ASUS’ New Products

The ASUS set of images came about via a leak at an APAC event. Apparently one media representative invited to that event (and should have been under NDA) took pictures and then distributed them via Weibo in spite of the NDA. At this present time ASUS has not officially released any other pictures of its range, so we are left to decipher these blurry photographs.

The whole range seems to have removed the mustard color and gone for a more subtle dull metallic gold. The iconography is around the livery and a chipset heatsink with a circular image.

First up is the mini-ITX model:

Here ASUS have put the 24-pin ATX power connector outside the DRAM slots and the CPU power connector is in an easy to reach place on the top. The socket area is more central, meaning the chipset is squashed down towards the PCIe slot. The SATA ports are spread out such that two are near the 24-pin ATX (along with a USB 3.0 header) and two are inside the DRAM slots at the bottom.

On the high end of the market is the Deluxe:

The styling is easier to see here, especially with the power delivery heatsink reaching around three sides of the CPU socket. On the right there are some SATA Express ports, with an M.2 just between the chipset heatsink and what looks like the TPU switch. As the Deluxe is high up the scale of the board list, we see two USB 3.0 headers near the 24-pin ATX connector as well as an 802.11ac WiFi module on the rear IO. It looks like the audio also has had an update, and we move to Dual Intelligent Processors V (five).

The workstation model was also on display:

Despite the small grainy picture, we see four PCIe slots and a heatsink exactly where a PLX8747 would be, suggesting an x8/x8/x8/x8 PCIe layout for four-way SLI. It is perhaps interesting that we see this on the WS and not on the Deluxe. Like the Deluxe we have dual USB 3.0 headers, SATA Express ports and an M.2 slot. There are dual two-digit debugs at the bottom for enhanced error reporting, and the chipset heatsink is larger than the others, perhaps to accommodate a controller or two.

There is also an image of three ROG motherboards being released, including the Hero, Gene, and the Ranger which is new to the brand.

TUF gets some love as well with the Sabertooth:

GIGABYTE’s New Products MSI’s New Products
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  • Flunk - Monday, April 28, 2014 - link

    Your product images all have the chip set name, unobfuscated. Not that we didn't all know what it was anyway.
  • crazysurfanz - Monday, April 28, 2014 - link

    See the article:
    "Technically the launch date of these products is under NDA. The NDA is such that we can't even mention the chipset by name, even if it is visible on some of the images we are sharing today."
  • Railgun - Monday, April 28, 2014 - link

    Just call it Z97 already. The Asus WS board CLEARLY shows Z9...
  • jmbnbn - Tuesday, April 29, 2014 - link

    As well as that, one of the Gigabyte images doesn't have it blurred out at all: GA-Z97X-UD3H
  • meacupla - Monday, April 28, 2014 - link

    So... which board to pair with an unlocked pentium...
  • Antronman - Monday, April 28, 2014 - link

    Asus.
    Duh.
    Every single time (unless your chip just sucks) RoG boards will help you squeeze more juice out.
    Maximus VII Extreme + unlocked pentium = sweet, juicy OCs.
  • meacupla - Monday, April 28, 2014 - link

    Okay, which 'sensibly priced' mobo for an unlocked pentium then

    If I was going to spend $200+ for a mobo, I'd make sure my CPU costs at least the same.

    Unlocked pentium, random guess, has got to be around $60~100, so there's no way I'd want to spend double that for the mobo.
  • Antronman - Monday, April 28, 2014 - link

    Maximus VII Impact.
  • meacupla - Monday, April 28, 2014 - link

    How do you report trolling on anandtech?
  • Antronman - Monday, April 28, 2014 - link

    Just grab one of the standard Asus mobos then.

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