Intel DG33TL G33 Express chipset mATX motherboard
Well, to be fair, when you buy an Intel motherboard, you don't buy for gaming innovation (or usually even Silent PC innovation) - you buy for reliability and ruggedness. It'll never be the Supra or the Prius - it is the Corolla of motherboards.
In other words, it's great for that computer build you're putting together for a friend or family member that you hope you'll never get support calls on.
-D
In other words, it's great for that computer build you're putting together for a friend or family member that you hope you'll never get support calls on.
-D
That was as always informative without being the 29-page over-done piece of work we have come to love from X-Bit, but this had a slight twist of humour and sarcasm that made me feel at home.
Andy
many enthusiasts have snickered at Intel's so-called "Extreme Graphics."
The box's design screams excitement.
There isn't a whole lot you can do when it comes to fan control, just play with the settings and pray.
We would have liked to lower the CPU speed to see what effect it would have had on our test results, but due to the Orwellian BIOS, this just wasn't possible.
it simply has no soul
Sadly, it takes itself so seriously that it makes it hard for us to appreciate it
In the end, the DG33TL is a robot, a grunt, a simple but extremely effective soldier. Welcome to Sparta.
Andy
Thanks for a really good clear concise review. This is the kind of work that keeps me coming back to SPCR!
Would the system described have worked with a Ninja?
Suppose you don't need HDMI and can manage without mobo fan control, and mainly care about heat/power. How far is the described system from an AMD 690G (plus low-power CPU) PC in terms of heat and power consumption?
Would the system described have worked with a Ninja?
Suppose you don't need HDMI and can manage without mobo fan control, and mainly care about heat/power. How far is the described system from an AMD 690G (plus low-power CPU) PC in terms of heat and power consumption?
Humor is missing in most, if not all, reviews- which is a shame, because it's such an effective device.
I appreciate your efforts!
P.S. Yes, a Ninja fits with zero issues in my hands, but I use a Thermalright bolt-through kit. (Those ________ push pins could not have been designed and tested by anyone wanting repeat business.)
I appreciate your efforts!
P.S. Yes, a Ninja fits with zero issues in my hands, but I use a Thermalright bolt-through kit. (Those ________ push pins could not have been designed and tested by anyone wanting repeat business.)
Last edited by fri2219 on Wed Dec 05, 2007 6:06 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Larry explicitly mentioned that the review board is 17W higher at idle than the 35W of the Asus AMD690G system he reviewed a couple weeks ago. With more BIOS options, turning off any board features you don't use or need, you could probably make the idle lower, but not with this Intel board. Using CrystalCPUIDmight also help.colin2 wrote:How far is the described system from an AMD 690G (plus low-power CPU) PC in terms of heat and power consumption?
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nice review, though "You could toss on a gaming graphics card and turn it " seems to be an orphan phrase in the Final Thoughts section.
TBH, as soon as I saw the BIOS page I pretty much gave up any interest. Throw in lack of Speedfan support and I'm just not interested. However, it would make a good reliable box for a friend or family member - where it doesn't have to be flashy, it just has to work. Interesting to see the microATX reviews on here - given how full featured many of them are and how many features on full ATX boards are superfluous, they really fit well into the SPCR ethos.
TBH, as soon as I saw the BIOS page I pretty much gave up any interest. Throw in lack of Speedfan support and I'm just not interested. However, it would make a good reliable box for a friend or family member - where it doesn't have to be flashy, it just has to work. Interesting to see the microATX reviews on here - given how full featured many of them are and how many features on full ATX boards are superfluous, they really fit well into the SPCR ethos.
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@nightmorph
What you talking about?
This motherboard is simple, stable, Intel mobo.
I run 24 h/daily/365 HP-Compaq computer totally silent, with guess what mobo? Lite-On. With Lite-On PSU->>far better than any Seasonics and Corsairs. This PSU is only 250 W, totally silent, and HP-Compaq BIOS is totally closed. I never change anything in my BIOS for years.
I'm searching for for that type of motherboard. I'm tired from too many experiments-they are useless.
The "OC subject" is rubbish for the people which have tooo many time to play.
I'm simply searching for for the stable mobo.
What you talking about?
This motherboard is simple, stable, Intel mobo.
I run 24 h/daily/365 HP-Compaq computer totally silent, with guess what mobo? Lite-On. With Lite-On PSU->>far better than any Seasonics and Corsairs. This PSU is only 250 W, totally silent, and HP-Compaq BIOS is totally closed. I never change anything in my BIOS for years.
I'm searching for for that type of motherboard. I'm tired from too many experiments-they are useless.
The "OC subject" is rubbish for the people which have tooo many time to play.
I'm simply searching for for the stable mobo.