Wednesday, December 31st 2008
ASUS M4A Series to Spearhead Company's AM3 Motherboard Initial Lineup
With motherboards based on AMD's newest AM3 socket surfacing from the likes of ECS and ASRock, market heavyweights such as ASUS have decided to pixellate their offerings on the internet. ASUS for one has two motherboards in the pipeline, under the M4A series. As the series name suggests, It's based on the AM3 socket (AM2+ was M3A) and based on AMD chipset. AM3 boards based on NVIDIA nForce chipset will be most likely called the M4N series.
Here are the initial offerings: M4A78 Pro and M4A79 Deluxe. The two are based on the AMD 780G and 790FX chipsets respectively. Both the motherboards use DDR2 memory. A complete range of AM2, AM2+ and AM3 socket CPUs are supported. Surprisingly neither support DDR3 memory, the one that makes AM3 stand apart from AM2+. The two are expected to be released in January, their prices are unknown at this point in time.
Sources:
OCWorkbench, FudZilla
Here are the initial offerings: M4A78 Pro and M4A79 Deluxe. The two are based on the AMD 780G and 790FX chipsets respectively. Both the motherboards use DDR2 memory. A complete range of AM2, AM2+ and AM3 socket CPUs are supported. Surprisingly neither support DDR3 memory, the one that makes AM3 stand apart from AM2+. The two are expected to be released in January, their prices are unknown at this point in time.
24 Comments on ASUS M4A Series to Spearhead Company's AM3 Motherboard Initial Lineup
they are going to make the same thing as jetway did in newegg
Any word of a 790GX mobo?
Without these ports not only the manufacturing will be cheaper but also boot up time will decrease.
Foxconn made a great mobo which had none of these. (I know foxconn is not that good)
And please do not say "bios updates bla bla bla.." and "optical ıde drive BS"....
I wish too Asus would actually change up the board alittle. It looks almost exactly like a M3A32-MVP and M3A79-T besides the SATA placement and the heatsink.
And when DDR3 is cheaper, you can upgrade to a DDR3 mobo, and still able to keep the CPU.
The Phenom II that built for AM2+ socket only support DDR2.
memory OC'd to 2000, this suppoorts DDR3, not sure why people say it does not