1600 points is bang on for Cinebench R24. You might accidentally be comparing your results against the previous (and far more popular) R23 version of the benchmark.
AK-Brian
Samsung Neo G9 (G95NC) 57". It's a dual 4K width (7680x2160) at 240Hz, but existing Nvidia cards can only drive it at up to 120Hz. Radeon 7000 series can do the full 240Hz at native resolution.
What GPU? Does it show up (properly or otherwise) in device manager?
If you initially boot with a display connected to the iGPU, does swapping the cable over to the GPU result in any display output?
Gigabyte certainly never stopped, and seems to have actually increased their focus there.
I did some light digging, but it would appear that the updated file simply hasn't been made available yet. This could mean that the page was taken down until it can be updated to include the new revision. Give it a few days, but after that perhaps check in on the Intel support forums to see if it's just a server side goof.
If you need ECC UDIMM support and true ITX, there are quite literally zero options on the market.
If you can use a "deep-ITX" board, ASRock Rack offers the only model available:
Dual X550 10GbE: https://www.asrockrack.com/general/productdetail.asp?Model=W680D4ID-2T/G5/X550#Specifications
https://www.newegg.com/p/N82E16813140115
Dual X710 10GbE: https://www.asrockrack.com/general/productdetail.asp?Model=W680D4ID-2T#Specifications
If you don't mind using ECC SO-DIMMs, there are a few ITX spec boards:
This is perhaps more superficial than I'd care to admit, but every time he pronounces Genoa like that it causes my eye to twitch.
Great stuff. We need more positive tech content like this.
It's very silly. That said, you can already stream PS games to a phone with the remote play app. The Portal is completely optional.
Those are usually just separate chapters scanned in from original order booklets or product handbooks/catalogs. The stuff that tends to be available are the more common components, the parts that were carried forward for a number of years or were iterated upon.
The chapter you came across seems to be excerpted from the 1981 Component Data Catalog, one of several sets which have been archived whole on this site:
http://www.bitsavers.org/components/intel/_dataBooks/
Some of the later revisions (8237A/8237-5, 8257, etc) can be found in the more recent entries, such as the 1985 edition.
November 10, 2023 –GIGABYTE TECHNOLOGY Co. Ltd, a leading manufacturer of motherboards, graphics cards, and hardware solutions, released the latest AGESA 1.1.0.0 beta bios for AM5 next gen APU support on X670, B650, A620 motherboards. The forthcoming AM5 next gen APU will be launched at the end of January 2024.
The AGESA 1.1.0.0 beta BIOS for AM5 next gen APU is now ready on the GIGABYTE official website, and the formal release will be at the end of Nov. Users can easily update the BIOS using GIGABYTE's @BIOS, Q-Flash, or Q-Flash Plus technology. For more update, please pay close attention to the official GIGABYTE website: https://www.gigabyte.com/Motherboard/All-Series?fid=2559,2735,2743,2858
Interesting that they snuck in an actual launch date reference.
The display only has one high refresh HDMI port (out of three), but that input is limited to 120Hz. It's stamped on the shell and listed as such in the manual, so it would appear to be on Samsung.
https://imgur.com/a/xx1PWyp
240Hz on this display requires the use of DisplayPort, which is what makes it a perfect (well, imperfect) example.