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Intel Desktop Board D510MO with integrated Intel Atom processor D510 - Motherboard - mini ITX - iNM10 - SATA-300 - Gigabit Ethernet - video - High Definition Audio (6-channel)

Intel Desktop Board D510MO with integrated Intel Atom processor D510 - Motherboard - mini ITX - iNM10 - SATA-300 - Gigabit Ethernet - video - High Definition Audio (6-channel)

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Intel Desktop Board D510MO with integrated Intel Atom processor D510 - Motherboard - mini ITX - iNM10 - SATA-300 - Gigabit Ethernet - video - High Definition Audio (6-channel)

 
 
Our Price: $119.00
*Shipping:$5.49
 
SKU:  

050012-082

In Stock
Availability:   Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Only 1 left in stock, order soon!
 
 

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Features
  • CPU: Intel Dual-Core Atom D510 processor(1.66 GHz, 1MB L2 Cache) Chipset: Intel NM10 Chipset

  • Memory: 2x 240pin DDR2-800/667 DIMM, Max Capacity 4GB Slots: 1x PCI Slot; 1x Mini PCI-Express x1 Slot

  • SATA: 2x SATA2 Ports Audio: Intel 6-Channel High Definition Audio; Front panel mic/headphone header (2x5)

  • Video: Intel GMA3150 Graphics Controller LAN: Realtek 8111DL 10/100/1000Mbps Gigabit Ethernet Controllers

  • Ports: 7x USB 2.0 Ports(4 rear, 2 by header, 1 for SSD); 2x PS/2 Ports; 1x RJ-45 Port; 1x VGA Port; Audio I/O Jacks Desktop Board Power Requirements: 24-Pin ATX


Description

Intel BOXD510MO Atom Dual-Core D510/Intel NM10/DDR2/A&V&GbE/Mini-ITX Motherboard, Retail


Product Details
Product Length:8.25 inches
Product Width:7.5 inches
Product Height:2.75 inches
Product Weight:1.4 pounds
Package Length:8.03 inches
Package Width:7.24 inches
Package Height:2.68 inches
Package Weight:1.46 pounds
Average Customer Rating: based on 19 reviews

Customer Reviews
Average Customer Review:4.5 ( 19 customer reviews )
Write an online review and share your thoughts with other customers.

Most Helpful Customer Reviews

14 of 15 found the following review helpful:


5Awesome little motherboard  Feb 25, 2010 By J. Allen "j allen"
I have had two Intel iAtom mITX mother boards before this.
(Both are still running fine on someone elses desk)
This is the best yet and I am sure there are even better ones to come.
This one is dual core, has gigabit LAN, and no fan at all is required.
It can use 4GB (2x2GB) of DDR2-800 RAM so it will work well with Windows 7.
I am using it with XP Pro and it does everything I need it to do.
It is stable and fast enough for drafting, word processing, and photo editing.
I wouldn't expect it to be used for editing video except occasionally.
The onboard video looks good to me.
I do wish it had HDMI and/or a DVI connector which it lacks.
It has a flash interface, 4 rear, abd 2 front USB ports which is handy.
For hardware hackers and folks with legacy hardware there are still headers to attach parallel and serial connectors.
That's getting rarer these days.

This is a great little board if you are not a mega-gamer or do a lot of video editing.
It is stable, reliable and relatively inexpensive, and it sips power compared to most rigs.

I have it in an Apex M008 mITX case, with a 320GB WD 3.5" HD, 4GB of OCZ Gold DDR2-800, and a Samsung DVD writer.
The 4GB is not necessary if you are running XP or even Windows 7 for most folks.
2GB is plenty and would use less power. For XP 1GB might be adequate.

I love it!

5 of 5 found the following review helpful:


5Good little board at a good price  Sep 28, 2010 By Frank R "Professor"
As I was reading the other reviews I saw that someone had done what I planned for this motherboard, i.e. put together a small energy saving NAS device using FreeNas OS. Specifically to be used as a uPnP video streaming server. Since FreeNas does not need much memory I only installed 2 GB total. One thing that was of interest was that this board has a connection and space for a solid state drive (Intel Z-U130). Not sure Intel makes these any more but I found a substitute from [...] the ATP Z-U130 eUSB SSD. I purchased the smallest drive they had 1GB since FreeNas needs little more then 70 MB of space to store the OS and about 35KB for the configuration file.
As set up I used a 1.5 TB HDD and placed the OS on the SSD. No CD or Flash drive is needed. All is working well and the total power is 27 watts in standby with the drive spun down and 34 watts with the drive spinning. You can't get much better then this. With the on-board Gigabit ethernet it comes out to be a big winner.
The MO also has room for a mini PCI slot. A wireless card can be placed into this. Perhaps when I get tired of the NAS drive I will use it for a kick ass wireless router.
One last thought, since as a NAS device no video is really needed the free PCI slot can be used for more SATA drives.

4 of 4 found the following review helpful:


5Great little mobo  Nov 15, 2010 By G. Bartley
I bought this to run a 4-disk homebrew NAS in my closet and love it. I'm not using the onboard SATA except for the OS drive and a SATA RAID controller for the actual NAS drives. So far, it has been great. It has enough processing power to run Windows 7 with a media transcoder/server and a small game server. It does not generate much heat at all (at least compared to the hard drives) and works well in an unventilated closet. At one point, I had my other NAS in the closet it with it and the other NAS unit shut down due to overheating while this one stayed on the whole time. I have since relocated the other NAS and the closet is MUCH cooler (80F in a 72F house). The fanless design works out quite well with a single 120mm fan cooling the entire system. It's a great buy for the price and have recommended it to several techie friends.

1 of 1 found the following review helpful:


5Great low power server board.  Feb 15, 2011 By Dave
I was looking for a low power motherboard that I could use to build a 24/7 server. All I needed was a server that could stream movies and share files and that was small enough that I could stuff the whole thing into my small server room and have very little maintenance. This board was perfect. I found an Apex case that is very small and also worked perfectly. The D510MO board is very stable and handles all my file serving and movie streaming needs. I run an iTunes server on this server that streams movies to our Apple TV and I've never seen any issues at all. I also run a Firefly media server on this box that points to a D-Link NAS device that has my music on it. Overall, I'm very pleased with this board and will probably buy another one as the need arises.

Power usage is very low. From what I've seen it never gets above 40 watts. The most usage you will probably see, unless rendering HD video is probably 30 - 40 watts of power being used and that's when both drives are spinning and data is being transfered over the ethernet connection. Other than that, I have the drives spin down after 10 minutes and the power usage is minimal.

I was a little concerned about the passive cooling for the CPU, so I got a Cooler Master 92mm fan and modified the case so that I could mount the fan to blow air right across the CPU heat sync. The fan speeds are automatically controlled by the motherboard, and I've never seen the fan speed up past the slowest speed other than a boot up. After the boot up sequence finishes, the fan slow cycles down to the slowest speed and just runs with hardly any noise. I have to put my ear close to the fan to hear it running.

That being said, there is one thing I wish this board had more of and that is SATA ports. There's only two. Four ports would be great and six would be better. With the small form factor, Intel probably didn't see the need to put more SATA ports on the board, but I've seen other mini-itx boards that have at least 4 ports. There's nothing that says you can't put a mini-itx board into a larger case and connect a bunch of drives to it. Either that or have SATA port multiplier capabilities on the board. More SATA ports or SATA port multiplier capabilities would better enable the board to be used as a NAS device. There is a standard PCI expansion slot on the board, so I could get more SATA ports using that, but I'm unsure of the speed that the PCI slot can handle. I've read online that people have had mixed results going that route. In the end, I think I will just have to stick with getting drives with larger capacities as the need arises.

I had considered using this board for an HTPC when my Apple TV dies because you can get one of the Broadcom Crystal cards to put in the mini-pcie slot, but since there are no HDMI or DVI ports, it doesn't make much sense.

Overall, I'm extremely pleased with my purchase. For a 24/7 low power server board, you can't do much better.

1 of 1 found the following review helpful:


5Wow!  Jan 23, 2011 By Muneo
Combine this with a Broadcom Crystal HD mini-pcie card (the latest model), give it 4 gigs of ram, use a SSD hard drive for your 64-bit OS and BAMN!!! The uber low powered 1080p video playing, Hulu streaming fanless HTPC! YES, I can do full screen HULU at its highest setting. The key here is your drivers, plug-ins and settings. If streaming video is of most importance, set your desktop screen resolution to 720p. The integrated graphics processor and atom cannot handle streaming Hulu while trying to scale the 480p or 720p video up to 1080p or higher resolution screens. The Crystal HD card is VERY important. This ups the video graphics capability of this motherboard 10 fold and only cost $50. It also allows you to play full on 1080p video files and enables graphics acceleration on flash videos! (You will have to change the screen resolution to 1080p if you want to see it in its best resolution). Get the latest adobe flash and shockwave plug-ins. Use Google Chrome or Firefox browsers for streaming. Update all your drivers for the board and your BIOS.

There you have it. I searched the web and only ran into people that figured smooth full screen high quality Hulu streaming is impossible on an older atom motherboard with integrated graphics. It took a lot of trial and error and buying and returning parts but I figured it out. Warning: a PCI graphics card does not help graphics quality. The PCI connection doesnt seem to have what it takes for full streaming. I had a two week headache trying to get it to work but to no avail. Maybe I should have used NVidia instead of ATI.

Streaming quality is pretty much identical to digital cable with its occasional frame hiccups and all.

FYI, Im using this on a 57" 1080p DLP screen through a VGA connector. Fact: VGA computer connectors can do 1080p as long as your TV VGA input can handle it. No need for that HDMI graphics card unless you really want HDMI audio in which case, your receiver better have a HDMI input.

See all 19 customer reviews on Amazon.com
* Estimated shipping rate for US 48 states. Final rate calculated at checkout.
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