Other Deals

We wouldn't be able to write a guide without mentioning some of the other oddities in the motherboard land. Given the amount of Pentium M attention lately, some people may want to persue Prescott's little brother with a little more enthusiasm. Our analysis does not put the Pentium M ahead of the Athlon 64 (or even the Pentium 4) in most instances, and you still pay through the nose for hardware. DFI and AOpen both have first generation motherboards available, and the premiums on these boards are outrageous.

Prices have remained stagnant on both boards for several weeks and we probably won't see any change until the next generation motherboards start shipping.

Although SIS clearly lost the "oomph" they once had, we have seen some generally favorable products from them in recent history. The Price Engine bot picked up a lonely Foxconn SKU when searching for the SIS 755FX in retail space – the Foxconn 755FXK8AA-8EKRS [RTPE: 755FXK8AA-8EKRS].

At under $100 for a Socket 939 motherboard, Foxconn probably has a winner on their hands. However, it's going to take some more testing and benchmarks on our behalf to assure that the retail SIS 755FX boards have what it takes to stack up against nForce3 and K8T800.


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  • arswihart - Friday, February 18, 2005 - link

    where is evidence of a v2.2 9nda3+?
  • arswihart - Friday, February 18, 2005 - link

    nm zipzoomfly does not have them, although really newegg and mwave, who cares if not every single seller has them, they are easily purchasable and should've been included is my point
  • arswihart - Friday, February 18, 2005 - link

    I got my 9nda3+ from Mwave, plus Zipzoomfly has them, not to mention others. What are you talking about? I take back my comments about the nf4 boards, but you really should've included the nf3 boards.
  • sonicDivx - Wednesday, February 16, 2005 - link

    umm the NForce3 (939) prices are missing
  • Live - Monday, February 14, 2005 - link

    It did help :) Thanks for the swift replies Visual and Kristopher. These little nuggets of information could give extra value to the price guides if included.
  • KristopherKubicki - Monday, February 14, 2005 - link

    Live: I think Visual makes the best point. Online the prices remain very close to each other, but offline the two boards have a larger disparity in price.

    Visual: The Neo2 Platinum (the socket 939 nforce board) went on backorder everywhere overnight. It got real pricey. the original Neo (socket 754) is still a great buy and I would c onsider it just as good as the otpion we recommended for the guide (for a 754 board).

    Hope that helps,

    Kristopher
  • lsman - Monday, February 14, 2005 - link

    Pretty much only newegg carry the Epox 9nda3+ or j. And Epox is yet again with newer verison. (9nda3+ up to ver. 2.2 now) Better BIOS option (but the Caps are different...)
  • Visual - Monday, February 14, 2005 - link

    on their price engine, the a8n-sli vanilla is priced almost same as deluxe, so it makes sense to go with the deluxe... if the prices were such.

    but they aren't. i wont bother myself with checking the online shop prices, but at my local shop i got myself a vanilla asus sli for $140, while the deluxe was $40 more. in these circumstances the extra cash for the deluxe is not worth it. if you actually look around some forums you'll see a common advise is don't use the extra sata ports, and dont use the extra lan port on the deluxe, even disable them in the bios :p then why pay for them in the first place?

    funny how you dont list the msi neo2 platinum nforce3 board... with it being the best nforce3 out there (at least according your reviews). has it stopped selling or what?
  • Live - Sunday, February 13, 2005 - link

    Good guide as usual. One thing that I don’t understand is why the ASUS A8N-SLI Deluxe is recommended over the vanilla ASUS A8N-SLI.

    The only thing you get that is deluxe is a second LAN port and extra raid options. I fail to see what you would use a extra LAN port for? I only have one internet connection and most LAN:s are set up with hubs or routers. So what is it for?

    The silicon raid controller is only useful if you want to add more the 4 hard drives in your raid setup right? How many users do this? Considering the use of raid is not that common I would guess a 4+ raid setup would be a very rare find indeed. It would seem to me that the extra $ spent on the “deluxe” would be much better invested in almost any other part of your setup.

    So why the deluxe?
  • KristopherKubicki - Sunday, February 13, 2005 - link

    The reason why we didnt mention Epox products is because - you can't buy them anywhere.

    Kristopher

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