But hey, didn't they do the same thing with the Phenom CPU's so why are we all so surprised by this?
I can agree. But by that logic, one could also argue that after going through the same thing with Phenom, AMD should have learned to share the fine print with the enthusiast market to avoid another negative feedback debacle. I'd suspect any similar limitation in the server-destined Interlagos chips built on the same arch is disclosed or discussed in every enterprise customer meeting, as those folks would be slightly less tolerant if they spent the extra money on RAM only to find it "isn't supported".
Personally, I skipped the Phenom/AM3 generation. I have a few AthlonII Kuma/Lima/Sparta machines still kicking with 4 DIMMs, albeit at the old DDR2 days of 800MHz. I keep up with the tech regardless and read about all the memory controller limitations in AMD arch shared across these generations. Then I read that Bulldozer's brand new core design also contains a redesigned memory controller, supporting up to 1866. Then I buy a board with 4 DIMM slots that supports up to 32GB total and speeds well in excess of 1866 if overclocking.
Perception is reality. Given the above, in the words of Denis Leary, "What would you think? I think you would think what I thought!"
Good luck to you when you buy a Piledriver core!