BIOS is not dependent on the form factor (ATX) of the motherboard. BIOS are chips with information on how to run certain hardware, these are usually American Megatrends, Award, or Phoenix.
A motherboard that is mounted to tilt 90 degrees within a computer box is known as an ATX motherboard. The ATX motherboard was created by Intel in the 90's.
Yes, if it is an ATX motherboard. The motherboard specifications should say specifically if it is ATX, mini ATX, BTX, ITX, etc. Most motherboards are ATX.
Two common types of motherboard are ATX and Micro-ATX. An ATX motherboard is much larger and allows for additional hardware to be installed.
Asus is simply a manufacturer that makes atx and non-atx motherboards. Whether a motherboard is ATX or not is specific to that single model.
No. The PCI slots on the motherboard will not line up properly with the chassis and most chassis that are made for ATX have screw holes to accomodate atx and mini atx
It is an ATX motherboard. But even though it is an ATX size it is a company specific motherboard, and is not compatible with standard ATX cases.
Most ATX motherboards offer a choice of several similar processors. The manufacturer decides which processors can used by a specific ATX motherboard. ATX is a physical and electrical specification. ATX does not define a specific central processor, so theoretically an ATX motherboard could be created for any type or brand of processor that can function within the specification. Common ATX motherboards use either an Intel processor or an AMD processor.
Micro ATX
usually any motherboard that has a form factor above mini or micro atx (atx, extended atx, super atx) will have atleast 4 if not more expansion slots available by default and normally an atx (and possibly a extended atx) motherboard should fit in a full tower case (a super atx motherboard will more than likely need a super tower)
flex ATX above that is the micro ATX
No. All ATX cases are capable of accepting a microATX or FlexATX motherboard as well.
no