K
Apperently MSI has a notebook (or released iduno) with a loving PCI SSD in it.
A loving laptop with a pci ssd
Well ofcourse that thing is worth more than the house I live in.
some dell XPS laptops use pci SSDs, but in limited sizes (around 256GB). the XPS15 i was looking at with that kind of storage was only $1450 for a 1080p non-touch display, i7, and 960 2GB with 256GB PCI-E SSD and 8GB RAM.
I am slow
in what circumstance do you need to upgrade your mobo
and how do you upgrade cpus
I'll take notes don't worry guys
you'd upgrade your motherboard and CPU if you're changing CPU generations. you upgrade CPU by either buying the next model up in your current generation or buying a new generation CPU and mobo. basically if the upgraded CPU is of the same family/generation/socket type as your current one, you can keep your mobo. if your new processor is of a new/different generation/socket type, you would have to also change your mobo.
i.e. if i were to upgrade my LGA-2011 socket mobo and 5820K CPU to a skylake CPU, i would get the skylake CPU and a LGA-1156 socket motherboard. if i were just upgrading my CPU to something like a 5960K CPU, i would just buy the new CPU because it's still in the haswell-e family.
of course if you just want to upgrade your motherboard for the sake of features (i.e. going from an ASUS X99 to an X99 deluxe) then you'd just swap the motherboards as long as they're the same socket type (the X99 boards are both LGA-2011, so they can be swapped). but if the socket type of your new mobo is different from that of your previous mobo, then you'd have to also change your CPU.