At the current market of computers and accessories, took a substantial part of the platform with socket LGA 775, nVidia, and the company gets a good profit from the sales of the platform, as it produces a number of chipsets that are intended for this platform. Intel, however, after replacing the traditional system interface to the FSB QuickPath Interconnect (QPI) in platform socket LGA 1366 decided that nVidia is not a license to manufacture chipsets for the new platform. According to the largest manufacturer of processors, the license, which has nVidia, do not apply to the latest Intel processors, as they integrated memory controller and a bus QPI. As a result, the company nVidia has had to give the producers license SLI motherboards for the creation of products based on chipset Intel X58, and then to products in the P55 chipset to the processor socket LGA 1156, and now the future of nVidia chipsets for Intel processors to look very grim.

According to recent data, nVidia really has planned for the production line of chipsets MCP99, which will support processors with socket LGA 1156. In addition, nVidia will be releasing two new chipset for LGA 775 platform code-named MCP85 and MCP89. Common to all of these chipsets is a built graphics processor (IGP). Some of the chipsets for the LGA 775 platforms will be 64-bit memory channel, dedicated to the needs of IGP, in addition to 128-bit channel for the controller's memory. Dedicated channel memory allows the IGP in the processing of graphics performance to achieve graphics lower level, not encroaching on the system memory. Perhaps the use of these chipsets will be similar to the use of chipset AMD 780G, 785G and 790GX, with separate memory chips on the motherboard. Chipsets with support for LGA 775 will additionally have a controller with support for dual-mode RAM DDR3-1333. Most likely, MGPU will be included in a series of GeForce 200m.

Turning to the MCP99, the first nVidia chipset for the generation of processors Nehalem / Westmere, the manufacturer will start to focus on the middle market segment. Chipset MCP99, presumably, would have built the kernel image, again, with memory allocation and a separate channel for it. However, some of the future Intel processors will have a custom built kernel image.