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The most recent ATX motherboard specification is version 2.2. [3] The most recent ATX12V power supply unit specification is ATX 3.0 released in February 2022. [4] [5] [6] EATX (Extended ATX) is a bigger version of the ATX motherboard with 12 × 13 in (305 × 330 mm) dimensions.
Derived from the EEB and ATX specifications. microATX: Intel: 1996 244 × 244 mm (9.6 × 9.6 in) A 20 % shorter variant of the ATX form factor. Compatible with most ATX cases, but has fewer slots than ATX, for a smaller power supply unit. Very popular for desktop and small form factor computers as of 2017. Mini-ATX: AOpen: 2005
Some versions of the Intel ATX Specification (i.e. Version 2.2) contained a small, but important, typo on the Main Power Connector drawing (figure 8) ...
The term Mini-ATX was originally used in (now obsolete versions of) Intel's ATX specification, and denoted motherboards with dimensions of 284 x 208 mm (11.2 x 8.2 in.). The two terms refer to different specifications and should not be conflated.
ATX: 2.3 2007/03 BIOS Boot Specification: 1.01 [2] 1996/01 BIOS Enhanced Disk Drive Specification (INT 13H) 3.0 [3] 1998/04/20 Bluetooth: 5.0 2010/06/30 Boot Integrity Services API 1.0 [4] 1998/12/28 BTX Chassis Design Guidelines 1.1 2007/02 BTX Interface Specification 1.0b 2005/07 BTX System Design Guide 1.1 2007/02/20 Chassis Air Guide (CAG ...
The ATX connector provides multiple wires and power connections for the 3.3 V supply, because it is most sensitive to voltage drop in the supply connections. Another ATX addition was the +5 V SB (standby) rail for providing a small amount of standby power, even when the computer was nominally "off".
ATX form factor, Socket 370, ServerWorks ServerSet III LE chipset. Supports one or two Pentium III processors. Reference unknown. 2001 Aladdin Motherboard OEM version of the Zappa motherboard, manufactured for Gateway 2000. Also spelled Alladin. Aladdin character of 1001 Arabian Nights. 1998 Alberta Motherboard Intel AB440ZX motherboard.
The four mounting holes in a Mini-ITX board line up with four of the holes in ATX-specification motherboards, and the locations of the backplate and expansion slot are the same [2] (though one of the holes used was optional in earlier versions of the ATX spec). Mini-ITX boards can therefore often be used in cases designed for ATX, micro-ATX and ...