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Computer Hardware

Part 6: Motherboards

The definition of a motherboard used to be a circuit board that other circuit boards (daughterboards) were plugged into. The motherboard had interconnections between the daughterboards. In computers, the motherboard is the circuit board that contains most of the computer. IBM uses the term "system board," which is probably more appropriate.

There are several motherboard manufacturers with different circuit families that they are designed for. However, all computer motherboards have the same functions.

The original IBM PC motherboard

Know your system

CPU-Z is a freeware program that provides a comprehensive inventory of the hardware present on a motherboard. There are two versions for Windows and Android. CPU-Z can be downloaded at cpuid.com.

Form factors

The motherboard form factor refers to the board's size, shape, and layout. There have been many form factors over the years, but those based on the ATX layout are now nearly universal on non-proprietary systems. ITX is based on ATX. The differences are based on the size and compactness of the board. The most notable difference is that smaller form factors have fewer expansion slots. Larger form factors are usually designed for more powerful systems, such as gaming computers and graphical workstations, whereas smaller form factors are designed for compactness, sacrificing power for size.


ATX and ITX form factors

Many form factors are available, but the most common are those based on the ATX form factor. The standard ATX form factor is 10 x 12 inches and has five or six expansion slots. The illustration shows that other form factors are smaller with fewer slots. Notice that the smaller form factors use notebook memory modules (SODIMMs).

The most important thing to keep in mind is that you must choose a case large enough for your motherboard. You can usually put a smaller form factor into a larger case, but don't expect your micro Micro-ATX board to fit your Mini-ITX case.

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