|  | September 05, 2017 Choosing the right DC-DC PSU August 27, 2015 AMD's Project Quantum August 13, 2015 The Redstone PC is the ultimate Mini-ITX Minecraft Machine October 09, 2014 The "Restomod TV" April 09, 2013 Installing NAS4Free February 28, 2013 Building an XBMC 12 Home Theatre PC January 25, 2011 XBMC Guide updated to version 10.0 August 06, 2010 Building a Green PC February 15, 2010 Building an ION powered HTPC with XBMC October 10, 2008 The "Cambridge Autonomous Underwater Vehicle 2008" |
|  | | | September 12, 2008 "Florian", the DVD burning robot September 05, 2008 The "i-EPIA" May 22, 2008 The "GTA-PC" April 14, 2007 The "Digg" Case January 19, 2007 The "ITX-Laptop" December 07, 2006 The "Tortoise Beetle" October 02, 2006 The "DOS Head Unit" August 31, 2006 The "Janus Project" August 05, 2006 The "Leela PC" June 26, 2006 Nano-ITX in a Football May 17, 2006 The "EPIA Alloy Mod" April 11, 2006 Neatorama's Collection of Case Mods February 18, 2006 The "Rundfunker" October 24, 2005 The "ITX TV" October 06, 2005 The K'nex-ITX August 05, 2005 The "Waffle Iron PC" July 21, 2005 The "Supra-Server" July 18, 2005 The "Mega-ITX" July 07, 2005 The "Encyclomedia" May 25, 2005 The "Accordion ITX" |
|  | | | May 16, 2005 The "FileServerRouterSwitch" May 15, 2005 The "Mini Falcon" May 13, 2005 The "Bender PC" May 11, 2005 The "BBC ITX B" May 10, 2005 The "Frame" April 20, 2005 The "Jeannie" March 09, 2005 The "Cool Cube" January 30, 2005 First Nano-ITX Project? January 17, 2005 The "iGrill" January 15, 2005 The "Gumball PC" December 15, 2004 The "Deco Box" December 03, 2004 The "TERA-ITX" October 06, 2004 The "Coealacanth-PC" September 17, 2004 The "Gramaphone-ITX-HD" August 26, 2004 The "C1541 Disk Drive ITX" August 25, 2004 The "SEGA-ITX" August 13, 2004 The "Quiet Cubid" August 06, 2004 The "BMWPC" July 14, 2004 The "Moo Cow Moo" July 02, 2004 The "Mini Mesh Box" Full alphabetical archive on right hand side of page... |
|
|
Zotac ION-ITX-A Review
First Impressions

Zotac's ION-ITX-A board comes with a wealth of ports so far only seen on Socket based Mini-ITX boards. Most noticeable is the full complement of Video and Audio outputs - HDMI, DVI, VGA and 3x 3.5mm outputs as well as both types of S/PDIF digital audio connector.
Also nearly unheard of on a Mini-ITX board is the lack of any expansion slots. The Mini-PCI Express socket is taken up by the internal 802.11n Wi-Fi card which has its own antenna port on the back panel. We don't see the lack of expansion as too much of a problem. There are 6x USB 2.0 ports on the back panel and pin headers for 4 more on the board.

Maximum memory capacity is a generous 4GB, spread across 2x DDR2 667 or 800 DIMMs. In practice this means 4GB as 4GB DIMMs are still very expensive. The 3x SATA 3Gbps ports (and an eSATA port) is a strange number, but we'll take anything more than the usual 2 provided with most current Intel chipset Atom boards.
The board itself is of a high quality with solid capacitors throughout.
Most interesting is the decision by Zotac to include a DC converter directly on the ION-ITX-A version of the board, with a single Female Molex connector providing voltage for to up to 3x SATA devices through a provided adapter cable. A 19V 90W AC Adapter is of course provided. The DC converter idea was used by VIA with their earlier EPIA TC, and is still currently used by AOpen and some other industrial manufacturers with their boards. The advantage is an enclosure does not require its own power supply, and can be much smaller. On the downside this can limit your enclosure choices or the peripherals that you power.
The ION-ITX-B (not pictured or reviewed here) is a fanless single core version of the board without Wi-Fi but with a more traditional 20-pin ATX power connector. You can see the area on the board where this connector goes, to the bottom right of the red DIMM slots.

Here's that earlier shot of the board, this time showing all the stuff we've been talking about. Pay attention. We'll be asking questions in the observation round.
Benchmarks -->
|
|