Computer Motherboard
The heart of any computer is the motherboard. It is that big
board inside the computer that everything is connected to. It performs the role
of traffic lights and policemen, directing flows of information to where they
are needed, when they are needed.
Choosing the right motherboard does not have to be a huge issue, even though
there is a lot to consider. Let us start off with the most major parts and move
onto the the things that are less important or non-essential.
1.
Socket type.
1.
Memory type
2.
Expansion slots
3.
Hard drive and optical drive connections
5. Extras
Socket type:The socket is the place where the processor (CPU) connects
to the motherboard. There is no compatiblility between sockets, so it has to be
the right one. The socket connection needs to match the connection of the
processor you have or the one you intend to buy for the computer.
Most older Intel Pentium 4s utilise socket 478. Newer ones use socket 775. AMD
chips utilised socket A for a long time, but now the AMD Athlon 64 series and
Semprons use socket 939. Just check with someone as to what yours or your
intended one will have.
Your choice of chip will have a lot to do with your needs, but choosing one
with an up to date socket type will ensure slightly longer motherboard life as
you can upgrade the chip for a while.
Memory type :DDR is the RAM of choice for most systems, but some newer
systems, which includes all Pentiums with socket 775 use DDR2. These two kinds
are not interchangable and have a different number of pins. Both DDR and DDR2
come in different speed ratings measured in MHz. DDR has a usual 400MHz denoted
as DDR400 or PC3200, while DDR2 can go a little higher and comes in slightly
faster speeds. Just make it match what the board needs.
Expansion slots :The expansion slots are the places where you put extra
cards onto the motherboard, like graphics cards, extra sound card or a wireless
internet card. The old standard is a PCI slot and these are appropriate for
most expansion cards, excepts new graphics cards.
The most simple of graphics cards are sometimes available for PCI slots, but
not too many. More common are AGP cards and the newer PCI express (PCIe) cards.
AGP slots come in speed variants up to 8x, make sure the slot matches your
card. PCI and PCIe are incompatible, so don t be confused by that. The PCIe
slots are much longer and have a securing latch. If you want an SLI graphics
card setup with two PCIe cards with SLI attached together, make sure the
motherboard specifically states that it supports SLI.
Hard drive and optical drive connections :Two kinds are available, IDE
and SATA, IDE is older with a thick cable and SATA is newer with a thinner
cable. SATA capability is usually an add-on, you can see a dedicated chip on
the motherboard. IDE is being phased out, but is still used for many drives and
all optical devices like DVD and CD drives. IDE has speeds of ATA66, ATA100 and
ATA133, SATA has speeds of 150Mbps and 300Mbps the latter sometimes referred to
as SATA2. Make sure your board supports as much or more than you intend to
install.
Extras :The number of extras available on motherboard has increased
greatly and so has the quality of the extras. Things to be expected are USB
2.0, a sound card and network slot. Other things which it may or may not have
are firewire and extra USB slots.
Roundup
Socket type - A, 478, 775, 939
Memory (RAM) - DDR, DDR2
Expansion slots - PCI and one of AGP or PCIe
ATA - ATA66, 100 or 133. SATA or SATA2
Extras - USB, network and sound card (expected), firewire, extra USB, extra
SATA slots (optional but becoming more common)