Originally posted by lecter
As you put it, save the gigabit lan (can´t you really live with a 100Mbps network? ) I think the Asrock 939DS2 actually has more features. It actually supports natively AGP8x and PCIe 16x Buses. It has a most elegant design, as the PCIe controller is on the nortbridge and the AGP controller is on the southbridge, sending data to NB through a 1000Mhz 16bit HHT bus, that´s more bandwidth you can ever use. It´s the only rational choice for anyone having a decent AGP card on a 939 AMD system. It supports dual-core CPU´s, either AthlonX2 or dual-core Opterons. It does support SATA NCQ. It has all those fail-safe bios boot features.
If you go with a P5P800 and a P4, you´ll need to buy a new motherboard for you next upgrade. And that means even your video card.
If you go with the 939 Dual-Sata2, when you upgrade, just put a new PCIe card on the slot (you can even run a fully functional AGP8x and a PCIe16x cards at the same time!), put a dual core AthlonX2 on the CPU socket, and there you go, a brand new system. I wouldn´t even mention the "future CPU port" this board has, that´ll support the upcoming AMD M2 CPU´s via a daughter card with a CPU socket and some DDR2 slots.
So I went this way and I´m more than happy. For little more than 200€, I have a up-to-date system with a 2500Mhz AMD venice core (something like a odd AMD64 4000+, as this runs 100Mhz slower but has more L2 cache), virtually silent - it´s actually quite difficult to do this on actual P4 cores - and running completely stable on my old Chieftec 360W PSU.
Grab one while you can. They can be found as cheap as 60-70€, wich is a steal for such a board. As you may noticed, nvidia just bough ULi, i wonder why?
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