Chipset Compatibility | Legacy system builds, budget upgrades | Industry Standard: Supports modern LGA 1200/1700 sockets (e.g., B660 chipset) Our Base: H61 (LGA 1155) Our Advanced: H61 + LGA 1155 + backward compatibility | ▲ Our Advanced: Backward compatibility with older CPUs (e.g., 2nd-gen Intel) | Limited to older CPUs (pre-2015); no support for modern PCIe 4.0 or DDR4/DDR5 |
CPU Performance | Light gaming, office tasks | Industry Standard: 4-core/8-thread (e.g., Intel i5-12400) Our Base: 2-core/4-thread (i3-3220, 3.3 GHz) Our Advanced: i5-8400 (6-core/6-thread, 2.8 GHz) | ▲ Our Advanced: 3x more cores for multitasking (e.g., video editing) | Base model struggles with modern games (e.g., <30 FPS in Cyberpunk 2077) |
Form Factor | Small PC builds, HTPC | Industry Standard: ATX (e.g., MSI MPG B550 Gaming Edge WiFi) Our Base: ITX (17cm × 17cm) Our Advanced: ITX + full PCIe x16 slot support | ▲ Our Advanced: Compact design with full PCIe 3.0 x16 bandwidth | Limited expansion slots compared to ATX (e.g., only 1 PCIe x16) |
Graphics Performance | Casual gaming, basic 3D rendering | Industry Standard: Dedicated GPU (e.g., NVIDIA GTX 1650) Our Base: Intel HD 2500 (integrated) Our Advanced: Intel UHD 630 + PCIe x16 GPU slot | ▲ Our Advanced: Supports external GPUs for 1080p gaming (e.g., RX 580) | Base model limited to 720p gaming (e.g., Minecraft at 60 FPS) |
RAM Support | Multitasking, light virtualization | Industry Standard: 64GB DDR4/DDR5 (e.g., ASUS ROG Strix B760-E) Our Base: 16GB DDR3 (1600 MHz) Our Advanced: 32GB DDR4 (2400 MHz) | ▲ Our Advanced: 2x faster RAM speeds (DDR4 vs. DDR3) | Base RAM type (DDR3) is obsolete for modern workloads (e.g., 4K video editing) |
Storage Options | Fast boot times, lightweight OS | Industry Standard: Dual M.2 PCIe 4.0 slots (e.g., Gigabyte AORUS B660) Our Base: 1x M.2 NVMe (PCIe 3.0) Our Advanced: 2x M.2 + 6 SATA ports | ▲ Our Advanced: Dual NVMe drives for RAID 0 (up to 4GB/s throughput) | Base lacks redundancy (no RAID support); single M.2 slot only |