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Author Topic: Sandy Bridge (2011) LGA 1155  (Read 2243 times)

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Offline chrisNova777

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Sandy Bridge (2011) LGA 1155
« on: March 04, 2017, 11:23:23 AM »
http://www.soundonsound.com/sound-advice/sandy-bridge



Quote
The Sandy saga has been taking up column space for several months now — so how long should you wait before crossing that bridge?

Intel's P67 and H67 Express Sandy Bridge chip sets have generated many column inches in computer circles (not least because of their recent recall), but only the P67 version seems to have set much of the audio world on fire. It's not hard to see why. Both support the overclocking of RAM, but while the H67 features integrated Intel HD Graphics components that can be overclocked with Turbo Boost, plus dedicated QuickSync acceleration for decoding and encoding HD videos, only the P67 allows overclocking of the CPU for significantly enhanced audio performance. It does need partnering with an external graphics card, however.

The Waiting Game

Now that the dust has settled, more and more people are wondering why Intel made these arbitrary decisions, and whether it's worth waiting a little longer for motherboards featuring the high‑end Z68 Express chip set, which provides both integrated graphics and CPU‑based overclocking, and is slated for release about the time you read this, in mid‑May. The Z68 also supports solid‑state drive caching to boost the performance of systems that already have mechanical hard drives, which is arguably a better approach than fitting an SSD boot drive, since it speeds up access to any data that you access frequently.

With integrated graphics that ought to be more than sufficient for many audio applications (as well as being versatile enough to support video streaming duties, where required), plus the more flexible overclocking options, I suspect that the Z68 chip set could quickly become the new favourite for the musician. Promised pricing is close to that of the P67, and there's the comfort of knowing that the second release in a new chip set line is likely to have fewer teething troubles, so these are interesting times for anyone planning a PC upgrade.

Install & Be Damned

Recently, I experienced some very frustrating installation problems. These had different symptoms, but eventually turned out to have the same fairly simple solution, so here are the details, to let you sidestep such issues if you run into them in the future. First, each time I received an update for Little Endian's SpectrumWorx 2 it installed perfectly, but as soon as the update had finished, my entire PC locked up, requiring a reboot, after which the updated plug‑in carried on working perfectly. The second was after attempting to update my iLok drivers, which, once again, worked fine, except that once the install had almost finished I got an error message to the effect that an associated service had failed to start, after which it abandoned the driver update.

The culprit in both cases turned out to be an over‑enthusiastic virus checker. We all need decent protection when connected to the Internet, but sometimes this can prevent legitimate processes being run when they are deemed suspicious. Most virus checkers should pop up a warning to this effect when blocking something, but it seems this doesn't always happen.

Solution

After temporarily locking my Internet Firewall, I found that disabling my background virus-checker utility before running the SpectrumWorx installer resolved its crash endings. However, the iLok driver installer required a complete shutdown of my entire virus checker before it would finally finish and let me continue to use all my iLok‑protected plug‑ins. So if you ever experience the tell‑tale symptoms of a software install failing right at the end, try temporarily disabling your virus checker and trying again. Just don't forget to re‑enable your virus checker immediately afterwards!