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Home Theatre PC motherboard shootout - TechAmok
Home Theatre PC motherboard shootout - [hardware] 04:58 PM EST - Feb,05 2008 - post a comment
Bit-tech
published a three way shootout of Home Theatre PC motherboards from Asus,
Gigabyte and MSI. Here's an excerpt:
As it currently stands, none of the solutions are good enough to deliver
smooth playback in protected Blu-ray and HD DVD movies - only the MSI
K9AGM3-FIH comes close but there's still not enough processing overhead spare to
make it a good solution. You could buy a more powerful CPU, but that gets rid of
the attractiveness that draws you to the AMD solution and if you're going to
splash the cash you might as well buy a discrete graphics product that offloads
all video processing from the CPU: using either ATI's Avivo HD or Nvidia's
PureVideo HD video processing engines. Integrated graphics is not really
designed for gaming; I don't care what the graphics boys try to claim. In
this respect, I don't really care that Intel's gaming support is exceptionally
poor on its integrated graphics solution when you consider that the video output
quality comes by the bucket load. But what good is its output if it can't
actually play HD DVD and Blu-ray discs back in a watchable manner? We find
ourselves in catch 22. In addition, for the £40 extra Intel charges, why not
just buy a discrete card for the same price and drop it in the MSI?
If you're not concerned with investing in expensive High-Definition players
(well, less so expensive these days) and only want to play back HD content from
other sources like WMV9HD or h264(or x264) then all will certainly offer a very
capable HTPC for all HD video that isn't very high bit-rate h264. Every chipset
seems to have its niche performance, but all perform around about the same when
you look at the bigger picture. What's surprising is that even though the
Nvidia-based solution from Gigabyte has absolutely no hardware acceleration, it
still manages to outperform the Intel G35 in terms of lower CPU usage in
quite a few cases. But why care if the output is utter tripe?
Most will still prefer to buy a CE device instead for Blu-ray or HD DVD, as
there are features on these just won't be available on a HTPC. Things like Deep
Colour support (when disc authors and TVs start making use of it) and also
lossless audio streams such as Dolby TrueHD and DTS MasterHD audio. At the
moment the S/PDIF loop back from the HD audio chipset is limited to just
standard DVD quality Dolby Digital and DTS.
The MSI K9AGM3-FIH, when combined with an Energy Efficient Athlon 64 X2 5000+
is the most inexpensive solution with silicon-level HCDP and HDMI support
and also good quality sound and video outputs - all of which just sweetens the
deal. Of course, it doesn't support the faster 125W CPUs, but then for under
£40, we don't expect it to. While it's not the absolute best solution if money
was no object, it is the cheapest and still packs a pretty heavy punch.
The Gigabyte board may have a fully featured rear I/O, the best onboard sound
of the bunch and if you were unaware of the difference in video quality output,
it would probably suffice. However as it stands we cannot recommend it for a
HTPC - it's not a bad board, but that doesn't make it the right solution here.
Finally, the Asus has the best features - plenty of upgrade potential, tons
of overclocking options, plenty of SATA, all solid capacitors, high quality
power regulation and the best quality of video playback quality we've seen from
an integrated graphics processor. However it's marred by inferior sound, a much
higher price and no actual noticeable video offloading performance enhancement
compared to its Nvidia-based competitor from Gigabyte. It not only has far more
shader horsepower and clock speed, but it also has more specific video
acceleration components - but none of this seems to be used.
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