Page 1: Intro, Box, Parts, Specs, Board
Intro:
The ITX standard has been around since VIA unveiled it back in 2001. It was a great idea put into use that promised relatively powerful computing in a small and power-efficient package. Unfortunately, the powerful computing part usually doesn't stand up. There have been many new companies pushing into ITX, but most boards are expensive. Enter Intel's D201GLY2. This ITX board pairs an integrated Celeron processor in a package that is less than $80. That's pretty incredible.
Box:
The box is a fairly standard Intel "Essential Series" package.
Parts:
You get a few CDs that contain Windows only programs, a few cables such as Serial ATA and IDE as well as a manual. Intel also includes a very helpful sticker to place in the case that shows an overview of the motherboard headers.
The Specs:
The Board:
Here is the board in its entirety. You can clearly see how well thought out the board is. It is interesting to see a single PCI expansion slot over a PCIe slot. Usually most people won't be adding anything additional, so this isn't a problem and there are many more pieces of hardware for PCI (for low profile as well) than PCIe for use in this type of application. There is no active cooling on this motherboard. Everything gets its airflow from the case, but the CPU used on this motherboard is pretty power efficient. There is a D201GLY2A which includes an active cooling solution. It is worthwhile to note that this is considered a uATX board since it is the tiniest bit bigger than an ITX board. It should have no trouble fitting in ITX cases, though. This board contains an AUX12V connection.
The board includes two Serial ATA connectors, but those ports only run at the first generation 150MB/s speed. You will see many parts of this motherboard that are castrated to not canalize Intel's more expensive boards. There is a single memory slot that can only take a maximum of 1GB which is another bogus limitation introduced. The third is the Broadcom 10/100 only network chip. There is no gigabit NIC on this board. Fourth, SiS chipset for use in the north and southbridge. While I like SiS, they don't produce great graphics chips and their Linux support is terrible. Intel could have used their GMA type of graphics on the board (that is well supported and fully open), but didn't. The Celeron 220 is really the major point on this board. It may only run at 1.2GHz, but this is a fast board compared to others in its price range.
The SiS964 chipset provides the southbridge support for the D201GLY2. Really interesting to see Intel not going with its own chipset for a board it produces. I guess at this price, they aren't concerned about it.
The board that I'm using has the basic assortment of ports. You can easily get a board that includes S-Video for use with a media center type application. That's the perfect use for this motherboard. I'm surprised to still see Legacy PS/2 ports as well as serial and parallel ports. They could save the space and include more USB and Firewire on the I/O backplane.
If you didn't know the reason that many small board still contain serial and parallel ports, it is because many are used for embedded applications that require communications through them. Yes, it is a big business. VIA still makes the original EPIA motherboard because of embedded applications.
The ITX standard has been around since VIA unveiled it back in 2001. It was a great idea put into use that promised relatively powerful computing in a small and power-efficient package. Unfortunately, the powerful computing part usually doesn't stand up. There have been many new companies pushing into ITX, but most boards are expensive. Enter Intel's D201GLY2. This ITX board pairs an integrated Celeron processor in a package that is less than $80. That's pretty incredible.
Box:
The box is a fairly standard Intel "Essential Series" package.
Parts:
You get a few CDs that contain Windows only programs, a few cables such as Serial ATA and IDE as well as a manual. Intel also includes a very helpful sticker to place in the case that shows an overview of the motherboard headers.
The Specs:
Code
CPU Embedded Celeron 220
Chipset SiS SiS662 / SiS964
FSB 533 MHz
Memory 1x DDR2 (533/400)
Integrated Graphics SiS Mirage 1
Expansion Slots 1x PCI Slot
USB 6x USB
LAN Broadcom 10/100 Adapter
Sound 2 Channel AC97 AD1888 audio codec
South Bridge Speed 1x ATA 133 channel
Serial ATA 2x SATA 1.5Gb/s
Chipset SiS SiS662 / SiS964
FSB 533 MHz
Memory 1x DDR2 (533/400)
Integrated Graphics SiS Mirage 1
Expansion Slots 1x PCI Slot
USB 6x USB
LAN Broadcom 10/100 Adapter
Sound 2 Channel AC97 AD1888 audio codec
South Bridge Speed 1x ATA 133 channel
Serial ATA 2x SATA 1.5Gb/s
The Board:
Here is the board in its entirety. You can clearly see how well thought out the board is. It is interesting to see a single PCI expansion slot over a PCIe slot. Usually most people won't be adding anything additional, so this isn't a problem and there are many more pieces of hardware for PCI (for low profile as well) than PCIe for use in this type of application. There is no active cooling on this motherboard. Everything gets its airflow from the case, but the CPU used on this motherboard is pretty power efficient. There is a D201GLY2A which includes an active cooling solution. It is worthwhile to note that this is considered a uATX board since it is the tiniest bit bigger than an ITX board. It should have no trouble fitting in ITX cases, though. This board contains an AUX12V connection.
The board includes two Serial ATA connectors, but those ports only run at the first generation 150MB/s speed. You will see many parts of this motherboard that are castrated to not canalize Intel's more expensive boards. There is a single memory slot that can only take a maximum of 1GB which is another bogus limitation introduced. The third is the Broadcom 10/100 only network chip. There is no gigabit NIC on this board. Fourth, SiS chipset for use in the north and southbridge. While I like SiS, they don't produce great graphics chips and their Linux support is terrible. Intel could have used their GMA type of graphics on the board (that is well supported and fully open), but didn't. The Celeron 220 is really the major point on this board. It may only run at 1.2GHz, but this is a fast board compared to others in its price range.
The SiS964 chipset provides the southbridge support for the D201GLY2. Really interesting to see Intel not going with its own chipset for a board it produces. I guess at this price, they aren't concerned about it.
The board that I'm using has the basic assortment of ports. You can easily get a board that includes S-Video for use with a media center type application. That's the perfect use for this motherboard. I'm surprised to still see Legacy PS/2 ports as well as serial and parallel ports. They could save the space and include more USB and Firewire on the I/O backplane.
If you didn't know the reason that many small board still contain serial and parallel ports, it is because many are used for embedded applications that require communications through them. Yes, it is a big business. VIA still makes the original EPIA motherboard because of embedded applications.