At least this article from XYZ Computing had some content, unlike the PSU article from two posts ago that didn't even link to the manufacturer. And both from an "anonymous reader"...
Taiwan is the Republic of China because they believe that they are the lawful ruling government of China that was forced to flee during the Communist Revolution. Only now are some in the government (including the President) pushing for a separate Taiwanese identity.
The layout looks to be a squished ATX layout. The heatsink on the processor is a standard intel design used for their LGA775 (Socket T) processors. The MB has 1 PCIE X16 slot for graphics, two standard PCI slots and a PCIE X1 slot. Looks a lot like a Dell or other major system integrator's MB.
I think it's called 75%+ market share.
At least this article from XYZ Computing had some content, unlike the PSU article from two posts ago that didn't even link to the manufacturer. And both from an "anonymous reader"...
Those are small business workstations. The machine in the article is a Dimension machine for the home user. The E510 does not appear to be offered in the US market without Windows at this time: http://www1.us.dell.com/content/products/productde tails.aspx/dimen_e510?c=us&cs=19&l=en&s=dhs&~tab=s pecstab#tabtop
Taiwan is the Republic of China because they believe that they are the lawful ruling government of China that was forced to flee during the Communist Revolution. Only now are some in the government (including the President) pushing for a separate Taiwanese identity.
The layout looks to be a squished ATX layout. The heatsink on the processor is a standard intel design used for their LGA775 (Socket T) processors. The MB has 1 PCIE X16 slot for graphics, two standard PCI slots and a PCIE X1 slot. Looks a lot like a Dell or other major system integrator's MB.