ASUS M3A78-EMH HDMI AMD 780G Motherboard


Inroduction and Specifications


AMD made it very clear in our sneak peek at the 780G integrated chipset and Athlon X2 4850e processor that its platform aspirations were coming to pass. Not only did the company introduce a complementary hardware ecosystem, complete with processor, chipset, and graphics solution, but it succeeded in trumping the best effort of its principal rival. Intel’s G35 simply couldn’t keep up with the 780G’s alacrity in gaming and video decoding.  

The 780G chipset demonstrated somewhat playable frame rates—a boast most built-in GPUs cannot make. We heard grumblings that the built-in Radeon HD 3200 graphics weren’t enough to give mainstream gamers the high resolutions and detailed textures today’s titles offer. Why bother if you’re not going to get that “elevated” experience? Isn’t that like dinging Toyota’s Avalon because it won’t yield the guttural experience of a Ferrari when you blast up the Pacific Coast Highway? For the gaming enthusiast who can’t afford to add a GeForce 8800 GT or Radeon HD 3850 to his system, AMD’s 780G could mean the difference between playing Half Life 2: Episode 2 or a compelling night of Solitaire. This is the open door where before there was a wall.

On top of its performance, the 780G/Athlon X2 4850e combination paints a rosy picture of value. The CPU is priced at $89 and the Gigabyte motherboard we used as a test bed in the launch article rings in at $99. Even after adding a $50 Radeon HD 3450 card to take advantage of Hybrid Graphics, you’re still hanging out under the $250 mark.

That Gigabyte board, the GA-MA78GM-S2H, was the one AMD chose for its initial batch of sampling. And it represented the chipset’s built in functionality well, while delivering great stability, an impressive set of features, and modest configurability through Gigabyte’s M.I.T. BIOS controls.

ASUS is hot on Gigabyte’s heels with its own 780G-based board, though. The M3A78-EMH HDMI defies ASUS’ habit of packing in every add-on available at a premium price by sticking to the basics, consequently driving down the price target for a 780G platform by another $10. Expect to find this one around the $89 mark. Should you spend the extra Alexander Hamilton to get eSATA support, optical output, and FireWire on the Gigabyte board or do ASUS’ cuts make good sense to the cost conscious? Stay tuned as we compare the microATX motherboards, and then pit the 780G chipset against Intel’s G35 in a round of high-definition video playback.

ASUS M3A78-EMH HDMI
Features and Specifications

CPUs
AMD Socket AM2+ Phenom FX/Phenom/Athlon 64 Sempron
AMD Socket AM2 Athlon 64 X2/Athlon 64 FX/Athlon 64/Sempron
AMD Cool’n’Quiet technology
AMD64 architecture
AMD Live!-ready

Chipset
AMD 780G northbridge
AMD SB700 southbridge

Bus
Up to 5200 MT/s HyperTransport 3.0 interface for AM2+ CPUs
2000/1600 MT/s HyperTransport 1.0 interface for AM2 CPUs

Memory
Dual-channel memory architecture
4 x 240-pin DIMM slots
ECC and non-ECC DDR2 1066/800/667/533 MHz
Support for up to 8GB of memory

Expansion Slots
1 x PCI Express x16 slot
1 x PCI Express x1 slot
2 x PCI 2.2 slot

Storage/RAID
1 x UltraDMA 133/100 connector
6 x internal SATA 3 Gbps connectors with RAID 0, 1, and 10 support

Graphics
Integrated Radeon HD 3200 DirectX 10.1 graphics
Maximum shared memory up to 512MB (per the BIOS)
Supports HDMI with HDCP compliance, maximum resolution up to 1920x1080p
DVI-D with maximum resolution of 2560x1600
VGA with maximum resolution of 2048x1536
Hybrid Graphics support

Audio
ALC883 HD Audio 8-channel codec
Supports jack-detect and multi-streaming technologies
Supports S/PDIF out interface (digital audio module not included)

USB
Supports up to 12 USB 2.0/1.1 ports
Four back-panel ports, eight on-board headers

LAN
PCI Express Gigabit Ethernet

Back Panel I/O Ports
1 x PS/2 mouse port
1 x PS/2 keyboard port
1 x HDMI port
1 x DVI output
1 x VGA output
1 x RJ45 Ethernet jack
4 x USB 2.0/1.1 ports
8-channel analog audio I/O ports


Our ASUS M3A78-EMH HDMI didn’t arrive in retail packaging. Rather, it shipped as a kit, together with an Athlon X2 4850e CPU, two gigabytes of DDR2-800 memory from Corsair, and a reference cooler—the same type used in our 780G sneak peek to help cut down on noise.

But that didn’t stop us from digging into the retail box’s bundle. When you buy the M3A78-EMH HDMI, you get the board, a driver CD, the user’s manual, an I/O shield, an array of storage cables, and a SATA-to-Molex power adapter. Notably missing from the package is a DVI-to-HDMI adapter, which you do get with ASUS’ Intel G35-based P5E-VM HDMI board. There’s also no digital audio connectivity. ASUS’ documentation talks about an audio module, but it doesn’t ship alongside this board.

There’s no question that ASUS built the M3A78-EMH HDMI to curl toes in the living room, the home office, and at work. Just be aware that the bundle is minimalist, and if you want to hook up to either of the digital video outputs, you’ll need the right cables since ASUS doesn’t provide adapters.


Tags:  AMD, Asus, HD, Motherboard, HDMI, M3, board, A7, 780, AR, AM

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