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Gigabyte Unveils GA-9SISL Micro-Server Board

btarunr

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Gigabyte launched the GA-9SISL, a unique micro-server board in the mini-ITX form-factor. At its center is an Intel Atom C2750 "Avoton" processor. This chip embeds an eight-core "Silvermont" x86-64 CPU clocked at 2.40 GHz, with 2.60 GHz Turbo Boost, a dual-channel memory controller that supports up to 64 GB of memory, 4 MB of L2 cache, and a 6-port SATA AHCI/RAID controller with two 6 Gb/s and four 3 Gb/s ports. Its TDP is rated at just 20W, and so a tiny fan-heatsink is deployed to handle it.

The GA-9SISL from Gigabyte draws power from a combination of 24-pin ATX and 8-pin EPS connectors. The Atom C2750 SoC is wired to four DDR3 DIMM slots, supporting up to 32 GB of DDR3-1600 memory. Its lone expansion slot is a PCI-Express 2.0 x16. Storage connectivity includes four SATA 3 Gb/s and two SATA 6 Gb/s ports. An ASPEED AST2400 chip provides remote management capabilities, and its integrated video, over a D-Sub connector. An Intel N354 network controller offers four 1000 Mbit Ethernet connectors, while a 5th one is wired to the management chip. Gigabyte didn't announce pricing, but given that the SoC itself is priced at US $170 a piece in 1000-unit quantities, home NAS builders may not get excited.



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TheLostSwede

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Does it really need that 8pin up there...?
 

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I suspect that it will be prices around the same as the ASRock and SuperMicro boards that already exist that use the C2750 (~400 USD?). I wouldn't expect it to be cheap.

The ASRock variant was interesting because of how many SATA ports were on it, but I think I like the SuperMicro and GigaByte variants better because they actually give you all 4 ethernet PHYs. It almost seems wasteful not to use all the features of the SoC if you're paying that much for it. I would almost prefer a micro-atx board instead though with a 8x slot and two 4x slots though.
 
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