Nano-ITX
Nano-ITX is a computer motherboard form factor first proposed by VIA Technologies at CeBIT in March 2003,[1][2] and implemented in late 2005. Nano-ITX boards measure 12 × 12 cm (4.7 × 4.7 in), and are fully integrated, very low power consumption motherboards with many uses, but targeted at smart digital entertainment devices such as DVRs, set-top boxes, media centers, car PCs, and thin devices. Nano-ITX motherboards have slots for SO-DIMM.
There are four Nano-ITX motherboard product lines so far, VIA's EPIA N, EPIA NL, EPIA NX, and the VIA EPIA NR. These boards are available from a wide variety of manufacturers supporting numerous different CPU platforms.
Udoo has now released at least 1 nano-ITX board: the Udoo Bolt.[3]
See also
- Mini-ITX
- Pico-ITX
- Mobile-ITX
- EPIA, mini-ITX and nano-ITX motherboards from VIA
- Ultra-Mobile PC
- Minimig, is an open source re-implementation of an Amiga 500 in Nano-ITX format
References
External links
- Jetway Computer Corp. J8F9 AMD Nano-ITX Mainboards Nano ITX Manufacturer, Mainboard OEMs, Daughterboards etc.
- VIA EPIA N-Series Nano-ITX Mainboard
- VIA EPIA NL-Series Nano-ITX Mainboard
- VIA EPIA NX-Series Nano-ITX Mainboard
- VIA EPIA NR-Series Nano-ITX Mainboard
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- AT (351×305)
- ATX (305×244)
- EATX (Extended) (305×330)
- Baby-AT (330×216)
- WTX (356×425)
- BTX (325×267)
- LPX (330×229)
- SSI CEB (305x267)
- Ultra ATX (367×244)
- EPIC (Express) (165×115)
- ESM (149×71)
- Nano-ITX (120×120)
- COM Express (125×95)
- ESMexpress (125×95)
- ETX (114×95)
- XTX (114×95)
- NUC (102×102)
- Pico-ITX (100×72)
- PC/104 (-Plus) (96×90)
- ESMini (95×55)
- SMARC (82×80)
- Qseven (70×70)
- mobile-ITX (60×60)
- CoreExpress (58×65)
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