Couple of users on Reddit saying this will be available in the UK/Europe by end of March or early April
Fingers crossed its priced well.
Some more info in this thread: ASRock Rack has created the first AM4 socket server board
All sounds pretty positive
Fingers crossed its priced well.
Some more info in this thread: ASRock Rack has created the first AM4 socket server board
Some more information from Michelle Wu.
I checked with our team, we actually have few(about 2~5pcs) PVT (Production Verification Test) stage sample on hand, which is the same as mass production version board. But no discount on those boards.
Let me know if you would like to purchase them, we can reserve the board for you.
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Yes, the board will support third generation of Ryzen processors after BIOS update.
We will release new BIOS that support third generation of Ryzen processors when the processor is released by AMD.
And:I checked with our team, we actually have few(about 2~5pcs) PVT (Production Verification Test) stage sample on hand, which is the same as mass production version board. But no discount on those boards.
Let me know if you would like to purchase them, we can reserve the board for you.
…
Yes, the board will support third generation of Ryzen processors after BIOS update.
We will release new BIOS that support third generation of Ryzen processors when the processor is released by AMD.
I spoke with Michelle Wu with ASRockRack US Sales.
The mass production date of our X470D4U board is Mid-March, and the board will be delivered and officially available in the US on about the week of March 26.
Unit price is $210 (via US local distributors, Ma Labs or ASI, depends on which you prefer to work with)
Looks like someone has their hands on one:The mass production date of our X470D4U board is Mid-March, and the board will be delivered and officially available in the US on about the week of March 26.
Unit price is $210 (via US local distributors, Ma Labs or ASI, depends on which you prefer to work with)
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- Right now my only complaint is I can’t get the VGA out to work, but the IPMI’s KVM basically fills that role. Plus I’m using an old VGA monitor with a cable I’m not 100% sure if works so take that with a grain of salt.
- The BIOS/UEFI looks like a standard no-frills UEFI, a better way to view all it’s options is to view the manuals available on their website.
- I haven’t messed around with features like Image Redirection and Remote Media, but the interface for those seems to be pretty simple.
- The built-in Dr. Debug hex display was useful when it hung entering into the UEFI Setup the first time, just did a reset and everything worked.
- I haven’t timed it, but disabling CMS/Legacy boot sped up boot times quite a bit.
- FreeNAS works, but I didn’t have doubts about that.
- I have 6 of the 8 SATA ports used, works well. Intel Optane NVMe boot drive works as well.
All sounds pretty positive
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