Would you hookup your Kill-A-Watt and post some idle and load power numbers?
		
		
	 
Just got around to poking into the BIOS so don't have Windows installed, but I would assume that it would draw as much power as any other P55 setup at similar clocks.
So, the bad news is that it does not allow undervolting of the CPU.
It does allow undervolting of the RAM, though. I guess you can take advantage of those new low voltage DDR3 kits.
	
		
	
	
		
		
			I'm going to say late 2008 when DFI released he LanParty Jr P45-T2RS.
		
		
	 
Well, I guess it depends on your definition of an enthusiast board, but that DFI LanParty Jr certainly fits the bill.
If it means no onboard video, then around 2002-2004 I know of an AOpen micro ATX 845D chipset board for Pentium 4 and a Chaintech Nforce 2 Ultra chipset board for Athlon XP. Yes, I owned both boards (in-laws still have the AOpen and use it to this day).
If it means allowing voltage boosts to memory/CPU, then Biostar had it around 2004 with an Nforce 2 IGP micro ATX board that "officially" supported 400MHz FSB.
If it means allowing 1MHz increments in FSB adjustments... don't even remember when I started seeing that, but Asus had them in socket 478 micro ATX boards. So did MSI, but my particular board was unstable with even a single MHz adjustment. :hmm:
If it means all three... yeah, that DFI LanParty Jr P45 may have been it. And since then, we've had four X58 chipset boards and now seemingly endless P55 chipset boards that are micro ATX without onboard video and with voltage adjustments.
And now, we have the DFI mini ITX P55 chipset board. :awe: It has so many adjustments that I don't even know what to do beyond the basics, LOL.
I do have one thing to add at this time for that DFI mini ITX board. It can't seem to run my memory at 1600MHz (G.Skill RipJaws 1600 9-9-9-24 1.5v). Haven't tried more voltage, but it does work at 1333. I've gotten a different set working at advertised speeds on another (ATX) P55 chipset board. Enabling XMP just causes it to not POST, and manually setting it results in locking on POST. Oh yeah, and I haven't found the setting to disable the POST full-screen logo.