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AMD Hardware Technology

AMD Aims At New Standard for Motherboards 156

alexwcovington writes "CBC reports that AMD is launching DTX, a new motherboard layout about the size of micro-ATX. Their goal is to provide a small, energy efficient board that's compatible with as much hardware as possible. In the DTX, they're hoping to produce a new standard for desktops, and somewhat reverse the decline in consumer interest. From the article: 'Most desktops still have motherboards that operate using a standard laid out in 1995 by Intel called ATX, which stands for Advanced Technology Extended. ATX was designed to allow everything from memory cards to mouse ports to have a standardized spot alongside the central processing unit on a typical desktop motherboard. While there have been other standards since, ATX remains the most common standard for desktops, though its design is not suited for smaller, more energy-efficient desktops, AMD said.' Ars Technica has further details on the board."
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AMD Aims At New Standard for Motherboards

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  • Might be just me (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday January 12, 2007 @04:47PM (#17580448)
    But this topic is worthless without pics.
  • by jimstapleton ( 999106 ) on Friday January 12, 2007 @04:49PM (#17580490) Journal
    I couldn't find any of these... But I could be missing something

    (1) Does it provide something that is not encompassed by one of MicroATX, MiniITX or ATX
    (2) Does combine advantages of any of the above listed form factors?
  • well then (Score:2, Insightful)

    by User 956 ( 568564 ) on Friday January 12, 2007 @04:51PM (#17580518) Homepage
    Their goal is to provide a small, energy efficient board that's compatible with as much hardware as possible.

    If that's the goal, then with ISA, PCI, AGP, PCI-X, IDE33/66/100/133/SATA and a few hundred flavors of SIMMS and DIMMS, I can see this becoming a very large board indeed.
  • by rm999 ( 775449 ) on Friday January 12, 2007 @04:53PM (#17580562)
    I may be mistaken, but I don't think any of the current ATX implementations have this specific goal:
    "The DTX standard will be designed to embrace energy-efficient processors from AMD or other hardware vendors, and allow an optimally designed small form factor system to consume less power and generate less noise," the company said in a release Thursday."

    How AMD intends to implement this is beyond me. It seems that is more of a case layout and CPU issue than motherboard
  • Reversals (Score:4, Insightful)

    by mfh ( 56 ) on Friday January 12, 2007 @04:54PM (#17580576) Homepage Journal
    "and somewhat reverse the decline in consumer interest"

    Let's hope for the sake of AMD, their level of excitement is greater than the submitter's. The new boards will have to deliver something effective if they are going to be of any use. Scale down component infrastructure, increase speed and decrease power requirements. Intel could stand to do the same, but still...

    HP launched small form factor PCs called Slimlines, and I had a few customers buy them from me -- so far no complaints, but it will be nice to see these models reduced further and then pushed for speed as well, in the future.

    AMD seem to really have their eye on the ball, IMHO.
  • Re:hmm BTX style? (Score:1, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday January 12, 2007 @04:55PM (#17580614)
    "...so I sure hope that includes the Case. "

    I have alway hoped that if a supplier could make the mobo in 2 section connected by flexable cable it would (assuming cost a performance are equal) really help create way more interesting cases.
  • Bleh (Score:2, Insightful)

    by ceeam ( 39911 ) on Friday January 12, 2007 @04:59PM (#17580684)
    Why they even bother? Notebooks and rack servers have won. Not quite yet maybe but I don't know everyone who's gonna buy a new "big" desktop PC anymore. The death of CRT (totally happened already, right?) is just one step away from death of your typical desktop block.

    Now - if they would come up with modular notebook design, mmmm.... Standardize on some internal configs (12", 15", 17") and sell cases with different design that I would be able to stuff with motheboard, RAM, HDD, optical drive, etc. Like current PCs. Wouldn't that be great?
  • by Spazntwich ( 208070 ) on Friday January 12, 2007 @05:04PM (#17580798)
    ATX might not, but mini [wikipedia.org] and nano [wikipedia.org] ITX standards have been out for a long time, and seem to do exactly what AMD states as a goal.
  • by rm999 ( 775449 ) on Friday January 12, 2007 @05:17PM (#17581072)
    Neither is targeted towards the consumer PC market. This is an important distinction.

    I have found that one of the big cons of desktops is noise and heat. My laptop can do 99% of what my desktop can do, but somehow does it using a lot less power (and I consider myself a gamer, plus I use Matlab quite a bit for CPU and memory intensive applications). I support AMD in what they are doing, even though I think it is mostly a strategic move.
  • Re:Down with PS/2 (Score:3, Insightful)

    by TheRealMindChild ( 743925 ) on Friday January 12, 2007 @05:27PM (#17581254) Homepage Journal
    I completely disagree. I work with plenty of OS's that don't have USB support at ALL when you need it.... like at the installer phase.

    There is more to this than using your new sparkly USB keyboard via Windows.
  • by amigabill ( 146897 ) on Friday January 12, 2007 @05:29PM (#17581284)
    I don't see much point in yet another desktop standard. We've laready got a number of good standards there. ATX, MicroATX, BTX, Mini-ITX, Nano-ITX, etc...

    What I'd really love to see is a motherboard standard for the laptop. Let me choose the motherboard, the CPU, and other features on it, and let me choose the shell, and let me choose the screen to put into the shell with this chosen motherboard. Why is thre no LTX?

    That'd be wicked cool.
  • Re:hmm BTX style? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Chris Burke ( 6130 ) on Friday January 12, 2007 @05:41PM (#17581512) Homepage
    Cases are part of the problem. Intel realized this and that's part of what BTX is about, and I have to say the design really makes sense.

    While the design of BTX did make more sense in particular for cooling, for Intel it wasn't just a "better ATX", it was a way to make the increasing power demands of the Pentium 4 acceptable as it was becoming near impossible to sufficiently cool them. Now that Intel has dropped Netburst, the need for BTX isn't there. Not that there's anything wrong with a better ATX, but the industry doesn't want to switch from something that works.

    Then it says the DTX will have ONE pcie slot. What is DTX trying to accomplish? A platform trying to capture the Mac Mini market I'm guessing (however big that is).

    They're trying to create a larger small form-factor market. Like all those cool Shuttle small form factor cases that cost more than normal sized ones. The idea behind DTX is to provide a standard that can lead to mass-produced, cheap, commodity cases and motherboards just like we enjoy with ATX, and with the minimal amount of retooling of existing manufacturing. There is certainly a demand for smaller, cooler, quieter computers which don't need a lot of expandability (and other than a video card, with networking and sound built in, what do most people need at minimum?), and AMD wants to bring commodity economics into that market (so they can sell more chips to it).

    That's the point. Whether it will work, I don't know. The technical details aren't even out yet I don't think, and it remains to be seen if the industry accepts it.
  • by arivanov ( 12034 ) on Friday January 12, 2007 @05:45PM (#17581574) Homepage
    Intel's BTX has the same goal (besides a few others) but for Intel. Airflow and component positioning with respect to airflow is part of the spec. IIRC it does not account for having industrial heaters (AKA modern videocards) in the case, but this can be taken care of by amending the spec. It is clearly a good hardware spec and it fixes most ATX problems.

    miniITX has a similar goal in theory and it has the advantage of being nearly 100% backward compatible with ATX, but fails at making a good small factor PC as it does not specify an airflow across the MB. It is also severely limited in its expansion capabilities as it supports only 32bit PCI. Every single ITX MB out there has slightly different positioning of thermally active components and different airflow requirements. Why Via did not make the airflow and the thermals a part of the standard is beyond me as it often defeats all the advantages of having a quiet motherboard and multiple bad case designs give Via's otherwise excellent Eden based MBs an undeserved bad name. Classic example are older Cubid cases where the CPU and the disk overheat while the case emits hovercraft like noise because it has 3 fans to blow air from nowhere to nowhere. There was an even more horrible one which used a 1U rackmount PS with 40+db noise (forgot the manufacturer). And all this to power a 7W fanless CPU system...

    So now AMD has joined the fray. By the way, it is still mostly vapourware as there is nothing on their website. Personally, I would like to see a spec, especially the thermal,ps,expansion and airflow part of it. Without this it is not possible to compare it to the existing competition. AMD has plenty of experience aquired via Geode as well as a clear picture of the failures in the miniITX, nanoITX and BTX specs so it should be able to make a better one if it wants to. I somehow doubt it. It is more likely going to end up as another marketing initiative like Live!
  • by wikinerd ( 809585 ) on Friday January 12, 2007 @06:09PM (#17581956) Journal
    A very creative idea. But it isn't correct, I argue: We put the CPU inside the box because the box is a controlled environment. Many times I run computers with their boxes open, but only when I know that the external airflow is more than the internal airflow. However, having an industry standard with the CPU dependent on external airflow is not correct because people won't know how to properly place their computer, and thus this is a recipe for tech-ignorant people to burn their CPU. If you know what you are doing, then it is really better to have the CPU outside the box, but only if you are smart enough to set up your space in such a way where the CPU will receive more airflow externally (some people use a big room airfan or an aircondition blowing cool air directly against an open box).
  • by Jeff DeMaagd ( 2015 ) on Friday January 12, 2007 @06:36PM (#17582406) Homepage Journal
    I'm not convinced that there can be a standardized notebook form factor and still have a desirable computer, I think it might hurt innovation because it looks like the size of notebooks have been steadily shrinking, a form factor with all standardized parts would only allow you one size machine and be a fixed thickness.

    Battery types change, CPUs change, graphics change, add-in cards change and so on. There are differing ranges of CPUs, some consume 5 watts and others take 30 watts, the cooling system needs to be different, or rather, you can use a smaller and lighter cooling system for the 5 watt chips. If you have less powerful graphics, then you can scede space to somthing else, more powerful graphics require better cooling. Then you have different size screens, some people want 2-3lb notebooks, others don't mind 5-6 lb notebooks, some want cheap and don't mind thicker, others may want to pay for thinner devices, which requires stricter engineering. Tower computers generally have standardized internal parts because they are so large and you can give huge space margins for just about anything.
  • by aztracker1 ( 702135 ) on Friday January 12, 2007 @06:44PM (#17582554) Homepage
    For some reason this just conjures images of the Apple Cube from a few years ago in my head...

Machines have less problems. I'd like to be a machine. -- Andy Warhol

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