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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 ...
Date Max. size [a] width × depth Slots Notes (typical usage, Market adoption, etc.) ATX Intel 1995 12 × 9.6 in (305 × 244 mm) 7 : Original, successor to AT motherboard Proprietary, specific to crypto-mining specific motherboards: Unknown 2011 12 × 8 in (305 × 203 mm) 3 3 double-slot add-in cards with 1 slots of free space in between
Date Max. size [a] depth × width Slots Notes (typical usage, market adoption, etc.) ATX Intel 1995 12 × 9.6 in (305 × 244 mm) 7 [b] Original, successor to AT motherboard Proprietary, specific to crypto-mining specific motherboards: Unknown 2011 12 × 8 in (305 × 203 mm) 3 3 double-slot add-in cards with 1 slots of free space in between
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With dimensions of 15 × 15 cm (5.9 × 5.9 in), [2] an AOPEN-spec Mini-ATX motherboard can be placed into a single DIN space for standardized application conditions such as a car, rack mount, tower case, wall mount, etc., which may be impossible for the larger Mini-ITX form factor.
A typical motherboard will have a different number of connections depending on its standard and form factor. A standard, modern ATX motherboard will typically have two or three PCI-Express x16 connection for a graphics card, one or two legacy PCI slots for various expansion cards, and one or two PCI-E x1 (which has superseded PCI).
BTX form factor motherboard inside a Dell Dimension E520. Pico BTX is a motherboard form factor that is meant to miniaturize the 12.8 × 10.5 in (325 × 267 mm) BTX standard. Pico BTX motherboards measure 8 × 10.5 in (203 × 267 mm). This is smaller than many current "micro"-sized motherboards, hence the name "pico". These motherboards share a ...
LGA 1156 (land grid array 1156), also known as Socket H [2] [3] or H1, is an Intel desktop CPU socket.The last processors supporting the LGA 1156 ceased production in 2011. It was succeeded by the mutually incompatible socket LGA 1155.