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Motherboards
When it comes to motherboards, ASUS is pretty much a household name these days. There are few that are as well known, or as reliable. Backed by a history of quality products with their own performance bar set high, they sent us out the ASUS F2A85-V Pro to play with. Will The ASUS F2A85-V Pro continue with the tradition of high quality products? Read on to find out!
Motherboards
Since the launch of the new FM2 platform and the new range of APU processors, we've had a huge influx of boards arrive with us from a variety of manufacturers and in a variety of different flavours, from the lower-end A55 chipset enabled boards to the more meaty A85X based products and today sees us delving into another A85X based board.
Motherboards
This is our second of two reviews today, focusing on the official launch of AMD’s A10 5800K when paired up with partner motherboards. In our other review we have paired up the new AMD APU with a high end AMD discrete graphics card to see how it compares against a Core i3 and Core i7 system. Many people say that you don’t need an ultra high end processor just for gaming so we though it was interesting to specifically cover that topic. The review you are reading now however concentrates on the onboard HD 7660D graphics. Is 1080p gaming finally a possibility if don’t want to buy a discrete card?
Motherboards
With the release of FM2, we also saw a slight refresh with their chipset lineup as well as some additions. A85X was added but an old favourite was kept on with their A55 chipset, which we all remember from the FM1 Llano days.
A55 in a nutshell is your typical no frills option that gives you all the features you need, and none of the features that you don't need. I guess you could say that it's aimed at a particular market, such as HTPC, business, education, government and so forth as it doesn't have the likes of SATA III and Bluetooth and AMD CrossFireX technology, but for users wanting it for the purposes listed, are you really going to want all of that? If your answer is no, then why should you pay for it?
Motherboards
We check out the small and affordable F2A55-M Trinity board from Asus.
Motherboards
ASUS has a reputation for making quality products. Whether it's a graphics card, motherboard or laptop, if it's from ASUS it has to be good, right? Today we have the chance to look at the ASUS F1A75-V Pro. The ASUS F1A75-V Pro is one of eight AMD A75 FCH motherboards from ASUS. Will the ASUS F1A75-V Pro live up to the ASUS name? Read on to find out!
Motherboards
Today we're going to be looking at our first A75 chipset motherboard in the form of the ASUS F1A75-V Pro. Of course, we've already done a big preview on this board that covered everything on the board and the BIOS; because of that we'll be getting straight into the test system, talk about overclocking and get into the performance side of things. If you want to see more of the board, though, I'd recommend you check out our original preview piece, ASUS F1A75-V Pro (AMD A75) Llano Motherboard Preview.
Motherboards
Just over a week ago we looked at our first Llano motherboard which came from GIGABYTE in the form of the A75-UD4H. It looked good, but until we're able to throw our AMD APU into it, we won't know the full potential of both the board and the platform. While we're still a few days away from the NDA lifting on the APU itself, ASUS has lifted the NDA on their motherboard today which gives us the opportunity to give you a preview of what exactly they're offering.
Motherboards
Heute wollen wir die lange Pause beenden und stellen euch ein weiteres Mainboard für Sockel FM1 vor. ASUS hat uns mit einer µATX-Platine versorgt, die über die üblichen vier USB-3.0-Anschlüsse hinausgeht und bietet auf dem F1A75-M Pro sechs dieser schnellen Verbindungen. Eine gute Gelegenheit für uns, die Geschwindigkeit des in den A75-Chipsatz integrierten USB-3.0-Controllers zu vergleichen. Außerdem bietet ASUS bei dem Mainboard die Möglichkeit zum einfachen Übertakten und eine erweiterte Energiesparfunktion EUP an. Was sich genau dahinter verbirgt, könnt ihr auf den folgenden Seiten lesen.
Motherboards
You can't go on the internet these days without seeing some information on Intel, AMD and their latest products. With Intel it's all about Sandy Bridge and their upcoming offering of Ivy Bridge, whilst AMD has potential fantastic products in the pipeline but are still hot on releasing slightly "cut-down" versions if you will.
We saw the initial release of AMD Fusion a few months back which saw the pure potential behind AMD's latest technology of fusing a CPU and GPU together to form an APU. Whilst this was fine for light usage in terms of HTPC and server systems, it wasn't aimed at a mainstream market. Enter Llano!
Llano is a new range of products from AMD and their partners which harnesses the technology saw in the original Fusion range but features a higher clock speed and higher range built-in graphics. Due to this it's market is slightly different and whilst being perfect for HTPC usage, users should be able to experience the technology on a mainstream level with the inclusion of gaming.
Today sees us putting the F1A75-M Pro motherboard from Asus through its paces to see what performance can be unlocked from these new APU's and what is on offer in terms of features from this leading motherboard manufacturer.
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