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I disagree, the author's description matches the majority of x86 motherboards in production, and if you were to wander in to a random computer store and ask for a standard desktop PC you'd be led to an array of machines that met all of those requirements. If it's not "small form factor" it almost certainly checks all the boxes.

I agree with the author, what AArch64 (or any alternative architecture) really needs to be taken seriously for more than "toy" or "appliance" type use cases is a real desktop board that an interested party could swap in place of the motherboard of one of their old PCs without having to invest in a pile of adapters.

To me, that means the following:

* Standard ATX or MicroATX formfactor * Standard ATX power input * At least two standard DIMM or SODIMM slots, preferably four * At least 32 lanes of PCIe 3.0 or greater, exposed as at least one x16 and one x4 slot plus one x4 M.2, leaving eight lanes for onboard accessories or more slots as desired * At least two SATA channels, preferably four * At least one copper gigabit ethernet interface * At least six USB 3.0 ports, preferably more and faster. * Onboard audio sufficient for watching Youtube or participating in a VoIP/videoconference call.

Since I'm pretty sure that providing video from power on rather than after the OS loads requires support in the video card itself, onboard video of some sort is probably also a requirement for now as well. Specifics don't matter, but it should be able to handle an accelerated desktop and video decoding.




Yes, that does seem to be pretty much exactly what I'd want out of an ARM desktop platform. It would be nice if they'd offer more cores in the desktop variant of the board, and anything that has a "contact us for pricing" link annoys the crap out of me, but it does meet the specs.




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