Last week, ASRock brought its Fatal1ty Global tour 2011 to London to show off a number of new motherboards the company is bringing to market this month, most of which sport PCI-E 3.0.
The new boards are the company's first to feature the new interface, and are easily identifiable thanks to their Gen 3 suffix.
According to ASRock, the new standard brings a number of benefits with it, such as a doubling of potential bandwidth per lane and a reduction in the coding overheads associated with passing data over the connection. However, it doesn't increase the amount of power available to a connected graphics card.
Despite the boards being available now, it will still be a while before you can take advantage of the new feature, as there aren’t currently any PCI-E 3.0 graphics cards available on the market. However, there are currently rumours that AMD’s forthcoming Radon HD 7000-series GPUs will support the new standard.
Even with a PCI-E 3.0 GPU and motherboard, though, you’ll still need an Ivy Bridge processor to enable PCI-E 3.0 support on the boards, and these aren’t due to hit the shelves until the first half of 2012. It’s interesting that ASRock is selling PCI-E 3.0 boards based on the P67 and Z68 chipsets, though, as this essentially confirms that both chipsets will be compatible with the future Ivy Bridge processors.
P67 Extreme4 Gen3
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Fatal1ty Z68 Professional Gen3
--Z68 Extreme7 Gen3
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