The Test

In recent times, choosing a motherboard cannot be completely determined by a Winstone score. Now, many boards come within one Winstone point of each other and therefore the need to benchmark boards against each other falls. Therefore you shouldn't base your decision entirely on the benchmarks you see here, but also on the technical features and advantages of this particular board, seeing as that will probably make the greatest difference in your overall experience.

AnandTech Motherboard Testing Methodology

Test Configuration

Processor(s): Intel Celeron 366 OEM
RAM: 1 - 64MB Memory Man SEC PC100 SDRAM DIMM
Hard Drive(s): Western Digital Caviar AC28400 - UltraATA
Video Card(s): Matrox Millennium G200 (8MB SGRAM - AGP)
Bus Master Drivers: Microsoft Win98 DMA Drivers
Video Drivers: Matrox Millennium G200 Release 1677-411
Operation System(s): Windows 98
Motherboard Revision: Shuttle HOT-681Z Revision 1.3

 

Windows 98 Performance

  Winstone Quake 2
Business 98 Business 99 Quake 2 demo1.dm2 crusher.dm2
Intel Celeron 366 (66MHz FSB) 26.0 18.1 14.4 11.0

 

The Final Decision

With virtually no price difference between the i440ZX based HOT-681Z and the i440BX based HOT-681, there is really very little reason to pick the i440ZX model. The loss of a DIMM slot is simply not worth a couple of dollars, especially when building a complete system. If the price difference increases, the HOT-681Z is certainly worth a closer look.


How it Rates

AnandTech Motherboard Rating

  Business
Performance 78%
Price 80%
Ease of Use 85%
Overclocked Stability 80%
General Stability 88%
Quality 82%
Documentation 75%
Reliability 80%
Overall Rating 81%

Click Here to learn about AnandTech's Motherboard Testing Methodology

The Bad & Features
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