We've seen numerous 915 and 925X designs during our pre show coverage already, so let's just start flipping through them.

PCI Express slots are quite common on these motherboards as can be seen on this Gigabyte board with three x1 and one x16 slot:


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Gigabyte also had a number of boards that offered both DDR and DDR2 support on the same board:


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As you can see from the picture above, the yellow slots are DDR2 slots and the orange/blue slots are DDR slots.

Gigabyte continued their push for manufacturing flexibility with this Intel based board that has both an AGP slot and a PCI Express x16 slot:


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What's interesting about this solution is that it is an Intel chipset but with both PCI Express x16 and AGP 8X slots on board, something that was supposedly not possible with Intel chipsets. It may be that Intel rethought their PCI Express transition strategy and decided to include AGP support on their chipsets, we will find out more asap. Update 6/4/04: We've discovered the real story behind this motherboard - read our new article on the topic - AGP on Intel 9xx Chipsets? We explain how.

Foxconn, a manufacturer who produces boards for Gigabyte and now for themselves, also had a number of 9xx based motherboards on display:


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Not launched, but everywhere: Intel's 9xx Chipsets SiS and VIA with PCI Express Chipsets
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  • Chuckles - Monday, May 31, 2004 - link

    It just makes some people's $150 cases become obsolete faster.

    I just find it funny that a pico (10^-12) BTX is larger than a nano (10^-9) ITX.

    Also, what's up with the 24-pin + 4-pin power connectors?
  • GI2K - Monday, May 31, 2004 - link

    Nice to see that MB based on the intel 9xx with AGP8x,PCI Express 16, DDR and DDR2, a must have for those that want to upgrade slowly...
  • Xentropy - Monday, May 31, 2004 - link

    #7 - These are PicoBTX boards, meant for desktop rather than tower systems. So if you just think of the front of the desktop case as being on the right side of the board, with the board laying down in the bottom of the case, it isn't really upside-down.

    Just curious, what is "stupid" about moving the motherboard to the other side of a tower case? Doesn't seem to really change anything to me.
  • Araemo - Monday, May 31, 2004 - link

    Hrm.. On motherboards with PCI-express and AGP...

    Will both be enabled at the same time in the bios? Will windows be able to handle both at once?

    /me has dreams of dual head x800 + his current 9700 pro.. or would that be quad head?

    I know it wouldn't be much use for gaming, but I LOVE high res + ultra high refresh rate, so I need decent cards to drive the big screens.
  • AtaStrumf - Monday, May 31, 2004 - link

    Interesting stuff. Keep it comming :)
  • Nighteye2 - Monday, May 31, 2004 - link

    Interesting...but with the memory and the Athlon 64, there's one thing I really want to know: will the dual core Athlon's AMD is planning have dual memory controllers, too? Given the stellar memory performance of dual-opteron systems under a UMA-enabled OS (Longhorn will be UMA-enabled), it would certainly make sense to give each core it's own memory. And if they upgrade the memory controllers to support QBM by that time...>:)
  • sprockkets - Monday, May 31, 2004 - link

    Oh, and aren't those pico BTX motherboards upsidedown? One of the stupidest features of BTX is the fact that the case now opens on the right side, not left. So if it was facing right the I/O ports should be on the left, not right.
  • sprockkets - Monday, May 31, 2004 - link

    Yeah, but is that board from Asrock dual channel with just 2 slots? The only real advantage I see to getting a 939 processor is the fact you can have 2 more slots of memory.
  • ZobarStyl - Monday, May 31, 2004 - link

    man that x600 is just silly...PCI-X and a mem clock boost isn't going to change the fact that it's only a 9600XT...anyone getting a PCI-X board is going to want to actually use that extra bandwidth for something worthwhile...at least, I hope so.
  • thatsright - Monday, May 31, 2004 - link

    A great initial article to whet everyone's appetite. And it's nice to see Anand back writing again.

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