Just 15 months after the technology first appeared in a commercial form, ASUS and MSI have finally announced the first PC motherboards that will ship with built in Thunderbolt ports.
Thunderbolt,
if you’re aware of it all, may sound like a tedious hard drive
technology, but it’s got an enormous amount of potential for PC gaming.
With these two boards, we may finally be in the era of the modular PC –
which doesn’t have to be opened up for upgrades.
It means, potentially, external hard drives that are as quick as
internal SSDs and plug in graphics cards that really work. Much as I
like to tinker inside my PC’s case, this is big.
Thunderbolt, which was developed by Intel under the codename LightPeak,
debuted in the MacBook Pro last February, but take up of the techology
hasn’t been especially fast. Apple quickly shifted its monitor range
over to support Thunderbolt, which is useful in professional
environments because it allows screens to be daisy chained together.
Other than a few very expensive external drives and backup systems,
though, there’s not been a lot of outside interest.
The tech itself acts as an extension of the motherboard’s PCI Express
bus – the one that graphics card interface with – and was originally
designed to use fibre optics. Current Thunderbolt designs are all
copper, but still capable of 20Gbps bidirectionally. They also combine a
DisplayPort feed for video out, using Apple’s annoyingly proprietary
miniDisplayPort adaptor. The advantage is that with a Thunderbolt
monitor, you only need one small connector to attach both the screen and
a peripherals hub.
The boards in question are ASUS’ P8Z77V Premium and MSI’s Z77A-GD80.
Thunderbolt is natively supported in Intel’s recent Z77 chipset, so
expect many more soon.
It’s worth pointing out that in ASUS’ case, you shouldn’t confuse
Thunderbolt with ThunderBolt, it’s cheekily named audio add-in cards
bundled with some high end motherboards recently.
Here’s what’s really exciting, though. Although these are the first
PC motherboards with Thunderbolt built in, they aren’t the first
non-Apple PCs. Late last year, Sony released its superthin Vaio Z
which used Thunderbolt technology in a USB port to attach an external
dock that housed a GPU. So it was ultra light in the bag but not a
terrible games machine when plugged in. While obviously that’s not much
use for a desktop PC, to me it’s the future of gaming. The more
Thunderbolt compatible machines there are out there, the more chance
there is of decent external graphics becoming commoditised in a way that
the industry has been trying but failing to achieve for years.
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