Someone over at OCWorkbench posted the US prices of the Gigabyte boards would be around $80 and $110. Still not bad. It'll definitely be interesting to see what adjustable RAM voltage will do for overclocking. That might explain the 150MHz ceiling with overclocking on the K7S5A. If you've already got a decent sound card and NIC, the basic board would be just fine.
Specs for both boards are 5 PCI/1 AGP/1 AMR slots with 3 DIMM sockets. No SDRAM support. Only difference between the boards like lsman said are the optional onboard Realtek LAN and Creative sound plus DualBIOS on the more expensive board.
I hope the flush BIOS process are better than the ECS, otherwise, DualBIOS can save you a lot of time.
The price will be lower by the time (may be early Oct.?) it come to US. And better yet, it was "tested" for half a month by then.
The other thing that'll be interesting to see is whether Gigabyte implements the enhancement outlined over at OCWorkbench that bumps Sandra and Disk Winmark scores by 5%.
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