Atom-Based Mini-ITX Motherboard Available
LWATCDR writes "A company out of the UK is selling an Intel Atom-based Mini-ITX motherboard. It has a riser for two PCI cards, two SATA ports, and an IDE ports so it could make a great little NAS, firewall, MAME box, or low-power workstation. To add to the fun it has a real parallel port 'perfect for hardware hacking,' a real RS-232 port 'perfect for data acquisition,' and two USB ports. The price is around $100, give or take, and hopefully it will come down over time. All in all a nice system to run Linux, WindowsXP, BSD, or maybe even OpenSolaris on."
And what's the power consumption of one of those boards? This board is made to do simple jobs and do it with little energy consumption.
Nice to see manufacturers still including the venerable RS232 port. It may be old and slow, but it's very easy to work with, if you're an electronics hobbyist -- much simpler than implementing USB connectivity...
Paleotechnologist and connoisseur of pretty shiny things.
Except that board is huge, whereas this is tiny, and this boards power useage is far, far lower.
Small refined things always cost more, even if they aren't as powerful as the 'normal' sized item.
Two Parts Swash, One Part Buckle
You just don't get it. Let me spell it out for ya:
... a lot of things like that.
1) This CPU runs on **4 watts!** I'm not sure my cell phone can run on 4 watts in standby.
2) This system board is really, really small. It would make a simply superb POS system, home fileserver/email server/router/allaround network appliance, a great low-power system the size of a trade paperback
Yeah, the 10/100 ain't so great, but you can always put a GigE NIC in one of the PCI slots.
Let's review: Really small, really low power, really really powerful for its size and power footprint. Lots of neat things one can do with this.
doc
And it needs a fan? My 486 consumes more than that and doesn't even need a heatsink. And what the hell is TDP if it doesn't represent some real mathematical value instead of Madison Avenue mumbo-jumbo?
What?
No ECC RAM support? Check!
Stupid 4cm fan that'll buzz like a mofo, then fail? Check!
No PCI-E slot, guaranteeing piss-poor video, Gbit ethernet or RAID? Check!
Onboard 10/100, not Gbit? Check!
Only one ethernet, making it harder to use as a router/firewall? Check!
Forced 'Legacy IDE' SATA ports? No AHCI, no eSATA, no NCQ? Check!
DVI? FUCK NO!
No hardware virtualisation functions? Check!
Largely useless PS/2, IDE and parallel ports? Check!
Made in a communist dicatorship with questionable human rights? Check!
BIOS bugs galore? With Chinglish changelogs and a slow website? Check!
Hundreds of pre-teen overclocking options? Check!
A generous 12 month warranty, more than anyone could ever need? Check!
Linux support? You'll let ME find out? Wow, bonus excitement!
Let me know if I missed any...
That's better than we get in the UK from the US. Most companies have hardware at a similar numbered price to in the UK (e.g. maybe £100 would sell for $120, which is ~£60 at the current exchange rate, or something equally stupid) and then we don't even get the option of shipping it to the UK! At least they're trying to be international ;)
/. doesn't reside in and around the US. There are visitors from other countries including Britain and Europe, you know ;)
Also, the whole of