Hello,
I am searching for motherboard with kabini (possibly gx-210ha) or baytrail (possibly e3825).
I need ECC ram support.
Can you help me?
Thanks,
Mario
kabini or baytrail with ecc-support
Moderators: NeilBlanchard, Ralf Hutter, sthayashi, Lawrence Lee
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Re: kabini or baytrail with ecc-support
Don't look for Bay Trail. The server chips are called Avoton. Both types are also called Silvermont, along with other stuff.
Hit the Wikipedia or something.
The previous generation of server chips might also be of interest. It's called Centerton.
Hit the Wikipedia or something.
The previous generation of server chips might also be of interest. It's called Centerton.
Re: kabini or baytrail with ecc-support
Supermicro a1sai-2750f. 8 core, 8 thread Avoton with ECC. You won't like the price
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- Posts: 94
- Joined: Tue Jan 13, 2004 8:09 am
- Contact:
Re: kabini or baytrail with ecc-support
Infact I need less cores, less power, less watts and... less money!
Thanks,
Mario
Thanks,
Mario
Re: kabini or baytrail with ecc-support
If you look at the manual linked on the product page, you find information about a board called A1SAi-2550F.
This board has a 4-core Avoton with a 14W TDP. I have not seen it on sale anywhere, so no idea about the price difference, but I don't expect it to be too big.
- Another person interested in a ultra-low-power personal server.
This board has a 4-core Avoton with a 14W TDP. I have not seen it on sale anywhere, so no idea about the price difference, but I don't expect it to be too big.
- Another person interested in a ultra-low-power personal server.
Re: kabini or baytrail with ecc-support
I was also looking for a cheap Baytrail (Avoton) board last week. Unfortunately they are all still quite expensive and not readily available. The price of an Supermicro Avoton board was more or less equal to the price of a Supermicro X10SLM-F + Xeon E3-1220v3. The power consumption of a similar Xeon E3-config is 20w idle, while the Avoton C2550 uses 15w. If you use little memory, you can save a little electricity by using fewer DIMMs, but the power savings are not substantial at idle.