Originally posted by: Fox5
For microatx, there are few cases that will fit a full length video card, and the cases that can are going to be practically ATX size.
Huh? My LAN party rig is in a case that is 14"x14"x8". Basically the width of a normal tower, but the height and depth of a legal-sized sheet of paper. I'd say that was pretty small compared to just about any ATX chassis.
My LAN party rig has a normal ATX power supply and a GTX 285 graphics card in it. It uses a 120mm exhaust fan and I have a VelociRaptor boot/game drive and a 1.5TB data drive.
Originally posted by: krashx6
What are the 4 matx core i7 boards out? Which do you think is best?
The board that is not available yet (since they like to pre-announce stuff waaayyyy ahead of time) is the
EVGA. They made it look like their Classified board, so it may be expensive.
The
MSI is the cheapest at $170. It is the only one out of the four that does not support SLI (but does support Crossfire). IMO MSI X58 boards are a step behind the market leaders (such as Asus/Gigabyte) in overclockability, but they usually try to make up for it through features or pricing.
The
Asus Rampage II GENE is $250 and is ROG (Republic of Gamers) branded, so you know it is good.
The
DFI board is a hair cheaper at $220 than the Asus, and is the cheapest SLI capable mATX X58 board.
The EVGA is not out yet, so it is an unknown entity (though their other X58 boards seem popular). The MSI does not support SLI and is "likely" to not overclock well (but stock speeds should be fine). I haven't read of any overclocker trying it out. This leaves the Asus and DFI as likely choices if you want SLI and/or overclocking. Many enthusiasts have purchased one or the other of these boards (and indeed some have purchased both!) and they are both proven to be stable and overclockable. One resident Anandtech forum member has both and likes his DFI board better - by a hair. The DFI is cheaper, but the Asus has more features such as software X-Fi, Firewire, eSATA that the DFI lacks, so those can be the deciding factors.
Software X-Fi audio, Firewire, eSATA
NEED = Asus
DON'T NEED = DFI
HDMI output depends on a few things. All the latest graphics cards support it to some degree in that all support HDMI for video. For audio, NVIDIA cards need a wire to connect it to the SPDIF output header of your onboard audio for two channel sound. Radeons have a built-in sound chip. For both you will probably have to use a DVI-HDMI adapter.
For a really small, lightweight and portable case, look for the Silverstone SG04. It is an SG03 with a handle! It can fit an ATX PSU, micro ATX mobo and any graphics card on the market along with two 120mm cooling fans. The only limitation is that the power supply is next to the motherboard, meaning you cannot use larger CPU coolers. If you aren't overclocking, then just use the stock cooler and you'll probably be fine.