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An ATX motherboard Comparison of some common motherboard form factors (pen for scale). ATX (Advanced Technology Extended) is a motherboard and power supply configuration specification, patented by David Dent in 1995 at Intel, [1] to improve on previous de facto standards like the AT design.
Baby AT motherboard An ATX Form Card, used by later Baby-AT motherboards to allow for USB, PS/2 mouse, and IR connectivity through headers. In 1987, the Baby AT form factor was introduced, based on the motherboard found in the IBM PC/XT 286 (5162) [2] and soon after all computer makers abandoned AT for the cheaper and smaller Baby AT form factor, using it for computers that spanned several ...
Typically used for server-class type motherboards with dual processors and too much circuitry for a standard E.ATX motherboard. LPX: Western Digital? 229 × 279–330 mm (9 × 11–13 in) Based on a design by Western Digital, it allowed smaller cases than the AT standard, by putting the expansion card slots on a Riser card. Used in slimline ...
FlexATX is a motherboard form factor derived from ATX.The specification was released in 1999 by Intel as an addendum to the microATX specification. It uses a subset of the motherboard mounting holes required for microATX and the same I/O plate system as ATX and microATX.
Single UNIX Specification (SUS) 3 2002/01/30 SOAP: 1.2 2003/06/24 Standard Configuration File Format: 1991 Storage Management Initiative - Specification (SMI-S) 1.1.0 2005 Synchronized Multimedia Integration Language (SMIL) 2.1 2005/12/13 SyncML: 1.1 2002/04/02 SQL: SQL:2016: 2016 Transport Layer Security (TLS) 1.2 [16] 2008/08 Unified Modeling ...
See also References External links A Accelerated Graphics Port (AGP) A dedicated video bus standard introduced by INTEL enabling 3D graphics capabilities; commonly present on an AGP slot on the motherboard. (Presently a historical expansion card standard, designed for attaching a video card to a computer's motherboard (and considered high-speed at launch, one of the last off-chip parallel ...
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In computer design, microATX (sometimes referred to as μATX, uATX [1] or mATX) [2] is a standard motherboard form factor introduced in December 1997. [3] The maximum size of a microATX motherboard is 9.6 × 9.6 in (244 × 244 mm).