With the continuing spread of USB devices, such as CD burners, printers, scanners, keyboards and mice, the ability to boot from such a device begins to play an important role. Eventually, serial port devices (PS/2) will no longer be used. So a new criterion here is the BIOS support of USB keyboards.
An Exercise In Patience: The Boot Process
A new criterion is the time it takes from boot until the system starts. A few of the candidates took at least 17 seconds (FIC AN17), while the fastest of the bunch took less than 2 seconds for startup (Gigabyte GA-7VRXP).
The AMD Thermal Protection Deficiency: THG Sets The Trend

Outmoded technology: measuring the CPU die temperature underneath the processor. A better method: evaluating the signal of the thermal diode.

Protection from thermal death, provided by Soltek.
Less than half a year ago, Tom's Hardware Guide pointed out the lack of thermal protection with the video clip Hot Spot: How Modern Processors Cope With Heat Emergencies and only now are there the first signs of improvement. Following the video, AMD got down to the problem of thermal protection and came up with a simple switch mechanism. This IC logic is to be integrated on all motherboards starting June 10, 2002 - as long as the individual motherboard manufacturers want to get direct support from AMD, that is. Otherwise, AMD is giving no guarantees for overclocked CPUs that have died a thermal death. Among the latest test candidates, there are two motherboards that are equipped with overload protection (for Palomino and Thoroughbred cores). We were pleasantly surprised by Soltek and Asus boards, both of which switched off immediately when the CPU cooler was removed during operation.
- Test Marathon: 18 Motherboards With The VIA KT333 Chipset
- Dilemma Of The VIA KT333: Still No USB 2.0 Support
- VIA KT333: Architecture
- GeForce 4 Compatibility: Not Unimportant
- Booting Via USB: The State Of The Technology
- Features Table
- Features Table, Continued
- Features Table, Continued
- Features Table, Continued
- An Overview Of All Boards
- Acorp 7KT333: A Classic OEM Product
- Asus A7V333: Thermal Protection And Jumper Overkill
- Aopen AK77-333: Not Feature-Rich
- Biostar M7VIF: Ready For Revisions
- Chaintech 7VJA4: Still In The Testing Stages
- Epox EP-8K3A+: The Quickest, Plus Crashes
- Enmic 8TTX2+: Fast And Stable
- FIC AN17: Past Its Prime?
- Gigabyte GA-7VRXP: One Of The Best
- Jetway V333K: A Typical OEM Board
- MSI KT3 Ultra-ARU: Strong On Features, Weak On Performance
- QDI KuDoz 7E/333-A: A Step Up To The Middle Class
- Shuttle AK35 GTR V2.2: More Performance Offered
- Soltek SL-75DRV5: Stable, With Thermal Protection
- Soyo SY-KT333 Dragon Ultra: Absolutely Over The Top
- Lucky Star K7VA333: Not Quite Mature
- Fastfame 6VQK: Latecomer
- Test Setup And Details
- Benchmarks Under Windows 2000
- OpenGL Performance: Quake 3 Arena
- DirectX 8 Games: 3D Mark 2001
- SiSoft Sandra 2002 Benchmarks: CPU And Multimedia
- CPU And Multimedia Performance: PC Mark 2002
- 3D Rendering Performance: SPECviewperf
- Archiving: WinACE 2.11
- Conclusion