ASUS M4A87TD/USB3

ASUS M4A87TD/USB3 @ KitGuru

“Asus supply the M4A87TD/USB3 in a green motherboard box which should provide plenty of protection for the board in transit.  The front of the box is littered with various logos which advertise a number of the boards’ features and turning the box over reveals a more detailed breakdown of these features and the boards’ specification.”

Gigabyte P67A-UD7

Gigabyte P67A-UD7 @ OCAholic

“With the P67A-UD7 Gigabyte presents its flagship on Intel’s new Sandy Bridge processors. A very pleasant change is that Gigabyte has changed the schema its high-end boards, and now they are definitely a visual treat. Furthermore, we are also curious what about the performance, but this was somewhat expensive motherboards.”

Zotac H67-ITX WiFi

Zotac H67-ITX WiFi @ Hartware

“By the H67 chip, however, the integrated graphics of the processors are used. Otherwise, wait for the Zotac H67-ITX WiFi for ratios of normal equipment with ZOTAC: Neither wireless nor or a PCI Express interface must be dispensed to USB 3.0. Whether the Mini-ITX mainboard on the recent success of the Zotac can tie series, clarifies this review.”

ASUS P8P67 Pro-M

ASUS P8P67 Pro-M @ 8Ware

“We were opening the packaging a little skeptical, but they were wrong. The ASUS P8P67 Pro-M has, despite its size sly old dog. It may also extend expensive high-end motherboards the water. It is also linked to the price of about CHF 160 – affordable and has everything on it you could wish for workstation design, ergonomics and OC-Herz.”

ASUS P67 Sabertooth TUF

ASUS P67 Sabertooth TUF @ 8Ware

“To start the Intel “Sandy Bridge” CPUs, the new ASUS P67 motherboard Sabertooth presents the TUF series. TUF stands for “The Ultimate Force”, a series of ASUS motherboards with built-in military-standard components. The new board is based on Intel’s P67 Express chipset and supports all current Intel CPUs Sandy Bridge.”

ASUS P8P67 Deluxe

ASUS P8P67 Deluxe @ iXBT Labs

“We got the top-end P8P67 Deluxe for review. This quite expensive solution should give you an idea of what the entire series has to offer. It might be not as top-end as the extreme ROG of TUF boards, prices of which are not proportional to functionality. The P8P67 Deluxe is a kind of “regular high-end” solution that you may consider buying, if you actually need all the features it has to offer.”

AMD Fusion Mini-ITX Preview

AMD Fusion Mini-ITX Preview @ eTeknix

“AMD Fusion is ideal for low power applications like HTPCs and NAS systems. Software like Myth, XBMC, Boxee and Windows Media Centre can playback media from your local network or from the Internet to your TV. Building a NAS and using UnRaid, FreeNAS or Windows Home Server allow you to share media over a network and if configured correctly can offer data protection via RAID and automatic backups.”

Zotac H67-ITX & ECS H67H2-I

Zotac H67-ITX & ECS H67H2-I @ TBreak

“Price/performance wise both boards are about the same, but the Zotac H67-ITX creeps out ahead of the ECS H67H2-I simply because of the additional features. You’re getting built-in WiFi with two extra ports for SATA II (not such a big deal) and USB 3.0 (but this is!). It’s just the added convenience of WiFi and future-proofing your HTPC with the extra USB 3.0 ports that makes the Zotac H67-ITX the winner of this round.”

ASUS P8P67 Deluxe

ASUS P8P67 Deluxe @ Hardware OC

“After the Core i7 2600k review we’ll show you the used board, the ASUS P8P67 Deluxe. In the article you can see the new EFI bios, the overclocking features and the actually bugs. Also 2 videos has been uploaded.”

Intel DP67BG & ECS P67H2-A

Intel DP67BG & ECS P67H2-A @ Au-Ja!

“Since Monday, the processors are Intel’s Sandy Bridge generation officially available in stores. In the test would have to convince us the new CPUs, but if you upgrade, needs a new motherboard. In particular for the K unlocked processors, a motherboard offers based on the P67 chipset. With the models P67H2 ECS-A Black Extreme and Intel DP67BG we tested two matching motherboard in detail.”