Abit's New Motherboard Lays On The Ports 673
An enthusiastic reader submits: "Possibly the most innovative motherboard to be released in years, Abit's MAX series intends to dive headfirst into the next generation of computing, leaving legacy ports behind in their dust.
Hardcoreware.net has the first full review of this board, which has support for 10 USB devices and 12 (YES, 12) IDE devices." I wish it had even more built-in USB ports, but six is a good start.
Funny.... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Funny.... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Funny.... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Funny.... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Funny.... (Score:3, Insightful)
"Here's the kicker.... with $5 worth of parts from Radio Shack, a $45 converter for each serial port you need, and an afternoon's ingenuity (even for a non-programming geek), you can still do something USEFUL with rs232c. Gotta love it. Try that with USB"
I don't want to spend $150 or whatever on a motherboard, and then spend another $50 for basic functionality. I'm sure Abit knows their target market, and I'm sure I'm not in it.
-Paul
USB absolutely uses DMA (Score:5, Informative)
Go check the USB host controller specs [usb.org] for yourself.
Wow! (Score:2, Funny)
Hope you enjoy IRQ-sharing...
- A.P.
Re:Wow! (Score:2)
I also recommend backups. Lots and lots of backups.
- A.P.
Re:Wow! (Score:2)
overkill imho, if you want that many drives, scsi is the way to go.
Depends what you want that many drives for... Besides, firewire is just as good, as far as usefulness vs. price.
Re:Wow! (Score:3, Insightful)
SCSI is also proven, and even faster.
"and a dime a dozen"
I am going to assume your talking about drives because you can get a UWide SCSI controller that supports 15 devices for about 25 bucks.
yes, SCSI disks are more expensive, but a Corvette is more expensive then a camero. you get what you pay for.
Your performance is really going to take a hit if you start loading up the IDE channels. The SCSI performance is not elusive, its proven. I have a cr-rw and a dvd player and 2 hardisks and I can play DVD, burn a cd, and run a compile in the background. My CPU usage hardly rises.
As far as RAID goes, you can RAID SCSI as well.
I suggest you try programming to both, then tell me which one is better.
but hey, you want to use broken SCSI.... i mean, IDE drive, no skin off my nose.
Re:Wow! (Score:5, Insightful)
I'll stick with IDE thanks (despite the hip elusive performance promise of SCSI)
A promise which it makes good on. IDE fulfills the "cheap", and, sometimes [3ware.com] the "good" of "cheap, good, and fast. Pick any two." SCSI fulfills "good" and "fast". You really do get what you pay for.
- A.P.
Re:Wow! (Score:2)
I have read of people hot swapping the IDE drive of an X-Box in order to have the X-Box unlock the drive and then swap it to their computer so they can hack it.
I also personally once had a CD-ROM drive that was so old (before there were good standards) if it was plugged in it would totally freeze my motherboard. Now I can't say if the drive was harmed or not but I had a bit of fun pluggin in the drive, freezing my computer, and then unplugging it and my computer unfroze, and the IDE controller on the motherboard wasn't hurt...
I don't know about warranties though... Who needs 'em?
Tim
Cost effective? Let's compare. (Score:4, Informative)
IDE
160GB x 12 = 1920GB (1.920TB) (Due to HD reporting, it'll actually be about 1.788TB for real.)
Disk System Price: $2400
Options?
SCSI
181.6 x 30 = 5448GB (5.448 TB) (Due to HD reporting, it'll actually be about 5.073TB for real.)
Disk System Price: $30,230 (With DC controller.)
Options?
Basically, it all REALLY depends on what you want to do with the system. That and take a look at any of the recent comparisons between SCSI and IDE drives (especially the aforementioned 120GB WesDig JB drives).
Re:Wow! (Score:2, Insightful)
Sweet! (Score:3, Funny)
Just in case the site gets /.ed (Score:2, Informative)
Never has the announcement of a motherboard created as much buzz around the PC hardware enthusiast community as the Abit "MAX" series of motherboards (something tells me they really wanted to call it "Matrix" instead). This line of boards, available on both Athlon and Pentium 4 platforms, is Abit's attempt at taking motherboards one step into the next generation, leaving things like legacy ports in its dust.
Windows 2000/XP/ME only. Win98 users need not apply.
How significant is this step though? If you've been paying attention to the hype surrounding these boards, you might think that it is a giant leap for motherboard kind. We're going to find out if this is the case, or if the MAX series is rather a baby step.
Giant leap or baby step, one thing is for certain, the AT7, Abit's first board in the MAX lineup, is definitely one of the most unique boards you'll see today. The AT7 uses the newest, fastest chipset for the Athlon platform, VIA's KT333. KT333 supports most of the newest features you'll need, such as native ATA/133 hard drives, onboard 5.1 audio with digital output, support for DDR333 SDRAM, and more. Abit takes that one step further, and adds a ton of integrated components intended for the next generation of computing. This includes both FireWire AND USB2.0 controller, a 4 channel ATA/133 RAID adapter (making for an unprecedented support of 10 ATA drives onboard), onboard 10/100 LAN, and MediaXP support. These would all be excellent useful addons for most boards, but that's where the MAX series is different - these aren't just addons for the motherboard, they actually replace all legacy parts on the board. Have a look!
This is definitely the most unique ATX rear panel I've ever seen on a consumer board. Notice the complete lack of legacy ports - this includes PS/2, ATA, serial, parallel, the whole shebang! Instead, we get 4 USB 1.1 ports, 2 USB 2.0 ports, a pair of IEEE1394 FireWire ports, full analog 5.1 audio out, digital audio out, and a LAN connector. This is what really sets the MAX boards apart. It is FINALLY time to get rid of that old Dexxa ball mouse that came with your first SVGA card. While you're at it, toss out that old Dot Matrix printer, and even the $13 keyboard with the ASDFJKL: keys completely rubbed off! Abit steps into a new era of computing with the MAX boards
There are some other noticeable differences in the board layout. First off, you are only going to get 3 PCI slots. This is because most of the peripherals that would use a PCI slot, such as the Ethernet adapter and sound card, are already onboard. Personally I've never used more than 3 PCI slots, and with this board, not a single slot it used. Yep, 3 should definitely be enough.
Despite having all the next-gen high performance capabilities, SCSI is still absent. This proves that while the AT7 is a very high end board, it is still targeted to the consumer market. Thanks, Abit!
Re:Just in case the site gets /.ed (Page 2) (Score:2, Informative)
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Got Storage?
Have a look at the vast number of ATA connectors - 6 channels! The yellow connectors are for the Highpoint ATA/133 RAID controller (which works perfectly fine in non-RAID mode). The two higher up on the board are the natively controlled IDE channels, also supporting ATA/133. This makes for an amazing 12 possible drives without the use of a single PCI slot!
Below the RAID channels you'll see a floppy adapter, one of the lingering legacy ports still found on this generation of MAX boards... I personally don't use a floppy drive anymore, but it will be necessary to use a floppy if you plan on installing Windows XP on a drive controlled by the Highpoint IDE. How ironic!
Besides what I've mentioned, and the fact that there are 4 RAM slots (up to three 1GB sticks may be used at a time with non-registered RAM, four if you are using registered), the layout is pretty much standard ATX fare. There are a couple nasty layout problems though, which I'll get to later in the review.
In addition to the 6 USB ports on the ATX rear panel (4 USB1.1 and 2 USB2.0), there are onboard connectors for 4 more USB 2.0 connectors, for a total of 10 devices! There is also an extra output for one more IEEE1394 port. The IEEE1394 controller used by the AT7 is capable of full speed 400mb/sec. So no matter what interface your advanced external peripherals are going to use, Abit definitely has you covered with the AT7.
Once again, Abit gets unique with the AT7, this time with the bundle. Included are a set of nifty black IDE cables (3 IDE cables, 1 floppy cable). This is a great way to have some nice looking custom IDE cables without worrying about using rounded cables (IDE cables are flat for a reason you know!). Also included are a set of cable tie-downs, to aide in keeping your PC nice and tidy inside. This is a great little bundle for a motherboard! A custom ATX rear panel plate is also included of course; the one that came with your case is now officially outdated. You also get one PCI plate USB adapter, to be used on one of the USB2.0 outputs on the motherboard. I would have liked to see a pair of these, in addition to another firewire adapter, since the board supports it. Unfortunately, you're going to have to get your own this time.
MediaXP
One significant absence in our package (I believe Abit is going to make it an option for some retail packages) is a MediaXP panel! MediaXP is one of the great steps forward with the MAX series. Basically, it adds integrated support for various portable media, including Smart Media, Compact Flash, and even Sony's Memory Stick. MediaXP also includes headphone and microphone jacks, SPDIF ports, and 2 USB ports! It is expected that most cases will start using MediaXP panels, rather than their own Mickey Mouse panels you see now. It is already beginning to look like the MAX is taking the PC a step in the right direction...
Re:Just in case the site gets /.ed (Score:3, Insightful)
Ouch. I was loving this board until I read that. I hate integrated components. If they die, or if something faster/cooler/better comes out that doesn't leave me enough slots to upgrade, so I have to replace the motherboard. Sorry Abit, you lost my business right there.
Re:Just in case the site gets /.ed (Score:3, Redundant)
Let's say you put in an Audigy in place of on-board sound.
And a PCI gigabit Ethernet NIC instead of the on-board 10/100.
And a GeForce4 in the AGP 4x slot.
You still have 10 USB ports, two firewire ports, 6 IDE headers (for 12 devices). You can put anything you want in that final PCI slot. Unless you're building a server or a videa-editing center with multiple PCI cards, you're going to be hard pressed to find a way to obsolete this board in the next 48 months.
Re:Just in case the site gets /.ed (Score:2)
just ten more seconds and i would have finished loading the last page. f*ing slashdotters
anyway, here's page nine for those of you who only got to page 8. this is the "gripes"/shortcomings page. maybe someone can post pg. 10
--
The Sound Card
Abit chose to use VIA's next gen onboard 5.1 sound card, dubbed "Avance". It looks good on paper, being a 5.1 AC97 sound chip, with digital capabilities. Abit certainly makes use of some of the digital capabilities by putting a TOSlink Out adapter on the board, allowing you to make a digital connection to an external decoder for movies, or to a digital set of speakers. TOSlink In looks like it might be an option, but wasn't on our board.
I have noticed that more and more board manufacturers are shying away from VIA's onboard sound as their integrated option, and going for third party options such as those by C-Media or even Creative Labs. There may be many reasons for this, and I think I may have found a few of them...
First off, let's have a quick look at performance, using ZD's Audio WinBench 99. We are only looking at the 44 kHz tests, and only those using 32 hardware voices; basically the most demanding situations possible.
Test A - DirectSound 44.1 kHz, 16 bit, Static, 32 Voices
Test B - DirectSound 44.1 kHz, 16 bit, Streaming, 32 Voices
Test C - DirectSound 3D 44.1 kHz, 16 bit, Static, 32 Voices
Test D - DirectSound 3D 44.1 kHz, 16 bit, Streaming, 32 Voices
Remember on this test, Lower = better. Now I am not going to go nuts and say this will give seriously hinder your performance, in fact I went through some game benchmarks with sound turned off and on, and performance differences were negligible. However it is worth noting that in the most stressful situations, the VIA onboard sound isn't quite up to the task compared to a solution like C-Media, which Shuttle has recently switched to.
One more nasty issue I have with the sound card regards, I think, the drivers. During testing, we used a Philips MMS306 5.1 speaker set. We connected the speakers to the jacks just like on any sound card, and the sounds seemed to be coming from the wrong speakers... I used the alternate setting, using Line-In for the Centre/Woofer channel, and Line-Out for the Rear channels, and everything worked fine. It seems kind of silly that Abit ditched a parallel port to make room for some speaker outputs that are completely useless.
The Layout
If you have a keen eye, you might have noticed a glaring issue with the layout design of the board... I saved this for the rant page...
That's right, the 'clip' end, where you would normally try to install the heatsink, is on the TOP of the board. When installed in a regular sized case, such as 17" or 18", it will likely be impossible to install or uninstall a heatsink - you will need to take the motherboard right out of the case if you don't have a full removable tray!
I have seen a few boards do this before, and it always seems to be a mistake... I have no idea why Abit would consciously choose to design their board like this - it seems to go right against their usual support for the hardware community...
If your other eye is just as keen as the first one, perhaps you noticed this:
That's right, the memory slots are extremely close to the AGP slot, making ram installation pretty difficult with a video card installed. This is a very minor concern however, and I am not going to make much noise about this. After all, you could easily use DIMM3 and/or DIMM4 if you only have one or two stick of memory (of course even these will likely be blocked by a GeForce 4 Ti4400 or Ti4600, but then again, most memory slots will be in all likelihood). Also, most boards with 4 DIMMs tend to have this problem. It may be worth mentioning that the Shuttle AK35GTR doesn't have this problem though...
With those rather minor gripes out of the way, let's get to the final conclusion!
Re:Just in case the site gets /.ed (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Just in case the site gets /.ed (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Just in case the site gets /.ed (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Just in case the site gets /.ed (Score:2)
The abit website (Score:5, Informative)
....more pics can be found here... (Score:2, Interesting)
Wow 12 IDE's (Score:2, Funny)
And the sound of a 747 taking of comes @ no extra charge!
Re:Wow 12 IDE's (Score:2)
Yup, and with an Athlon and a GeForce in there too, it can double as a weenie roaster.
Re:Wow 12 IDE's (Score:3, Funny)
It's the perfect flight simulator box! Not only are the engine sounds simulated, but the engine exhaust heat is simulated too!
very odd... (Score:2)
as for IDE, i thought they were getting rid of legacy support?!
this seems worthless to me. in fact, i think i'll go get another thunder K7 on pricewatch just to show abit where they should be heading.
Re:very odd... (Score:2)
As well, does the Thunder K7 have support for USB 2.0? Obviously, you can add a card, but having all the ports for the latest and greatest is what this MB is about. Also, for someone like me, having that many USB ports is great. It means that I don't have to buy a USB hub or any extra parts or cards or anything. Every USB device I own, 1.1 or 2.0, will have its own spot on the motherboard, instead of the nice mixture of cards and hubs I have now. More than likely, this is the board that I'll use in my next system.
Stupid wast of space (Score:2)
More firewire ports would be better. I've never seen a firewire hub, and if they are out there, they're probably expensive.
More ports! More ports! (Score:2)
Re:Stupid wast of space (Score:2)
ABIT's Media Sheet (Score:3, Informative)
ABIT MAX Media Sheet [abit.com.tw]
Terabyte system for the masses? (Score:5, Interesting)
Not that you would _want_ to put 8 drives in a RAID 0 array. The chances of failure and total data loss are just too high. But it's cool that you can.
12 friggin' IDE channels. The mind boggles. Perhaps I can finally use up all the bays in my full-size tower. It looks mighty pathetic with just my CDRW and a floppy.
Re:Terabyte system for the masses? (Score:2)
If you are serious about buying 12 drives to make a datacenter or a half-decent raid, unless you go with old drives or buy a buttload of 20-40gigs for next to nothing, You'd probably have the budget to get a REAL raid card that does decent raid5 performance like a 3Ware 7810 (8 channels, 64 bits, 48bits LBA, all the goodies plus not limited to standard PCI 33mhz/32bits speed) And if you're a bit richer, maybe a 7850 (more cache for raid 5 performance), else there's always cheaper 6810 boards that run on a standard PCI bus, either way, it'll give you FAR better performance than this board.
Of course, if it's to brag that your board can take 12 drives and want to connect your mom's 40megs and the brother's older 1gig drive and so on... that's another story
Re:Terabyte system for the masses? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Terabyte system for the masses? (Score:3, Informative)
Before anyone decides to invest heavily in a terabyte+ array thinking they'll access it as a single logical device, I recommend investing some time reading the linux kernel mailing list, or do similar reading for the OS of choice. Along with some friends, I've spent a lot of time looking at these issues lately, and there are a lot of "gotchas" for unwary users (which almost included us).
-Paul Komarek
Re:Terabyte system for the masses? (Score:3, Funny)
No wonder I can't get my 486sx/25 w/ 16mb of ram and a 160mb HDD to run this crazy Linux!!!
3 PCI? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:3 PCI? (Score:2)
Not THAT many people need dual nic's, most just connect dirrect or to a hub or DSL router.
I run out of slots by having: SCSII controller, two extra video cards (three monitors).
So yeah, even if they just added one more it would probably be nice, there's always more stuff to plug in that's cool
Re:3 PCI? (Score:2)
I've got an Abit NV7-133R sitting in the box that comes with what is probably the same audio setup they talk about, sitting here by my desk. I'm still waiting for the case, so admittedly I have not listened to it, but if it is as I'm told it is, you won't complain. Mine has optical input and output, minijacks for mic and line-in and one each for front left/right, rear left/right, and center channel/subwoofer. I'm going to have to buy another set of speakers, because my SB Live Value card only does front/rear left/right, so I don't have a center channel. So you're down to your TV Card.
Even though I'd rather not use their drivers for the sound card, I still hope your TV card's this: Creative's Video Blaster Digital VCR [creative.com]
That TV card encodes mpeg-2 in real time, and you can schedule record times. I bought one of those and a couple of 80gb HDs I'm going to stipe together--the board's got built-in RAID via HighPoint HPT372! (And the thing was only $137 w/second day air!). I figure at 1.1mbps, I can fit over 300 hours of TV shows. Or if I figure out a way to convert to divx via a batch file, I might pull 500 hours. And then there're CDs.
Did you ever just want to have your own library of TV at your fingertips? South Park, Saturday Night Live, Movies, MST3k(saturday mornings!!), MTV, a complete season of Broncos Football, whatever flips your cookie. And it's not even unethical. Total cost to me: $300 for TV card and HDs, plus CDRs, which are cheeeep.
I'm building the full system for $900, Monitor and all, and it's got an Athlon XP 1800+ and GF2 video. while I could easily pay more for things such as an Extigy, it's not worth so much more money when these new motherboards are so good.
I like my peripherals, thanks. (Score:4, Insightful)
It is FINALLY time to get rid of that old mouse... While you're at it, toss out that old Dot Matrix printer, and even the $13 keyboard with the ASDFJKL: keys completely rubbed off!
Ya know, I really like my peripherals. I have a great Gateway Programmable keyboard that has built-in hardware macros (so it's not OS dependant) and a slick logitech trackball that fits my hand well. My printer is pretty crummy, but it has this great ability to turn text into physical paper, which is all I need.
Having a motherboard which boasts of the ability to make me buy new hardware isn't quite what I'm looking for.
Sam
Re:I like my peripherals, thanks. (Score:3, Interesting)
Well, I doubt it's really aimed at people with old peripherals. It's intended for new machines with new everything.
And you can't really blame them for trying to cut off old technologies... someone had to start doing it, or we'd be using old standards forever. Remember the old, big, round keyboard adaptor? (I dont even remember what it was called.) If manufacturers never said "OK, enoughs enough, PS/2 or the highway from now on" we'd still be stuck with that crap. You got to make sacrifices if you want progress.
Buy a hub (Score:2)
Am I the only one with so many wires connected to their PC that it looks like a plate of spaghetti? 4 ports is more than enough on the computer after that I found it's better to use a hub. I have one on the other desk where my printer and scanner are and one by the keyboard for my MP3 player and Digital Camera.
No PS/2 keyboard and mouse? no *way* (Score:2)
And let's not even talk about my laserjet printer (which works *great* but is, obviously, parallel).
And what's the deal with no gameport connector (for MIDI)? Why should I pay twice for the onboard sound and for a creative card to hook up my MIDI gear? Not to mention some people that have hundreds of $$ invested in non-USB HOTAS setups.
I don't like backwards compatibility at all costs, and I like the idea of having some firewire ports and some extra USB ones (even if IMHO USB hubs are a much better idea, I can connect/disconnect things on my desk instead of having to crawl behind the computer) but removing things like keyboard/mouse connectors and parallel ports goes really too far.
Re:No PS/2 keyboard and mouse? no *way* (Score:5, Interesting)
Because USB does everything PS/2 does in a more flexable way. It's nice to be able to hook the mouse into my keyboard or the back of the computer or even into a USB hub. Computer makers like USB because it eliminates the need to color-code everything. With PS/2, the tech on the phone always has to think, "did this moron hook the keyboard into the mouse port?"
mahgod! 12 ide channels! (Score:2)
Thankfully I work with FibreChannel and SCSI at work... but with 12 IDE channels on a single board, I think I could "suffer" with IDE!!!! Schweet!
Linux? (Score:5, Insightful)
Removing all legacy ports seems a bit silly, to me; it takes so little to provide serial and parallel ports, they're usually integrated into some other multi-purpose I/O chip these days anyway. Sure, don't bother to have the full port on the mother board (just hook up a ribbon cable to some pins, if you need to break out the port), and allow people to disable it. But completely removing it would limit it's utility to some folks. I picked up a little motherboard recently which had no ports mounted, but everything (VGA, serial, parallel, game, sound, etc.) could be hooked up via ribbon cable to a little breakout connector. Saved a lot of space on the motherboard, but still gave you the functionality you might need.
(In fact, a lot of the same folks who would get excited about the built-in raid, are the same folks who still need serial ports to talk to routers and switches and stuff.)
Re:Linux? (Score:2)
What I'm wondering about is the onboard video, sound, and ethernet. If that all works with Linux, this thing might be in my next box (of course, that could be a while, I'm still happy with my Athlon 700).
Re:Linux? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Linux? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Linux? (Score:3, Insightful)
And...a lot of (say, more than 50% for sure) people prefer these treat-you-as-an-idiot style computers - because they ARE idiot, with respect to computers.
I believe Abit will continue to make excellent motherboards for the rest of us. I won't be worrying too much.
The venerable Mac (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:The venerable Mac (Score:2)
I have one of those.. it requires a special mousepad to be used with it, and will only work on that mouse pad and nothing else. The MS optical mouse works on that, a normal mouse pad, a desk, your face, the cat, whatever you want. They are similar, but they are not the same. The MS optical mouse is much more useful and works better.
Apple has been doing this for yeats? (Score:2, Insightful)
No ps2 ports - for the love of god.... (Score:2)
No 1000BaseTX, only 3 PCI (Score:2)
Bzzzrt.
I still need more than 3PCI slots, even with the cool I/O on this mobo.
I need:
HiPix Card (HD Tuner Card)
Gig Ethernet (You try shuffling 16GB movies in HD around)
SCSI (DDS-4 for offline storage of said HD movies)
And it's full. No possibility of adding the next cool thing. I'd have to use an AIW if I wanted to use dScaler for DVDs, etc. etc.
Seems like omitting SCSI and GigE were severe oversights.
-Z
USB Power limits? (Score:4, Interesting)
I have a USB modem (Alcatel Speedtouch) that consumes 500mA of power on one of my 2 USB ports. The limit of power that can be supplied through the USB is... 500mA. As a result, I can't run any extra USB devices on my system without an externally powered hub.
I am no expert on USB power consumption but might this not mean that having so many USB ports might not be so useful if not enough power can be supplied?
Re:USB Power limits? (Score:3, Interesting)
However, it's not very intuitive which port goes to which bus, but I'll bet that each set of ports is it's own bus atleast.
10 USB devices, hrm. (Score:3, Interesting)
Most people won't use more then four or five USB devices. Whats really cool here is the firewire.
Comment removed (Score:4, Funny)
No parallel port (Score:3, Interesting)
I suppose not buy it, but still. . .
How about a BIOS revolution? (Score:5, Insightful)
Now, how about updating the bios, so that ALL the old ports are emulated? To the extent that DOS 5.0 will still install from scratch and run?
Having a USB device is nice, but HARDWARE IS HARDWARE. They should function all by themselves with only the BIOS (think "safe mode"), and not only when some OS-supplied drivers are run.
How else do people fix things when the drivers break?
USB Mice (Score:3, Interesting)
Aimed at the consumer market (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Makes you wonder (Score:5, Insightful)
I'd love it. Every time I buy more hard drive space, I have to toss another drive from my box (dvd-rom + cdrw + 2 hd's). I'm working on a nice little pile, currently 10 and 20gb drives at the top. That kind of space is nothing to sniff at. It'd be nice to just pop them in, it's the space I want, not the marginal increase in access time or transfer rate.
SCSI costs more, always has, always will. I shouldn't need to spend the extra $hundreds just to be able to use a few drives at once, hence the need for boards like this. Of course, the mobo probably costs a small fortune, but if a LOT were like this, then my point would make more sense
Re:Makes you wonder (Score:5, Insightful)
"marginal increase in access time or transfer rate. "
the difference between the newest IDE and the newest SCSI is far more then marginal. And God help you if you want to access more then 2 devices at a time.
If you don't believe me, go ahead and compare a 3.9 ms SCSI drive to a 3.9ms IDE drive..oh wait, they don't exist.
As someone who has written low levely IDE and SCSI code, I can assure there are many benifits with SCSI then the access time.
The cosr isn't that much higher, and if there were a lot of mobos manufactured with SCSI, there would be no price difference.
Re:Makes you wonder (Score:3, Informative)
Check out pricewatch, here's a sample:
~40 gig
Scsi: $124
IDE: $54
~80 gig
scsi: $443
IDE: $90
160 gig IDE: $197
$180 gig SCSI: $999
Nope, not much price difference there.
I want a lot of storage space, so I bought a mobo with onboard raid. This is not so that I can quickly access a large amount of information, but so that I have somewhere to store all kinds of crap (MP3's, etc).
I also use the extra IDE slots so that I can have more stuff in there (DVD rom, cd-jutebox, CD-RW, windows drive, BSD drive, etc).
I'm not going for speed, I'm going for bulk. So yeah, I could upgrade to SCSI. I'd spend a crap-load of money and not really gain anything, since I don't do anything that is IO heavy. Everything I do is CPU/Memory heavy. SCSI doesn't help me there.
SCSI has its place, but I don't need it. I'm happy with my ability to stick a bunch of IDE drives into my computer and play with it like that. I have a board with 4 IDE channels, 2 1/2 of which I use. I don't need SCSI.
Re:Makes you wonder (Score:2)
Re:Makes you wonder (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Makes you wonder (Score:2)
Re:Makes you wonder (Score:3, Interesting)
According to the cut and paste job above ( Most importantly, IDE RAID...which rocks. With IDE drives, RAID lives up to it's name: Redundant Array of Inexpensive Disks. True, no hot swap, and they're not as fast as SCSI, but for a consumer board (and even non-mission-critical low-end servers), IDE-RAID is the way to go.
Then, there's the advantage of not having to put an older ATA/66 drive on the same channel as an ATA/133 drive. Or, to be able to split up your CD-ROM drive and your CD-RW to make disc to disc copying faster and more reliable. Or, put your swap drive on a different channel (and RAID it!) to give it more bandwidth.
I can think of many more uses for 5 IDE channels (assuming 2 ports to a channel) than I can for 6 USB ports (wouldn't a USB hub be just as effective), or for 2 Firewire ports (let's see...DV camera, and...uh...)
Re:Makes you wonder (Score:2)
Re:Makes you wonder (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Huh? (Score:2)
Re:Huh? (Score:2)
Re:Huh? (Score:2)
I thinks it actually somthing like 127 or 255 devices per USB port. It's hard to imagine what you'd do with that many devices sharing 11Mbps though...
Re:You too, idiot. (Score:2)
+1 - Zing!
Re:Completely useless (Score:5, Insightful)
Think of how much more stable the motherboards would be if there were less chips present and less IRQs being shared. Oh yeah, in theory PCI is supposed to share IRQs with no problem, but that doesn't mean it actually works out that way in practice.
There wouldn't be much cost savings associated with getting rid of these functions, but spending $5 or $10 less on a product is always nice.
And, no, sometimes you can't just turn these features off in the BIOS. Even worse, sometimes there's no way to reclaim the IRQs that are lost due to integrated functions! Check out some of the really bad implementations out there. It's a nightmare trying to make those poorly designed boards work. Abit is not known for their stability or great design, so I don't have much faith in this motherboard. Even if Asus made a board like this, I would have some trouble trusting it.
Getting rid of the PS/2 ports is just asinine. They are an industry standard. USB sucks. PS/2 works.
Re:Completely useless (Score:2)
One thing you are right about, built-in components cost a lot of money. More than just 5 or 10 dollars. Look at high end dual proc boards; many times the only difference between them is a nice builting SCSI raid card and $100.
USB doesn't suck, it's more flexible. It just requires more software support and it seems the Linux USB support isn't quite *there* yet.
Re:Completely useless (Score:2)
Just who do you expect is buying new motherboards? People hoping to drop in a replacement for the dead mobo in their XT? If you're happy with legacy ports and busses, nobody is forcing you to upgrade. For me, the next time I build a PC, I'd rather not have interrupts and physical space taken up by interfaces I haven't used in at least three years.
Re:Completely useless (Score:5, Insightful)
I used to do that. Then I decided that I'd rather not have to beat my head against a wall mucking with IRQ conflicts and port addresses to save $10.
USB keyboards are dirt cheap. USB mice are dirt cheap. If you're shelling out for a new system in the first place, replacing keyboards and mice are a negligeable cost (and you'd want new ones regardless, so that you can still keep the old machine active).
Graphics-wise, I'd have to be paid a lot of money to go back to using a graphics card obsolete enough to be ISA, even if all I'm doing is running a 2D desktop. Network-wise, PCI network cards are *almost* as dirt-cheap as your keyboard and mouse.
In summary: If you're buying a new motherboard at all, you can afford to upgrade the peripherals.
Re:Completely useless (Score:2)
I had to re-learn how to talk when I was 6, that screwed up my spelling forever.
Re:Completely useless (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Completely useless (Score:2, Redundant)
Re:Completely useless (Score:5, Funny)
So, why exactly are you not only reading, but also posting, to Slashdot?
Re:Completely useless (Score:2)
Poverty ain't the issue. It's the fact that any kid can go down to the local store and buy the latest shit every week. That's fucking lame. Get an old box working well, and that's fucking cool.
Re:Completely useless (Score:5, Funny)
Actually, true geeks design their own hardware from the circuit level up.
Re:Completely useless (Score:2)
Mod parent up you wankers
Re:Completely useless (Score:2)
A true geek plays quake, buys clothing from think geek, hangs out at
What you are sir, is a nerd.
be proud, you actually know something about technology.
It's sad that the term geek has lost all meaning, but thats what happens when something becomes "hip"
Re:Completely useless (Score:2)
Re:Stability (Score:2)
Re:IEE 1394 baby! (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Not so many ports... (Score:2)
Well the USB 2.0 ports are backwards compatible and the mouse can and should be chained from the keyboad so yes you have a lot of free ports.
Most keyboards have two extra ports I use one for my mouse and one for my camera.
As for the pci slots the onboard sound looks fine to me.
It has optical ins for god sakes. What more do you want?
It also has an onboard nic card and that saves you another slot.
Re:Not so many ports... (Score:2)
I don't know why, it doesn't have to be. My SOYO DRAGON onboard sounds sucks hind tit.
at least onboard nics have been getting better.
Re:USB Keyboard. (Score:2)
I even mapped all of the new "internet" keys on the top of my keyboard, and have a few of the set for quick access to a terminal.
Re:I think they're smoking ABIT of crack over ther (Score:2)
Hell, I was even using a usb mouse _before_ the 2.4 series.
Re:How about more firewire ports! (Score:2)
Considering that USB2.0 is a completely different ball park, which I know nothing about. BTW before people start saying that USB2.0 will kill firewire, remember that it is probably not going to appear in a major market anytime soon: Digital Video Cameras. Sony pretty much leads the pack in this, and the high end stuff has had them for a while (actually, before apple started the whole imovie thing).
Still astonished that I would ever hear a pc review magazine say that 3 pci slots is not enough (after hearing them lambast apple for making machines with only 3. BTW, they have 4, 64bit, 33mhz pci slots now)