I have an ASUS P5G MX with dualcore E2180. It is very goodfor my needs. Paulian Romania
The Nvidia nforce 680i SLI is the best motherboard for gaming in cheaper cost. Others are Chipset ASUS Striker, ASUS Striker Extreme , ASUS Striker II Formula.
There's no one answer.but the Asus P7P55D Motherboard is one of the best.
I have Intel E2200 Dual core and gigabyte motherboard and gpu it's the best configuration ever and scored higher on 3d mark than original Nvidia config with msi motherboard or asus.
ASUS Crosshair III Formula AM3 AMD 790FX ATX AMD Motherboard for $199.99 It really depends on what is most important to you. Are you looking for performance or stability? My personal opinion is that the best motherboard under $200.00 is the ASUS P5N-D
No. The ASUS P5GD1-VM motherboard uses an Intel 915 chipset, which is too old for a Core 2 Quad (or even a Core 2 Duo). Probably the best processor you could get running on that board would be a Pentium Extreme Edition 840.
One of the best mobos for these latest Intel processors would be 1)BioStar 965BT 2)Gigabyte P35-DS3 3)ASUS P5K Hope that helps.
i suggested that amd motherboard are used 64 bit processor. Intel are not used
This can vary from year to year and month to month but ASUS brand motherboards are usually at the top
ASUS. ASUS also makes the best motherboard on the planet, and if you where to look at the reviews of motherboards, you would see that they beat all other boards over 90% of the time.
ASUS boards currently offer three year warranties. From my understanding that is the best on the market.
The ASUS P7P55DX Deluxe Motherboard works exceptionally well for video playback.
For the compatibility, the revision number isn't the first thing I would look at. You need to get the model number of your motherboard and go to ASUS' site and find the page for that motherboard. There will be a link to compatibilty specifcations which has a list of all the CPUs and memory types that ASUS guarantees to be compatible with that board. That's the best place to go. If you get a new motherboard and pick a random type of memory that ASUS did not explicitly state as compatible, they'll say "sorry, it's your problem." One useful tool is Pcpartpicker, which you can just google. It has a tool to pick computer parts and it tries to automatically determine if they're all compatible. For the absolute final verdict, however, use the ASUS specs.