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what is the motherboard, like whats it do for the computer, and whats the difference in the 300 dollar ones and the 50 dollar oes?

2007-09-19 13:05:41 · 7 answers · asked by Anonymous in Computers & Internet Hardware Desktops

7 answers

Motherboard is sort of a backbone to hold, power and connect the processor with the chipset and other chips that support the peripherals. The cheap ones have minimal features due to low end chipset, simple voltage regulators (3-phase), simple chipset coolers, limited tweaks in BIOS and no WOW factor. The expensive ones have all the features like firewire, dual GigaLAN, 10USB ports, built-in Wifi, high quality sound, etc. Chipset is also the latest and expensive and come with heatpipe type coolers. They have 6 to 8 phase voltage regulators and FULL tweaking options in BIOS. They usually come in attractive PCB design, have LED code display and CMOS or Power switches on the board itself. The expensive ones are like "Toys for the Big Boys", the tweakers, enthusiasts and overclockers.

2007-09-19 14:01:23 · answer #1 · answered by Karz 7 · 0 0

Well, the motherboard is like the body for the computer. Visit the source down before for more info.

Whats the difference between 300 dollars and 50 dollars motherboards, is just specs.

2007-09-19 13:19:55 · answer #2 · answered by cobo6 3 · 0 0

The motherboard is the interface for all that goes on in the computer. It routes all the transfer of data between components, like the ram, hardrive, cpu, optical drives, video cards, etc. The more expensive ones have faster data transfer capability, can handle more ram, have dual video card capability, and are "tweakable". Meaning the end user can adjust the speeds of certain components, called overclocking. The 50 dollar motherboards are just that. Very basic and slow, comparatively.

2007-09-19 14:01:21 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

The moterboard that suits the purpose i choose to apply it for. An HTPC will require a smaller Motherboard for a small case. A gaming rig... properly i assume that relies upon on what helpful properties i choose it to return with. i like to adhere to ASUS or EVGA myself. the suited motherboard has each and every thing i choose and not something i do no longer choose. the value is likewise a factor. i'm no longer likely to spend $one thousand on a motherboard that a $one hundred motherboard will do the trick.

2016-12-26 18:54:44 · answer #4 · answered by cantara 4 · 0 0

your motherboard is the gatekeeper, in that everything in your computer is connected to, and through the motherboard. I'm trying not to get too technical, but that is a very broad answer. Also, the differences in price could be for the type of processor the motherboard can accept; the newer and faster processors will require more powerul boards. the chipset the board has, whether or not it can accept dual-video card setups (SLI or Crossfire)...

2007-09-19 13:17:11 · answer #5 · answered by th3_0n3_r1ng 2 · 0 0

It houses most of the parts for your computer. It takes everything (CD drive, Hard Drive, Graphics Card, etc.) all the data from those things, and computes it i guess. So I think the more expensive ones are more efficient/faster. Hope this helped

2007-09-19 13:17:20 · answer #6 · answered by cored_15 2 · 0 0

It is that thing in your computer with all the microchips on it. The diffrence is quality, if you want quality you are going to have to pay for it.

2007-09-19 13:14:43 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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