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AOpen's i915GMm-HFS Pentium M motherboard

Discussion in 'Article Discussion' started by Tim S, 23 Aug 2005.

  1. Tim S

    Tim S OG

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  2. Deep-Blue

    Deep-Blue Part-time Overclocker

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    Personally i like the idea of a Pentium M based rig. I could go an purchase a passivly cooled 6600, a Samsung silent hard disk, and nice Asus silent optical drive, and a SMALL matx chassis, and have a very quiet, very powerful, and yet very small machine!

    If you could fill the 2x DDR2 slots with 2x 1Gb 533Mhz DDR2 sticks, and a low profile GeForce 6200 Turbocache low profile card in the 16x slot, you could use even less power, still have decent gaming, and have a brilliant all rounder.

    All that is really needed, is for a few more mobo manufacturers to produce boards (competition is goooood), and for Intel to reduce the price of Pentium M to a reasonable price.

    Once thing i did notice though. Nothing was mentioned about Celeron M support. Do we know if it will take a CM?

    Edit: ebuyer.co.uk has Celeron M starting at £104 inc VAT. If the board supports Celeron M, i may just have to look into this gear for a small linux box.

    Deep Blue
     
    Last edited: 23 Aug 2005
  3. The_Pope

    The_Pope Geoff Richards Super Moderator

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    Yep - sounds like you're the kind of enthusiast that AOpen are targeting with this board :)
     
  4. Guest-16

    Guest-16 Guest

    6200 decent gaming?? There's little point of DDR2 gig sticks, when you could buy two gig sticks of PC3200 and they would run at low latency DDR333 with virtually no performance loss and you'd save money too.

    It supports any Pentium M, inc Celeron.

    The P-Ms are damn nice CPUs, if you wanna only game or only use it as a media centre. As a core PC i'd go P4 everytime (if you are an Intel fan).
     
  5. The_Pope

    The_Pope Geoff Richards Super Moderator

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    I personally prefer "fast enough" and as quiet as possible. Pentium M is perfect for that. What exactly do either of you need 2GB of RAM for btw? If you're gaming, then Battlefield 2 and that's almost it, but any mention of a 6200 kills that idea.

    2 x 512MB is plenty for Media Center (note the correct spelling Bindi!)
     
  6. mclean007

    mclean007 Officious Bystander

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    Cheeky! I say it's Windows Media Center Edition (that being the spelling of the trademarked software name, effectively a proper noun), but referring to an HCPC (Home Cinema PC - who has a theatre in their house? That's just silly, unless you want a private performance of Macbeth) I would call it a media centre (that being the correct way to spell the word!)
    :D
     
  7. Guest-16

    Guest-16 Guest

    You and you're frikkin Americanisms.

    Centre is spelt "RE" in proper oxford-english :p If we're talking trade marks, sure it's the other way around but you'll be walking over my cold dead body before i willingly do it though. Along with spelling sulphur with an "f".

    If you're running a Turbo Cache then you want extra ram, but seeing as it's single channel DDR anyway you might as well buy a gig and a 512meg stick.

    Noise: depends what you're used to really; you cant put a huge heatsink on the Pentium Ms which is unfortunate but you can run them virtually passively!
     
  8. Tim S

    Tim S OG

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    Media Center PC's are all about silence - I'd be pissed off if there was anything remotely noisy in my MCPC - Wil's has a fan that moves, and that'd annoy me sufficiently. :)

    I'm thinking of building one at some point - I'll be passively watercooling it I think. I may even go so far as to get an i-RAM and then have my hard drive array in another room.
     
  9. mclean007

    mclean007 Officious Bystander

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    Zalman Reserator?
    Extreme silence bigz! How about running a Linux box with MythTV front-end and booting it over ethernet, with your disk array on a back-end server in a different room? Saves on the i-RAM, plus it's pretty cool (to geeks anyway!)
     
  10. Tim S

    Tim S OG

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    I've got a lot of watercooling kit already lined up, but I might consider trying to use a reserator tank in the loop rather than a more conventional radiator. The only problem is that the pump can rattle in there, so that would have to be replaced with something else.
     
  11. Guest-16

    Guest-16 Guest

    You'd have to build a custom hold down though, good luck on that :p
     
  12. Tim S

    Tim S OG

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    I wasn't planning on using this board...
     
  13. Guest-16

    Guest-16 Guest

    Most pentium Ms have a custom hold down though, unless you're going Asus P4P/C + CT479.
     
  14. The_Pope

    The_Pope Geoff Richards Super Moderator

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    mclean007 is spot on. Media Center is software for a media centre ;)

    For the sake of clarity, I use HTPC if I want to talk about the generic group, otherwise specifically Media Center if referring to Microsoft Windows MCE.
     
  15. Kipman725

    Kipman725 When did I get a custom title!?!

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    great idea but why the custom heatsink! this would work great with a heatsink like the xp-120 running passivly.

    Infact I would be ordering one now if ti wasn't for the stupid heatsink...
     
  16. Guest-16

    Guest-16 Guest

    Fair enough. I just used media centre as a generic term and Windows Media Center as the trademark then.

    There's very little space on the board, and so having a full P4 mount would take up too much space.
     
  17. Highland3r

    Highland3r Minimodder

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    Nice review guys, looking forward to a Pentium M based shuttle...
    Any chance someone can PM/email or whatever me details of the tests you ran (compression/encoding etc) on this system... Would'nt mind running through some tests with Dual Channel and a little more on the FSB front just too show/see how much of a difference these really make to the M's.
     
  18. lol. go bindi!! :hehe:

    looks pretty nice for a media centre PC but as you say, I'd got with an Athlon 64 or X2 for really demanding stuff like games
     
  19. Guest-16

    Guest-16 Guest

    AutoGK 1.96, custom sized Dr.Who mpeg2 recording from freeview, about 15 mins of one of the episodes. I basically set it to auto and 174meg xvid output and it does the same thing every time.
    MP3 Encoding is using DBPowerAMP, copying to wave first off moby-play CD then trancoding it into mp3 using the standard lame encoder.
    HD WMV is the T2 clip off the MS website.
     
  20. Hackjedi

    Hackjedi What's a Dremel?

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    you must be working at the shop I visited this afternoon. A well known shop here in the Netherlands sells a high end game system and on the display it said:

    "The best gaming experience with the new 6200 turbocatch"


    :eeek: L(*)L
     
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