Wednesday, December 12th 2012
MSI Readies Celeron 847-based C847MS-E33 Micro-ATX Motherboard
MSI is working on a new micro-ATX motherboard with Celeron 847 BGA processor hard-wired onto it, the C847MS-E33. The Celero 847 is a dual-core processor based on the 32 nm "Sandy Bridge" architecture, clocked at 1.10 GHz, featuring 2 MB of L2 cache, and a dual-channel DDR3 IMC. Its 17-Watt TDP is low enough for MSI to use a passive heatsink to cool it with. Aiding the CPU is an Intel NM70 chipset, which provides one each of SATA 6 Gb/s and SATA 3 Gb/s ports.
The C847MS-E33 features two DDR3 DIMM slots, supporting up to 16 GB of dual-channel DDR3-1333 MHz memory. Its processor is wired to a PCI-Express 2.0 x16 slot, two legacy PCI and a PCIe 2.0 x1 make for the rest of its expansion. Connectivity includes 6-channel HD audio with optical and coaxial SPDIF outputs, gigabit Ethernet, a number of USB 2.0/1.1 ports on the rear panel and by headers, and display outputs that include HDMI and D-Sub. We expect the board to be priced around $70-80, providing a decent entry-level PC solution.
Source:
FanlessTech
The C847MS-E33 features two DDR3 DIMM slots, supporting up to 16 GB of dual-channel DDR3-1333 MHz memory. Its processor is wired to a PCI-Express 2.0 x16 slot, two legacy PCI and a PCIe 2.0 x1 make for the rest of its expansion. Connectivity includes 6-channel HD audio with optical and coaxial SPDIF outputs, gigabit Ethernet, a number of USB 2.0/1.1 ports on the rear panel and by headers, and display outputs that include HDMI and D-Sub. We expect the board to be priced around $70-80, providing a decent entry-level PC solution.
8 Comments on MSI Readies Celeron 847-based C847MS-E33 Micro-ATX Motherboard
Worse
AMD E-350 APU BENCHMARK: PassMark score 881
Intel Atom D2550 @ 1.86GHz BENCHMARK: PassMark score 683
Intel Pentium 4 northwood @ 2.80GHz BENCHMARK: PassMark 356
Better
Intel Core2 6400 @ 2.13GHz BENCHMARK: PassMark 1289
Intel Core i3-2357M @ 1.30GHz BENCHMARK: PassMark 1683
IMO, that Celeron is pretty good, excellent indeed, for a low power CPU. Performance/watt as good as any other CPU. Quite sufficient for most "productivity" PCs at home or in the office. This will run media quite fine, and without noise. It will probably do everything 99% of people want their PCs to do... and perfect for 27/7. Except play modern DirectX/OpenGL games.
Needs AMD versions btw.
Also how is this Celeron managing to run at a frequency lower than the minimum power state? FFS...Intel are losing themselves business with moronic moves like limiting their CPU multiplier minimum to 1.6GHz, while at the same time letting OEMs do whatever the hell they want -- it's no wonder people are still avoiding their Pentiums and Celerons.