More on BTX Motherboards 260
venger writes "Anandtech has an article on the new standard of cases and motherboards that is soon to be released. Looks like they are trying to cater for the increase in heat devices are now producing while keeping the noise levels down!" We mentioned BTX earlier.
you use cases? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:you use cases? (Score:3, Funny)
Jason
ProfQuotes [profquotes.com]
Re:you use cases? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:you use cases? (Score:3, Interesting)
Works well, a lil noisey, but easy to test stuff on!
Re:you use cases? (Score:3)
Re:you use cases? (Score:5, Funny)
You use boards? Weak.
I solder the chips together, directly. Barefoot. Everyday. 30 Miles. In the snow. With a knife in my thigh. And I like it.
Re:you use cases? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:you use cases? (Score:2)
Re:you use cases? (Score:2)
The future is oversized desks. I've got four boards on the back of this desk behind the monitors and I'm building a new super triple decker monster upstairs that will have room to grow. Fill up a sixteen port switch and a stack of KVMS. Yum.
Cases are so 90s, let's talk racks.
the real question (Score:2, Informative)
Since dust can be a problem (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Since dust can be a problem (Score:2)
Dust is never really a problem, until you put in a filtration system.
Do you want a filter maintenance schedule on your stereo?
Re:Since dust can be a problem (Score:3, Informative)
You have to periodically clean your filters anyway, so you might as well just dust your system with compressed air every now and then. Then you don't have to worry about reduced airflow.
The thing I've noticed about the filter on my case is that it picks up large particles, but the small stuff still ge
Re:Since dust can be a problem (Score:3, Interesting)
I would be willing to bet that the #1 reason, is that it seriously impeeds airflow.
I have a couple 80mm filters covering my intake fans, which limits air intake, unfortunately. So, just to prevent some ammount of junk entering your system, you have to have fans that are significantly more powerful, meaning more noise.
Besides that, I'm sure the material I used will not do a great job filtering out all dust, so an even more restrictive filter would be needed. Not to ment
Nice but.. (Score:4, Interesting)
Will these cases/board/supplies work with 64 bit CPUs or are those another ball of wax? Apple's got their 64 bit desktop machines for sale already, any i386 ones I've seen are rack mounted or sold as "big ass servers" meaning "you canna build yer own cheap, laddy"
Are you ashamed of your 64-bit CPU?! (Score:2, Funny)
Why would you want to place your brand new 64-bit CPU powermonster in a case that hides its true power? Would you muffle a fearsome V8 so that you cannot push the pedal to the metal at 2 PM and wake all your neighbours so that they can watch in awe as you and your car disappear into the horizon!
How would your friends know that you have something special in that case unless they hear, no, scratch that, feel the power?
Re:Are you ashamed of your 64-bit CPU?! (Score:2)
Re:Nice but.. (Score:2)
nVidia is already shipping nForce3 motherboards for the Athlon64 CPUs. They are standard-sized ATX boards.
it's great, improved layout.. three models to pick (Score:5, Funny)
'graphics will use a x16 PCI Express implementation that offers 8GB/s of bandwidth. '
will it be able to handle doom 3?
pm
Re:it's great, improved layout.. three models to p (Score:2)
Well, is that 8 Gigabytes, or 8 Gibibytes? And which one is better?
Big Water (Score:5, Funny)
Ice Sculpture case (Score:2)
I see a pattern developing !! (Score:5, Funny)
Nothing to do now but sit back and wait for the checks to arrive
Re:I see a pattern developing !! (Score:5, Interesting)
BTX.com - BTX Technologies (A/V equipment)
CTX.com - CTX Corporation (down, but I think they're a monitor company)
DTX.com - DTx (an embedded computer manufacturer)
ETX.com - ETX (down)
FTX.com - Drug portal
GTX.com - GTX Corporation (CAD software)
HTX.com - Marksmen (down)
ITX.com - ITX Design (web design/hosting)
JTX.com - Farrier Marine (boat manufacturer - second server for downloads)
There's the first ten from A, so you'll need to be quick if you want one...
Re:I see a pattern developing !! (Score:2)
Maybe the hardware vendors should switch to ETLAs.
why? (Score:5, Insightful)
Gamers, like usual, will be the biggest target for BTX. They are the only ones that will need the higher bandwidth bus for gfx and the faster cpus.
Re:why? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:why? (Score:2)
Of course a new CPU, why do you think they're changing the sockets all the time =)
Re:why? (Score:5, Interesting)
Gamers won't care much about BTX unless there is a killer video card that will only be released in PCI Express form factor. At least initially.
Re:why? (Score:2)
Re:why? (Score:2)
Re:why? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:why? (Score:2)
True enough - but BTX is also good news for people who don't buy top-of-the-line equipment, as the adoption of newer standards and equipment tends to drive down the prices of older technology. :) Maybe once BTX becomes more widespread, I'll finally upgrade my system from its present 750MHz Duron and 384MB RAM.
Re:why? (Score:2)
You crack me up dude. Keep it kicking with your 486 and MacIIci's!
Maybe someone knows (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Maybe someone knows (Score:3, Informative)
From an Intel developer network page.
Desktop Platforms with PCI Express Architecture will be designed to deliver highest performance in video, graphics, multimedia and other sophisticated applications. PCI Express architecture provides a high performance graphics infrastructure for Desktop Platforms doubling the capability of existing AGP8x designs with transfer rates of 4.0 Gigabytes per second over a x16 PCI Express lane for graph
Re:Maybe someone knows (Score:2)
Re:Maybe someone knows (Score:5, Informative)
The AGP 8x spec has a max bandwidth of 2.1GB/s, while PCI Express x16 has a bandwidth of 8 GB/s. It might be theoretically possible to create a AGP 32x spec (although I doubt it), but the obvious question would be why?
. But isn't the point of AGP that it allows you to set an arperture and use some of the system RAM as an extension of the memory on the graphics card?
No, the point of AGP was to give a single slot increased bandwidth that's needed for modern graphics cards. PCI just isn't fast enough. Intel wrote into the spec that you could get away with sharing main memory as video memory in order to reduce system costs, but in practice nobody does this except for the absolute bottom tier PCs. The performance hit is huge.
wont AGP still be better?
No. Although it's questionable that PCI-X will really provide any speed increases. AGP 8x has a negligible speed improvement over AGP 2x, and quadrupling the bandwidth again isn't likely to do much either. I'm pretty sure PCI-X can still do the main memory-as-video memory trick, but there's really no need or desire to do so. If your card doesn't have enough memory to hold the textures then you're going to have a massive speed hit when you need to get them from memory. In practice this speed hit is so severe that the amount of bandwidth has relatively little impact on things -- it's the latency that kills.
Re:Maybe someone knows (Score:4, Informative)
pci-x has been around a while
Re:Maybe someone knows (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Maybe someone knows (Score:3, Informative)
The big bottleneck on PC graphics for years and years was the bus speed. When you are doing 2-D graphics, in essence you have to copy your graphic data out, frame by frame, to the display memory. The system bus was always the bottleneck here. To animate a 320x200 screen at 30 frames per second, you have to push out about 2 megabytes per second. 640x480 is four times that; 1024x768 takes about 24 megs per seco
Re:Maybe someone knows (Score:2)
Re:Maybe someone knows (Score:2)
I'll be first in line to buy one of these when they become availabl
Re:Maybe someone knows (Score:2)
It's a big win on laptops though, where space is at a premium.
Re:Maybe someone knows (Score:2)
I think PCI-X is much like a merging of AGP concepts and adding clocks and I think an optional wider & faster data path. What is nice is that from what I've r
64 bit x86 from Intel? (Score:4, Interesting)
There is a story floating on the net that this is not so. However it is likely that it for axtra bit in and out IE maybe the Secret Yamhill project is still alive and if not kicking at least not dead.
Yamhill is if you remember the Intel backup solution for 64bit using the AMD Opteron model.
Link (Score:2)
Re:64 bit x86 from Intel? (Score:2)
Best case design....period. (Score:4, Interesting)
However, this G5 I am looking at again establishes Apple as the premiere company for case design. The case itself is aluminum for efficient transfer of heat and the multiple zone design with multiple low speed fans is absolutely the way to go until optical computing hits it's stride. All bits of the case are easy to access and they are absolutely quiet.
Looking at the BTX cases, I see nothing impressive when it comes to cooling or quiet other than perhaps the cool circular heat sink.
Re:Best case design....period. (Score:2)
Re:Best case design....period. (Score:2)
Having only two internal hard drive slots is also limiting. Heck, I know one video guy that puts three drives in a system - one system drive and two data drives in a stripe. Can't do that here.
I like the G5 systems, but they seem too limited i
Re:Best case design....period. (Score:2)
Re:Best case design....period. (Score:2)
Except that it's been proven that aluminum vs steel case makes absolutely no difference as far as heat transfer is concerned. There's no thermal coupling between the case and the hot components.
multiple low speed fans
Which good PC cases have had for 5+ years.
All bits of the case are easy to access and they are absolutely quiet.
Again, in the PC world for 5+ years. It's not my fault you bought crappy cases all the time.
Looking at the BTX ca
Re:Best case design....period. (Score:4, Informative)
Oh, the case also has rubber
grommets on the hard drive mount points to deaden any noise the HD's may make. And the fans are mounted with rubber-like screws to deaden any noise that may be caused by the fan vibrating against the case.
Re:Best case design....period. (Score:2)
If you know what you're doing, you don't have to remove a hard drive to image it.
B&W (Score:2)
Unlatch door (pull up and pull out)
Unscrew one retaining screw
Slide drive out and up
And as for re-imaging... why are they removing the drives?
Macs support boot across the net, boot across Firewire, and boot across scsi...
Meaning you boot off another image, clone/reimage the drive, then reboot off the internal drive.
Balanced Technology eXtended?!? (Score:2)
Re:Balanced Technology eXtended?!? (Score:2)
AT in "Advanced Technology" comes from IBM AT, ie the name for the 286 - not so advanced now
ATA being the hard drive "attachment" for the above AT computer.
IDE is called IDE because before IDE the hard drive controller was on a seperate card.
PCI was an all new one I guess, so I'ill grant you that one
ATX meant AT eXtended, but BTX?! Who do I complain to
Re:Balanced Technology eXtended?!? (Score:2)
The first thing they tried was sort of like HAL in 2001:
I - 1 = H
B - 1 = A
M - 1 = L
So IBM - 1 = HAL.
They tried adding 1 to ATX and got this:
A + 1 = B
T + 1 = U
X + 1 = Y
So ATX + 1 = BUY
Since this was just a way to get the proles to spend money on an non-original design that will be obsoleted (next gen thermal loads, 15000 rpm hds, etc), calling it BUY was too obvious.
I'm gonna have a hard time programming my AVRs... (Score:4, Interesting)
From article: The move to BTX will also bring us closer to a fully legacy-free PC, with PS/2, serial and parallel ports already beginning to disappear from prototype motherboards.
Re:I'm gonna have a hard time programming my AVRs. (Score:2)
Re:I'm gonna have a hard time programming my AVRs. (Score:2)
Re:I'm gonna have a hard time programming my AVRs. (Score:4, Insightful)
And a helluva lot of other legacy stuff.
But, you know, a lot of those old machines were designed very conservatively. I even have some old 286 running, and will continue to run them until they no longer function. Don't replace your legacy system... kinda like replacing your old SUV with the latest sports car should the bobbling heads start advocating it. Sure, the later one may be faster, but the old SUV will tote the kids.
In a pinch, a USB to serial converter will probably work. If its works, great, otherwise, its another case of having to do yesterday's work all over again, instead of doing today's work. Remember, you already got paid for yesterday's work... you don't get paid again for doing it again.
I did yesterday's work yesterday. I built my foundation years ago. Today, I use it. Kinda like years ago I put copper pipe in the house because I did not wanna mess with it ever again. I pour concrete foundations, because I know the wood one, albeit cheaper, will rot, and force me to do all my work over again. Some people have the money to do yesterday's work over and over and over again. Sure, they have the latest foundation in the neighborhood. But even I wonder how they economically justify such a paradigm.
Once I invest in a good solid foundation, I intend to use it for the lifetime I designed it for. Its not like I wanna design the Grand Coulee Dam, and demolish it every couple of years because someone came up with a different mix of concrete... Once I go through the trouble of building the thing, I intend it to perform its intended function from then on, usually indefinitely. Kinda like those Romans did things, where their aqueducts and roads still function as originally designed to this day.
I really take no thrill in developing the capability to sign checks to pay others to do the work... I take great pride in having the capability to do it. ( And also take comfort in knowing how my stuff works, as well as what to do if it doenn't work the way I want it to work. I think almost all Open-Source guys have this same mental picture. )
Great (Score:2)
So now I'll have to buy expansion cards (and waste slots) to use my IBM Model M, UPS comms cable, modem and printer?
Re:Great (Score:2)
All those can go on your linux server which is always the hand me down.
If you really must plug in an old device do not use expansion cards, thats ineficient, and frankly I hate that. Use a usb port replicator, thats what they were there for and you can easily migrate across machines.
Re:Great (Score:2)
PS/2, serial, and parallel ports are old technology with few new peripherals being released. If you want 4+ USB ports and firewire ports and ethernet ports, eventually some legacy ports are going to be removed. They just can't keep making room for new ports without losing something.
Just last week I built a new system for a friend who's still on dial-up. I have a few 56k modems lying around, but when I went to install the modem
Re:Great (Score:2)
Re:Great (Score:2)
Re:Great (Score:2)
Upgrade the UPS. The batteries are likely nearly dead on the old one, so you need to replace one of the most expensive parts anyway. Your new UPS will come with a USB adaptor. At least all the ones I've seen come with USB now. I have no idea if the protocol is compatable with linux though, wouldn't surprize me at all if the manufactures changed their protocol just to be incompatable with linux machines. It shuts them out of a large part of the server market, but at least they don't have to support oth
Anandtech reviews... (Score:4, Funny)
*Banner Ad* *Banner Ad* *SideBar Ad*
I really like Anadtech reviews,
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*Banner Ad* *Banner Ad* *SideBar Ad*
but they really do seem to have
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*Banner Ad* *Banner Ad* *SideBar Ad*
very little content on each page of their
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*Banner Ad* *Banner Ad* *SideBar Ad*
lengthy reviews. Anyone else notice this?
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Re:Anandtech reviews... (Score:5, Informative)
Solution:
1) Go to an Anandtech review
2) Click on "Print this article" link at bottom of page
3) Read the review in one page with no ads
It helps to have a decent browser (ala Firebird), as the "print article" link is a java pop-up window. You can force it to a new tab with the correct settings.
Re:Anandtech reviews... (Score:2)
Re:Anandtech reviews... (Score:2)
Current solutions for quiet PCs (Score:2)
www.quietpcusa.com
www.silentpcreview.com
Nexus makes some pretty good stuff I hear.
Something to be aware of though, there are some sites out there advertising a 14dbA SilenX PSU for $50... and they are counterfit. The real SilenX company DOES produce 14dbA PSUs, but for closer to $100. These authentic ones have been renamed away from the SilenX brand. See www.silenx.com fore more info on that
You knew this was coming... (Score:2, Funny)
"I, for one welcome our new BTX Overlords..."
"All your form factor are belong to us!"
"Microsoft == Evil!"
"In Soviet Russia, CPU cools Front Intake Fan!"
Something to include in BTX (Score:5, Insightful)
For the Love of Gawd, why is there legacy ports? (Score:3, Insightful)
I'm looking at the pic for the micro-BTX board (yes, the micro edition) and I still see two (2) PS/2 ports and one (1) parallel port. What a waste. I bet they'll chicken out and retain ATA and floppy drive ports on the mobo itself too.
http://www.anandtech.com/showdoc.html?i=1876&p =3
C'mon Intel, Apple did away with legacy ports back in 1997. This design won't hit the market until 2004. Quit slacking. You either want the mobo manufacturers and PC brands to move away from legacy or you don't. I personally would rather have the $3 or so that goes into putting these dopey ports on the machines go toward something else, like Bluetooth support or extra Firewire ports.
Re:For the Love of Gawd, why is there legacy ports (Score:2)
Just because they define a place for them in the standards does not mean a board is required to have them. They also define locations for sound, ethernet, and VGA ports, which certainly every board doesn't have. Contrarily, you can get legacy free ATX boards now if you really want them, and I'm sure this will be no different. But putting the ports in the spec a
Re:For the Love of Gawd, why is there legacy ports (Score:2)
Good argument. However, when Intel does not take a strong stand, OEM's such as HP will continue churning out PCs for the home user that will continue to offer these ancient relics of interfaces and in turn,
Re:For the Love of Gawd, why is there legacy ports (Score:2)
All PCs today ship with USB ports, and mainly of the USB 2.0 variety. So the cost of USB is inmaterial in your argument. It is a done deal. The PS/2 and other ports are legacy and they increase the price of the machine. It may not matter on a single machine, but when you mu
Re:For the Love of Gawd, why is there legacy ports (Score:2)
The point is that the extra cost of the USB devices is more than the cost of having PS/2 interfaces in the computer, so it overall costs less to include PS/2 interfaces and use cheaper devices than to not have the PS/2 ports and therefore have to pay more for the devices.
See?
Re:For the Love of Gawd, why is there legacy ports (Score:2)
See?"
Yes, I understand that. However, that figure will switch places soon enough when all keyboards and mice ship natively in USB vs. PS/2. And then prices for PS/2 hadware devices in relation to USB devices will be like buying SIMM chi
Re:For the Love of Gawd, why is there legacy ports (Score:2)
Re:For the Love of Gawd, why is there legacy ports (Score:2)
For instance, I have a `Happy-Hacking Keyboard Lite' that I bought (well my company bought) 5 years ago, and it still murders every usb keyboard that I've seen (though I actually also have a usb HHK Lite 2
Planned obsolescence at its best (Score:5, Insightful)
The most serious change to BTX versus ATX is switching the side of the expansion slots. What possible advantage could this have, aside from making it incompatible with existing ATX cases? In the reference examples they show, it just means that everything is moved to the opposite side of the case. As for the specially defined locations for the CPU and motherboard north and southbridges, they are pretty similar to a lot of boards already on the market (just reversed of course), and as the sizes of components change few BTX boards in the future will follow these specs exactly anyway. And the rest of the "advantages" (riser cards for horizontally-mounted video adapters, a sub-micro form factor, air ducts to chassis fans) already exist in practice with ATX anyway.
In the mean time, I hope I'll still be able to get new-generation ATX mainboards for the next couple years, because I see nothing in this new format worth buying a new chassis over.
Re:Planned obsolescence at its best (Score:5, Informative)
First, heat rises. Which means that you can use convection.
Second, I think they are deliberately making it incompatable with ATX because they want to make sure that you put a BTX motherboard in a proper case. To be quiet, they are going to have to run with as little cooling as possible for a given configuration, thus little things like having the vent holes done up properly are going to count.
Third, you are more likely to have short PCI cards than room in front of the CPU for hard drives. Sure the video cards are still huge, but most everything else is pretty small.
Fourth, the main push is for tiny motherboards, not large motherboards. The full size format is there mostly so that there will be a large enough BTX audience to make a difference.
It should be interesting to see how this plays out. From the looks of it, it doesn't look to be too dual-CPU friendly. There's not much that's strictly wrong with the ATX standard right now (There was major Baby-AT compatability problems and random headaches back in the day) so there's not as much of an incentive to switch form factors. The enthusiasts, who can be counted upon to upgrade regularly and choose whatever brightly colored, feature-filled motherboard is available, aren't going to find much of an audience. It doesn't look too friendly for 1 and 2 U rackmount systems.
But it might do some good work on replacing the LPX form factor and many of the myriad not-particularly-standard tiny ATX standards.
Of course, those who have been watching the computer market for a long time know that the case market has moved towards small cases, and then back to tower cases, several times so far. Apple didn't revolutionize the computing market with the iMac, the case has been part of your positioning ever since the who-knows-how-many colored Cray supercomputers. People loved C64-style keyboard-is-the-computer cases for a span of time. People wanted thin, sexy cases before almost everybody switched to tower cases that could be hidden under the desk. Beige Toasters like the early Macs and the PS/2 mod 25 were popular for a time, but there was a span where nobody made them.
Dual CPU's (Score:2)
Re:Planned obsolescence at its best (Score:3, Interesting)
If this little change is so important, why don't we see anyone manufacturing ATX tower cases where the motherboard mounts on the left side rather than the right. You'd get the same effect (CPU in line with the case fan) without designing a completely new style of motherboards. This sounds more like an excuse to elimina
I don't get it (Score:2, Funny)
Not much of an upgrade from what we have already (Score:2)
I have to admit I'm less-than-impressed by the new BTX standard. Allowing for larger CPU heatsinks is a solid advance, but the ATX standard could have been modified to require that kind of offset without necessitating the switch to new case designs. Placing the CPU closer to an air intake is another plus, but again I see no reason why the ATX standard couldn't have been modified to allow for this as well.
I'm also less-than-impressed by the way the cooling solution has been implemented. Utilizing t
bloody ethernet port (Score:4, Insightful)
Save our Ports! (Score:2)
I don't really have a problem with removing the PS/2 ports. I do on the other hand have issues with removing the serial and parallel ports. I am all for changing their form factor (the D-Sub style connectors are way too big) but it requires so little logic to implement these features that are very helpful for debugging a
Read the article!!!! (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Water cooling (Score:2, Informative)
I am quite surprised that on this next "quantum leap" of case design, it wasn't designed around "heat pipes". [electronics-cooling.com]
There is no reason the entire case itself can't be used as a heat sink, as aluminum is quite thermally conductive. I could only imagine a case that was intentionally designed with a sort of "semi-porous" exterior to facilitate heat transfer and blackbody radiation.
RTFA (Score:2)
Re:Why not... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:What's the big deal here (Score:2)
I just copied a 194MB file from one directory to another, and it took about 25 seconds. I'm running a PIII 700 with 384MB RAM- similar to the system you mentioned. Oh- I assume that you are not running an original Pentium at 900MHZ, but maybe a PIII.
So please- find the 'computer guy' where
Re:What's the big deal here (Score:2)
No, dude! Don't respond! YHBT!!!!!!! =P
Re:What's the big deal here (Score:2)
Re:Is this designed just to piss us off? (Score:3, Informative)
PCI-X != PCI-Express!
I'm no expert on these technologies, so I may be a bit off here (I'm a firmware guy and at my company, PCI-Express is still in the realm of the hardware people. This is just what I've picked up from being around them...)
PCI-X is just an extension of existing PCI. Basically the same thing but faster and backwards compatible (I believe).
PCI-Express (which seems to be the standard most of the industry is pushing for, judging by what I was hearin