Radeon,
Let's start with your first quote:
"Thats why we let the chip manufacturers make the chipsets and the companys make the boards..."
Hmm, correct me if I'm wrong but doesn't Intel make motherboards. I believe they do and they tend to be the most stable motherboards out there. So, you missed his point. At this point Urbantechie I don't think AMD will get into make motherboards. Also, the newer AMD motherboards do not have nearly the problems the first 750 Irongate motherboards did.
Next quote, which has to be the funniest statement I've ever read on a message board:
"The first gen MSI and Gigabyte boards were basically stock Fester reference boards from AMD with the companys name on them. They were rock stable."
What were you saying about blanket statements? Rock stable, I don't know of any first generation motherboards that were rock stable and the 750 Irongate motherboards were no exception. Everybody forgets the trouble Intel had with the first generation BX chipset motherboards.
Next quote:
"3) Dead Gigabyte GA-71x. After a bios update this board was MUCH better. Out of the box, it sucked. "
Wait, I thought you said the first generation Gigabyte boards, which were basically stock Fester reference boards were rock stable. You just contradicted yourself.
Next quote:
"I suggest you think before you flame me Instigator. I've been building computers since I was 10, now I'm 19. Age does not matter here. Your ability to comprehend the situation of other people, however, does."
This is too easy. First, the business I own builds and repairs PCs. I can guarantee you I've built a h@ll of alot more PCs than you ever will. My first computer was an Atari XL1200. I'm not sure but I don't think you were born yet. No wait, you were 4 years old.

As far as, my ability to comprehend the situation of other people, I think I figured out Urbantechie's question easy enough without flaming him. I believe you are the one who has problems comprehending the questions people ask, which is apparent by your response to Urbantechie. So, if you flame, you get flamed. His point is that AMD could make their own motherboard to help resolve some of the compatiblity issues, which is a good point. But, the Athlon classic and the Athlon thunderbird/duron have been out long enough that there aren't nearly the compatiblity issues there were at first. Like I said in my first message, the KT133 chipset is an excellent chipset and MSI, ASUS, and Abit make awesome motherboards. I would take a KT133 motherboard ANY day over the first generation 750 Irongate motherboard.
Next quote:
"From all my experience working with Athlons, I've yet to see a classic AMD system crash SOLELY due to bad ram. I think the P3 is a whore when it comes to accepting components."
Boy, this statement shows your age. You obviously didn't work on alot of first generation 750 Irongate motherboards, because they were know to have issues with cheap memory and power supplies. THAT IS A FACT! Gee, why do you think AMD published recommended power supplies and memory on their web site? Hello, because they were having so many problems with stablity with the first generation motherboards. Would you like a link to their web site? "I think the P3 is a whore." Wow, this is exactly like a Nvidia vs 3dfx issue. You just don't get it. The P3 is a very good cpu. The AMD Athlon is a very good cpu. It depends on what you want.
Next quote:
"Why would you put 512mb of low quality ram into a server? Or any PC for that matter?"
Funny I don't think Urbantechie said he wanted to put low quality ram into a server.
Why would anybody put cheap ram into there pc? Hmm, because they can. Not everybody can afford Muskin CAS 2 memory. Using high quality ram becomes a bigger issue when you want to overclock. You definitely don't have to buy expensive ram to get a system to run stable.
Xerox Man,
Hey, I'm happy your system is stable. My statement about the first generation 750 Irongate motherboard was dead on. Some people got lucky not using AMD recommended power supplies and memory, but there is a reason AMD published the recommended list.
And I never said ALL AMD motherboards are flaky about power supplies and memory. We are talking about the first generation AMD motherboards. As far as this quote:
"IMHO, don't b!tch about system instability if you're going to use crappy components"
Funny, I'm not using crappy components. Unless you consider Micron memory crappy.
Factor 5,
Umm, there was no typo. The Abit KG7 is the next generation DDR motherboard which uses the AMD 760 chipset. Thanks tho.
Modus,
"Absolutely false. You are taking your own personal negative experience with one (1) single Irongate motherboard to be indicative of the entire range of Irongate motherboards ever made. Right from the beginning, the Athlon platforms have been exceptionally stable. Read some of Anand's reviews of early production boards to refresh your memory. The few problems with nVidia cards were quickly addressed by BIOS and driver updates.
A blanket statement like the one you just made only confirms the sentiment behind your screen name."
No, I'm not taking my own personal negative experience with one single Irongate motherboard. I'm taking my experience with 25+ first generation 750 Irongate motherboards that I personally built. I never said all AMD motherboards. And your trying to tell me there weren't alot of compatiblity and stability issues with the first generation motherboards. Come on, give me a break. I'm not sure what review your talking about, but for every one that you find that says they were exceptionally stable, I'll find 10 more that say they weren't. I believe HardwareCentral had an article about this topic. Sorry, no way will you ever convince me the first generation AMD motherboards were exceptionally stable. Very few first generation motherboards were exceptionally stable. As far as my name, if you don't like it, don't read my comments.
Noriaki,
I'm also happy you have a stable system. But try using your 250 watt power supply and cheap memory on a first generation AMD 750 chipset and you will be seeing BSOD on 50% of them. You might get lucky and not see BSOD, but 50% of the time a cheap power supply and memory will not fly on the older AMD motherboards. And again we are talking about first generation AMD motherboards, I'm NOT talk about motherboards that had 4 or 5 revisions.
Nesud,
Personally I don't consider Micron cheap memory, but thats me. Also I have the same problem with my USB mouse. If you did build 60+ systems on the first generation AMD 750 chipset and had that kind of success rate then consider yourself lucky, because that was not the case when I was building them. I also tried to buy my motherboards from several different places (i.e. MWAVE, TC Computers, PCNut, etc) to get a wide sample of the motherboards and it still didn't matter. I can't tell you how many web sites, discussion forums, and news groups I went into that were having problems with the older AMD motherboards back in August - October of 1999.
I think that takes care of it. Urbantechie, I wouldn't worry too much about some of the responses from these guys. You make a great point that I agree with (i.e. AMD should consider making their own motherboards). In my experience, motherboards that use the Intel chipset are definitely less flaky when it comes to power supplies and memory. You can use generic memory on most Intel motherboards. I definitely like both the P3 and the Athlon cpus. But I prefer AMD cpus, because they tend to be faster clock for clock in Windows and that in part has to do with the 128k L1 cache. As far as games, the AMD is equal clock for clock to the P3, except for games like Quake 3 which does a excellent job of using SSE instructions. The AMD Thunderbird is just an excellent CPU. The next generation AMD cpus (Mustang - Palomino) will be fast.....very very fast. I also heard they will have SSE instructions, but I can't confirm this. If you plan on building a system in the future I would try the next generation AMD cpus with the AMD 760 DDR chipset. But in any AMD system, I only use AMD recommended power supplies and very good memory. Why mess with it. Later.