CeBIT 2000 Coverage - Athlon Motherboards
by Anand Lal Shimpi on February 29, 2000 9:36 PM EST- Posted in
- Motherboards
ASUS K7V-RM
Motherboard Specifications |
|
CPU Interface |
Slot-A
|
Chipset |
VIA KX133
VIA 371 North Bridge VIA 686A South Bridge |
L2 Cache |
N/A (on-chip)
|
Form Factor |
microATX
|
Bus Speeds |
Unknown
|
Voltages Supported |
Unknown
|
Memory Slots |
3 168-pin DIMM Slots
|
Expansion Slots |
1 AMR Slot
1 AGP Pro Slot 3 PCI Slots 0 ISA Slots |
AC'97 |
Unknown
|
BIOS |
AWARD 6.00PG
|
We've actually had this board in the lab for quite some time now, but at ASUS' request we refrained from reviewing the product. Why would ASUS make such a request?
Remember the K7M? That's all that needs to be said. The situation with the K7V-RM is quite interesting, while the board is a very stable solution (look for our review soon) it may be a while before ASUS claims that they even produce the board. Remember how long it took for the K7M to make its way to ASUS' website? Let's hope that ASUS wises up this time around and realizes that they're going to have to promote this product if they want to succeed in the growing Athlon motherboard market.
ASUS seems to be very intent on outfitting all of their capable boards with AGP Pro slots as the K7V-RM is the second board we've seen from ASUS to feature this slot. This brings one worry to mind, if current power supplies are having trouble supplying enough power to Athlon systems especially with graphics cards that also require quite a bit of current, what is a 50W AGP Pro card going to do to the situation? Luckily we have yet to see any mainstream AGP Pro cards on the market, so this isn't an issue.
ASUS K7V
Motherboard Specifications |
|
CPU Interface |
Slot-A
|
Chipset |
VIA KX133
VIA 371 North Bridge VIA 686A South Bridge |
L2 Cache |
N/A (on-chip)
|
Form Factor |
ATX
|
Bus Speeds |
Unknown
|
Voltages Supported |
Unknown
|
Memory Slots |
3 168-pin DIMM Slots
|
Expansion Slots |
1 AMR Slot
1 AGP Pro Slot 5 PCI Slots 0 ISA Slots |
AC'97 |
Unknown
|
BIOS |
Unknown
|
The K7V is the successor to the K7M (with the K7V-RM being the successor to the K7M-RM) and should perform identically to the K7V-RM.
If ASUS decides not to actively promote the K7V-RM, don't expect them to promote the K7V much either. But when these K7V boards do become available to the public expect them to be quite popular as ASUS, like AOpen, has always been known for their quality and stability.
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