Read our motherboard and processor reviews to find the best motherboard or processor, or use our price comparison links to compare prices and then buy online at the best price.
AsusTek has produced many great motherboards in the last few years and the company's BX series was one of the most respected. It used software switching to adjust the processor speeds and its jumper-less design was ...
AOpen has made great inroads into the European marketplace in the last few years and is now supplying everything from CD-writers to computer cases. The AK73 Pro is the company's latest motherboard and is aimed at ...
Abit has an enviable reputation, especially amongst the over-clocking community, and the KT7A RAID board has all the features to support this status. This Socket A motherboard can use the Athlon and Duron processors, with up ...
Intel claims a lot for the Pentium 4, its latest and probably last 32-bit processor. It's intended as a revamp of the Pentium III, to tide the world's largest chip producer over until its 64-bit design ...
Reviews of processors are usually out of date as soon as they are written. For example, AMD has recently announced its new 1.2GHz chip with DDR support in the chipset (see our News section for more ...
We reviewed an earlier version of the Spectra upgrade processor here, and a quick browse through that review should give you an idea of what this new one's all about. Basically, if you have an old ...
While AMD's Athlon and Intel's Pentium III processors, in their slot-based motherboards, are garnering much of the attention of press and public at the moment, there's still a good trade going on in the Socket 7 ...
Although you wouldn't necessarily believe it judging by the company's marketing campaigns, Intel does not have a total monopoly in the PC processor market (and nor would it want one - that could draw unwelcome attention ...
One of the promises that the PC has often failed to deliver is upgradeability. The concept of the 'future-proof' computer has now rightly been laughed into oblivion, but even when Pentium systems were being sold, one ...
As Intel's Celeron processor chips change shape, so must the motherboards that house them. This is Soyo's board for the new 370-pin chip range; it's an ATX board with a PGA 370 processor socket. That's not ...
With Intel's recent change of packaging for its Celeron range of processors, from a slot design back to a more conventional socket arrangement, a whole raft of new motherboards from various vendors is appearing to support ...
As well as having a dominant share of the processor market, Intel has a nice little sideline in motherboards and chipsets. In the former category, the company's products have proved quite popular amongst desktop and server ...