- Aug 14, 2001
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Originally posted by: BigFatCow
Originally posted by: BingBongWongFooey
Link
Not sure if there are many people here interested in these boards, but I have been wanting one for a long time, and I think I may finally pick one up.
just saw those the other day, they look pretty cool...
you have a long name :Q
Originally posted by: RanDum72
Nice, but can't you just get a mini-ATX mobo like the Asus A7N266-VM and an Athlon XP CPU cheaper than those? Plus, the nforce1/XP combo is going to be a lot faster.
Originally posted by: BingBongWongFooey
I think I'm gonna order the EPIA 5000.
533 Mhz, no fan, tiny ass board, 1 pci slot, one sdram slot, onboard video/lan/sound, $98, I think that's an awesome deal
I just have to work on finding or making a case to put it in. I wish I could make something like this
Originally posted by: Confused
Originally posted by: BingBongWongFooey
I think I'm gonna order the EPIA 5000.
533 Mhz, no fan, tiny ass board, 1 pci slot, one sdram slot, onboard video/lan/sound, $98, I think that's an awesome deal
I just have to work on finding or making a case to put it in. I wish I could make something like this
And performance of a Celeron 300
IF you're wanting to do anything with video/dvd, you need at least the 933MHz, probably the 1GHz one
Confused
The VIA boards are mini-ITX, not mini-ATX which is a very uncommon form factor slightly smaller than ATX. Mini-ITX is a VIA created form factor for their C3 CPU's. The boards are too small for an Athlon or P4 socket plus heat sink assembly. The mini PC's like the Shuttles use flex-ATX which is larger than mini-ITX but smaller than the standard smaller form factor boards which are micro-ATX.
Originally posted by: RanDum72
The VIA boards are mini-ITX, not mini-ATX which is a very uncommon form factor slightly smaller than ATX. Mini-ITX is a VIA created form factor for their C3 CPU's. The boards are too small for an Athlon or P4 socket plus heat sink assembly. The mini PC's like the Shuttles use flex-ATX which is larger than mini-ITX but smaller than the standard smaller form factor boards which are micro-ATX.
Yes, I know that. My point is, the only major difference between the ITX and mini-ATX is the loss of 2/3 expansion slots. If size is REALLY that important, then the ITX makes sense but if size is important but not the only factor, micro-ATX cases are just slightly larger but can accomodate more choices in the components used.
I can see VIA's new marketing approach now: "Ultra-quiet piracy appliance! Case has outward appearance of standard household clock radio! Your wife will never know!"and I may use it as a windows/kazaa piracy machine too.
Slightly smaller???Originally posted by: RanDum72
The VIA boards are mini-ITX, not mini-ATX which is a very uncommon form factor slightly smaller than ATX. Mini-ITX is a VIA created form factor for their C3 CPU's. The boards are too small for an Athlon or P4 socket plus heat sink assembly. The mini PC's like the Shuttles use flex-ATX which is larger than mini-ITX but smaller than the standard smaller form factor boards which are micro-ATX.
Yes, I know that. My point is, the only major difference between the ITX and mini-ATX is the loss of 2/3 expansion slots. If size is REALLY that important, then the ITX makes sense but if size is important but not the only factor, micro-ATX cases are just slightly larger but can accomodate more choices in the components used.
Originally posted by: mechBgon
I can see VIA's new marketing approach now: "Ultra-quiet piracy appliance! Case has outward appearance of standard household clock radio! Your wife will never know!"and I may use it as a windows/kazaa piracy machine too.![]()
Slightly smaller???
Originally posted by: RanDum72
Yes, I know that. My point is, the only major difference between the ITX and mini-ATX is the loss of 2/3 expansion slots. If size is REALLY that important, then the ITX makes sense but if size is important but not the only factor, micro-ATX cases are just slightly larger but can accomodate more choices in the components used.
Originally posted by: RanDum72
Slightly smaller???
Link of ITX board.
Link to micro-ATX board
Link to a small micro-ATX case.
Like I said, if size is the only factor being considered, the ITX IS smaller but if you are looking for just a smaller sized case that still packs some punch, the Asus board combined with an Athlon XP is so much faster its no contest at all.
Originally posted by: tRaptor
I dont see why anyone would not spend $4 more to get 267 more mhz.... Maybe that little fan on the 800 is really anoying LOL
Do these have enough power to do divx? If yes, then here i come!