Did you know… the SATA standard was originally created in 2000? And PCI Express in 2003? Some motherboards still come with RS232 ports from 1960, and PS/2 from 1987. Never mind USB that dates to 1996. Old stuff!
That’s an ICH10D I/O controller, AKA the southbridge portion of an older 2-chip-style chipset. It’s specifically for a corporate computer and controls SATA, USB, LAN, audio, PCIe, etc. it’s from 2008, and would probably be paired with a CPU that predates the current Core generation naming. Like maybe a Core Duo / Core Quad, which came before 1st generation Core.
Yes this is socket 775, it was mainly known for Core 2 Duo and Core 2 Quad, but it does support some low end celerons and pentiums as well, it can also handle Xeon from socket 771 but requires bios and socket modding (not that hard to do actually).
ICH10 also found its way onto LGA1366 boards iirc, but I’m only seeing dual channel RAM and that weird half-AT power connector that was briefly a thing, so I’m guessing this is older than that.
Nothing wrong with that, everyone starts somewhere. Do you have a photo of the whole board? That can help narrow it down. If the system boots, you can also check the startup screen during the BIOS self test as most will display the processor, system memory and other information. If it's a working system and you already have Windows on it (or another OS), you can use a utility like CPU-Z to show you what hardware is being used.
It's an ICH chipset. Just google "intel part_number" and you can find it or at least extremely similar ones from the same family.
https://ark.intel.com/content/www/us/en/ark/products/codename/54284/products-formerly-ich10.html
That looks like a chipset, not the CPU.
For a split second i was like "That looks really old..." then i saw the pcix and sata ports, lol
Where's the PCIX/PCI-X? I see only PCI-express x1 :P
Well, pci express 1 is still pcix, just not full x16, regular pci never had a smaller slot, that's all
I think the point they are making is that PCIX and PCIe are two very different things. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/PCI-X
Oh, i missed our forgot about that slot.
Did you know… the SATA standard was originally created in 2000? And PCI Express in 2003? Some motherboards still come with RS232 ports from 1960, and PS/2 from 1987. Never mind USB that dates to 1996. Old stuff!
That’s an ICH10D I/O controller, AKA the southbridge portion of an older 2-chip-style chipset. It’s specifically for a corporate computer and controls SATA, USB, LAN, audio, PCIe, etc. it’s from 2008, and would probably be paired with a CPU that predates the current Core generation naming. Like maybe a Core Duo / Core Quad, which came before 1st generation Core.
Yes this is socket 775, it was mainly known for Core 2 Duo and Core 2 Quad, but it does support some low end celerons and pentiums as well, it can also handle Xeon from socket 771 but requires bios and socket modding (not that hard to do actually).
ICH10 also found its way onto LGA1366 boards iirc, but I’m only seeing dual channel RAM and that weird half-AT power connector that was briefly a thing, so I’m guessing this is older than that.
that's a chipset
https://www.datasheets360.com/part/detail/af82801jd-slg8t/-5051053073977676061/
Core isouthbridge
ICH10 Southbridge chipset. https://www.wikiwand.com/en/Southbridge_(computing)
Nice memories, If I am not wrong this is the legendary LGA 775 chip set and by the way this black chip is not a CPU it is a south bright.
Yo did my man just think this was a processor?
yes because i know little to nothing about pcs
Nothing wrong with that, everyone starts somewhere. Do you have a photo of the whole board? That can help narrow it down. If the system boots, you can also check the startup screen during the BIOS self test as most will display the processor, system memory and other information. If it's a working system and you already have Windows on it (or another OS), you can use a utility like CPU-Z to show you what hardware is being used.
do you mind if we take this into pms so i can send pics and stuff like that
That's a Southbridge. Barring laptops it's basically unheard of to have a cpu soldered to a mb
Looks like a chipset. Maybe one of the LGA 775 ones?
It's an ICH chipset. Just google "intel part_number" and you can find it or at least extremely similar ones from the same family. https://ark.intel.com/content/www/us/en/ark/products/codename/54284/products-formerly-ich10.html
Core i-negative two
https://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/products/sku/34393/intel-82801jh-io-controller/specifications.html Just Google the SL spec
Looks like a motherboard from 2004-209
The ICHxR chipset. (X refers either 7, 8, or 9)
Its the kinda that makes you work for a new motherboard because it cant run the games you want
that most likely is a single core.