- Oct 13, 1999
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http://www.computerbase.de/news/2011-10/amds-brazos-2.0-plattform-enthuellt/
As we know, E-350 to E-450 added a paltry 50MHz to the CPU, a few MHz plus a minor turbo mode for the GPU and faster memory support.
The next step seems to be the E2-1800. Compared to the E-450, it adds another 50MHz to the CPU and a few MHz to the GPU, and that's it for the entire APU.
HOWEVER, the chipset is different. On the plus side there are two native USB 3.0 ports, DisplayPort support and RAID 0/1 (FWIW). On the minus side there are fewer overall USB ports (10 versus 16?!?!) and... only two SATA 6Gbps ports instead of six.
That might not matter for a notebook or netbook, but IMO that totally kills mini ITX beyond as just a low power workstation. I have two mini ITX E-350 boards and the reason I purchased those two were because one has five and one has six internal SATA ports. Most boards implement only four.
This is not progress.
As we know, E-350 to E-450 added a paltry 50MHz to the CPU, a few MHz plus a minor turbo mode for the GPU and faster memory support.
The next step seems to be the E2-1800. Compared to the E-450, it adds another 50MHz to the CPU and a few MHz to the GPU, and that's it for the entire APU.
HOWEVER, the chipset is different. On the plus side there are two native USB 3.0 ports, DisplayPort support and RAID 0/1 (FWIW). On the minus side there are fewer overall USB ports (10 versus 16?!?!) and... only two SATA 6Gbps ports instead of six.
That might not matter for a notebook or netbook, but IMO that totally kills mini ITX beyond as just a low power workstation. I have two mini ITX E-350 boards and the reason I purchased those two were because one has five and one has six internal SATA ports. Most boards implement only four.
This is not progress.