AMD A-series CPUs (aka APUs) support the standard on all FM2+ models. Intel CPUs support PCI Express 3.0 since the third-generation Core I (“Ivy Bridge”) processors. However, it is necessary for the motherboard also to be compatible with the standard. On the other side, in most cases, is the CPU that supports PCI Express 3.0, not the chipset. Regarding to video cards, all current models are compatible with PCI Express 3.0 the first NVIDIA chips compatible with this standard were from GeForce GT/GTX 6xx generation, while the AMD models use it since Radeon HD 7xxx models. For more detailed technical information, read our “ Everything you need to know about the PCI Express” tutorial. Let us keep in mind that those are the maximum speeds this connection supports, which does not mean the video card will transfer data at these speeds. ganeshts: The NAND part of the quoted tweet is factually wrong.USB PCIe Card, 4 Port USB 3.0 to PCI Express Card Expansion card, PCI-E to USB 3.0 4 Port Hub.gavbon86: A leak has a reliable and credible source, a rumour is what someone has seen/heard and regurgitated it.We have been shortlisted and are finalists for ‘Newcomer of the Year’ at this years North Eas… gavbon86: RT LOVELY NEWS ANNOUNCEMENT ☺️.gavbon86: A great man and someone who has been a mentor to me, a good friend over the years, and an inspiration, Dr taught me this.RyanSmithAT: While there aren't any major hardware announcements at this year's SIGGRAPH, there's no shortage of interesting sof…. RyanSmithAT: Among other things, AMD has a new diffuse Gaussian lighting technique, and NVIDIA has a new volumetric sheen to bet….gavbon86: Even if he's slower, he's still faster than AJ.gavbon86: I'm not saying AJ isn't fast, but he's more explosive in my opinion than fast.RyanSmithAT: Do these benchmarks use the day 1 patch?. #Graphic card benchmark pci express plus
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