| Name | PCB size (mm) |
|---|---|
| WTX | 356 × 425 |
| AT | 350 × 305 |
| Baby-AT | 330 × 216 |
| BTX | 325 × 266 |
| ATX | 305 × 244 |
| EATX (Extended) | 305 × 330 |
| LPX | 330 × 229 |
| microBTX | 264 × 267 |
| NLX | 254 × 228 |
| Ultra ATX | 244 × 367 |
| microATX | 244 × 244 |
| DTX | 244 × 203 |
| FlexATX | 229 × 191 |
| Mini-DTX | 203 × 170 |
| EBX | 203 × 146 |
| microATX (min.) | 171 × 171 |
| Mini-ITX | 170 × 170 |
| EPIC (Express) | 165 × 115 |
| Mini ATX | 150 × 150 |
| ESM | 149 × 71 |
| Nano-ITX | 120 × 120 |
| COM Express | 125 × 95 |
| ESMexpress | 125 × 95 |
| ETX/XTX | 114 × 95 |
| Pico-ITX | 100 × 72 |
| PC/104 (-Plus) | 96 × 90 |
| ESMini | 95 × 55 |
| Qseven | 70 × 70 |
| mobile-ITX | 60 × 60 |
| CoreExpress | 58 × 65 |
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 120 × 120 mm (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 PVRs, set-top boxes, media centers, car PCs, and thin devices.
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.
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