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FATHER of ALL Motherboards… | ASUS Pro WS

FATHER of ALL Motherboards… 😱 | ASUS Pro WS W790E-SAGE SE review

#FATHER #Motherboards.. #ASUS #Pro

“Tech Notice”

This is the MOST different Motherboard I’ve EVER seen! Why 2x PSU connectors???

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33 Comments

  1. Not a server motherboard. It’s really obvious too. No one is using these as servers. Do you know what you’re talking about? Servers are pretty dumb, cheap. Datacenters are full of these dumb, cheap servers. This is a workstation motherboard with audio. Audio! Servers don’t have audio my man.

  2. Hey I need your help. I'm building with this motherboard using a 3475X. For whatever reason the M.2 SSD slots on this board just does not detect my drives, one of them does (bottom slot) but it will crash within 60 seconds and Q-code error AA. Have you successfully built with it and got windows running stable? I've RMA'd this board once already and with two fresh new units had the same exact problem. I've already troubleshot the other components, RAM sticks are all fine, CPU is fine, SSDs are also fine as I tested them on another motherboard. Asus customer servicer also couldn't solve it, been with them multiple times on the phone. Appreciate any ideas you can give, thanks!

  3. Here's a question I think you have never heard. Which motherboard manufacturer has mastering grade audio converters on board? I don't think there are any, but I was hoping that you could find out what converters the various manufacturers use for each motherboard. Many builders have been marketing their PC builds as best for music production, so I thought it was only fair that we be told what converters are built into onboard audio. Perhaps manufacturers will begin creating offerings for music creators.

    We need lots of pci slots, we need crazy amounts of CPU power, we need , quiet cooling excellent long term low cpu temperatures with little or no thermal throttling, we need multi core performance that is as good if not better than single core performance, we need the options of m2, m.3 or ssd on every board. We need strong multi screen and video rendering capabilities as well. We need it all in one cpu and on one board with gigabytes lan and Ethernet and we need a s ton of those ports on out mobos. You know what we need some really different stuff.

  4. This is the motherboard I'm gonna buy. Please make a build with dual RTX 4090s, 128GB ecc. I want to replace my Mac Pro 7.1, the latest one with M2 Ultra is trash because has too few pci lanes and no modular gpu.

  5. I will bet that a LOT of people using a fully loaded motherboard like this will pop their breakers due to overloading the circuit, just put the workstation together using around 4×4090's, at least a few 4Tb SSDs (4) and obviously 8 SAS 20Tb HDDs in RAID Z2 with 3 redundancy reserved HDDs (so 60Tb lost for the sake of safety, still leaves you with a ZFS pool that will have 100Tb of usable storage). Of the SSDs 2 will be in RAID 1 mirror (main Operating system and software disk) the other two will be used for ZFS caching.

  6. I wish more high end board would support 2 PSUs by default, for one you can enable redundant power supplies easily this way instead of some sketchy workaround to enable you to have the same level of redundancy you have on rackmount servers. So, not because of additional power although in this case that is also a reason.

  7. Registered ECC…. Typical for servers and some high end workstations. Like my second hand server running DDR3 Registered ECC and no other type of memory will work regardless of fitting on the slots. On DDR5 they also made the server ram physically different (the referred voltages differences made it needed to prevent burnt dimms by those who don't know better)

  8. I just bought a workstation with the little brother to this board. It will be here this month.
    I got the Intel W7-2495X 24-Core, ASUS W790 ACE, 512GB DDR5 RDIMM (8×64GB), RTX-3090, WD Black SN770 NVMe, Corsair HX1200 PSU, Lian Li Lancool, and the Noctua NH-U14S cooler for this platform.
    I develop high end 3D software for use with with terrains and video game engines.
    I have defense departments and scientific analysts using my software.
    My software supports up to 18 Exabytes of memory, but typically only 4TB in most cases.
    I am looking forward to this build. I hope my building electrical can handle it!
    I wish that larger RDIMMs were available, 64GB was all that I could find. I am in Canada.

  9. 0:09 sorry, but you are confused, these are boards of different generations of WRX80 processors for 3xxx and 5xxx Threadripper where there is no support for DDR5 and PCI-Exp 5, and Intel on 4677 offers all this.
    It makes more sense to compare all this with the 3rd Gen IceLake LGA3647 platform

  10. I want this!!!

    I haven't upgraded my PC (X99) since 2016/2017 (except my M.2 NVMe), and I was disappointed there hasn't been an HEDT PC since X299.

    I was excited to see last month the quiet release of the ASUS PRO WS W790E-SAGE SE. I had no idea this beast even existed, and was even more blown away that there wasn't any coverage regarding this motherboard online reviewing it and performing benchmarks or something (I think you're one of the first ones to cover it).

    Once my finances allows me, and unless something better is released that catches my attention, I will be purchasing this ASUS PRO WS W790E-SAGE SE motherboard along with a Intel Xeon w5-3435X CPU (I might also simply YOLO it and get the Intel Xeon w9-3495X CPU 😏).

    Before, I would never imagine myself purchasing workstation-grade equipment, but due to the lack of HEDT in the consumer sector (as mentioned above), I think I will be purchasing workstation-grade equipment from now.

    I'm simply an enthusiast that loves overkill, high-end components with lots of features that aren't simply available on consumer-grade motherboards and CPUs. I demand at least ~50-60+ PCIe-5.0 lanes with multiple M.2 NVMe sockets and 8 DIMM slots. It's ridiculous and unfortunate that manufacturers think 28 PCIe lanes is acceptable.

    Now, I'm regretting not electing for the HPTX sliding motherboard tray when purchasing my CaseLabs Magnum THW10 computer case back in 2017. I never imagined myself getting anything bigger than a E-ATX motherboard, hence I elected for the XL-ATX sliding motherboard tray. Hopefully the guy who is bringing them back to life starts selling CaseLabs parts soon or I will have to find someone with a 3D printer or something to make me a custom 384 mm x 384 mm aluminum sliding motherboard tray along with a center divider to receive it.

    Interestingly enough, though, I couldn't find any 2 TB (8 x 256 GB) DDR5 ECC kits online to purchase when casually browsing for them earlier this month.

  11. Lot of people ( Including Mom's and Father's) Don't need THIS THING.. But I Blame YouTube and Other Social Video Websites for Chip Shortage and Normal prices Goes up without Tech upgrade…Thankyou for Your DPU review

  12. Some new info sprinkled in for me, but then
    Blunder 1: A Kingston Server Premier RDIMM 64GB, DDR5-4800, CL40-39-39, reg ECC, on-die ECC is under 300.- Euros, so 8 make 2400.- for 512 GB of RAM! (in words: FIVE HUNDRED AND TWELVE) Half is half the price. Double is rather a 1000.- x 8 or so. 1300.- mobo, 2000.- for a 3435X, 2400.- for 512 GB, 1700.- for an RTX 4090 sounds a good fit.
    Blunder 2: 7 4090

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