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[TGDaily] First core i7 notebook announced

1159 Views 18 Replies 17 Participants Last post by  sgdude
Eurocom Announces Core i7-Loaded Phantom i7 Notebook

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you are looking for the most performance in a mobile form factor, then it doesn't get much better than Eurocom’s new Phantom-i7 notebook. The workstation will be come with a Core i7 Extreme processor and an as-of-yet unannounced Core i7-based Xeon X5580 processor. The machine will have up to 12 GB of memory at first, and up to 24 GB later this year as well as up to four hard drives. Given the weight and capabilities of the notebook, the promised battery time of 60 minutes isn't bad.

Let’s get this out of the way first. The Phantom-i7, which is positioned above Eurocom’s current Phantom-X series, is not a notebook you would pick up at Best Buy and do your taxes with. It is designed to be a mobile workstation and/or server for engineers on the road, and is a device which offers the highest computing performance possible.

At the heart of the system is either a Core i7-940 or 965 Extreme processor, or a not-yet-announced Xeon X5580 (3.2 GHz) CPU. The 17†(1600 x 1050 pixel) system will support up to four hard drives (2 TB combined) in RAID 0,1,5 configuration -- though initial systems will be limited to three HDDs and 1.5 TB. Other hardware includes a triple-channel memory design with up to 12 GB of memory (4 GB per channel) and up to 24 GB when 8 GB modules will be more common later this year. The Phantom-i7 comes with only one graphics chip, either a 1 GB Nvidia GeForce Go GTX 280M or Quadro FX3700M, and does not have a separate low-power graphics unit which takes over when high-end or 3D is not required. This will also lend a significant amount of GPU computing to the system for number-crunching apps.

The 12-pound (!!) notebook will be available by the end of March with prices starting around $3000, with fully configured systems topping out in excess of $5000.

Eurocom says that the maximum power consumption of the CPU+GPU system is about 220 watts (150 watt allocated to the CPU and 70 watts to the GPU), while the average CPU+GPU power is expected to be closer to 180 watts. The i7 CPU alone consumes about 80 watts on average, we were told. Given the hardware specs, the battery time is measured in minutes, not in hours. Eurocom spokesperson Matt Bialic promises a battery time of about 60 minutes, which seems a lot given the raw computing power and high power consumption. However, Bialic explained that the CPU is throttled down via the X58 chipset when running on battery, as is the mobile Nvidia GPU, which helps to conserve power.
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Wow, epic heat I would think. Also quite expensive. Great tech though, wonder how it will compare to desktop systems.
Just wow, this is something I would only dream of buying. I wonder what something like that looks like 12 pounds is a lot of weight.
I cannot wait to sell some to people =)
No thanks. I like my lap and all of it's bits unburnt.
It's going to rule as a desktop replacement, but it's certainly no good for the lap.
BUT CAN IT RUN CRYSI---
*heart attack*
The 60 minute battery life is great for a laptop


I don't really care how much power it has, if I have a laptop, I would expect at least 2-3 hours with normal usage.
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No SLI!?!

Awww....

No real point in i7 then IMO.
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Originally Posted by jinja_ninja
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The 60 minute battery life is great for a laptop


I don't really care how much power it has, if I have a laptop, I would expect at least 2-3 hours with normal usage.

It's very good for the specs, but I'd shudder to see what happens with age...

My IBM Thinkpad with a Northwood Celeron barely gets 40 minutes on it's battery these days...
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Originally Posted by Brutuz
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It's very good for the specs, but I'd shudder to see what happens with age...

My IBM Thinkpad with a Northwood Celeron barely gets 40 minutes on it's battery these days...

...which is why you replace batteries on older laptops because batteries get worse with age and usage. The Celerons weren't too bad to be honest, it was the 3.2Ghz P4s that were the pure evil ones. I've seen them overheat out-of-the-box, no dust build up or anything lol.
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Originally Posted by thegreatsquare View Post
No SLI!?!

Awww....

No real point in i7 then IMO.
Ya, pointless to have the i7. It should have a Phenom II, which would go perfectly with the GTX280.
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Big power supply required just to power/charge the thing. While I'm a fan of somewhat powerful notebooks, because I needed one in school, I'm not a big fan of hot, power hungry, desktop chips being thrown into notebooks. I'm sure Intel has a plan to use the new i7 architecture in a mobile/lower TDP chip soon enough, I'd much rather have that.

To each their own I guess.
3
Quote:

Originally Posted by jinja_ninja View Post
The 60 minute battery life is great for a laptop


I don't really care how much power it has, if I have a laptop, I would expect at least 2-3 hours with normal usage.
its not a laptop.. its a mobile workstation/gaming rig.

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look at that guy.....
what guy.....
the guy with the i7 laptop....
Who?...Mr Burning Pancake Legs
The LAN-party KING XD.
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Quote:


Originally Posted by jinja_ninja
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...which is why you replace batteries on older laptops because batteries get worse with age and usage. The Celerons weren't too bad to be honest, it was the 3.2Ghz P4s that were the pure evil ones. I've seen them overheat out-of-the-box, no dust build up or anything lol.

yeah my friend has one and its the worst battery life ive ever seen in a laptop and its hot to the touch all the time
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