Everything else, from USB ports to audio output jacks are all located at the rear and are clearly labeled and easily accessible.
As a plus, due to its compact box-like design, it is also easy to upgrade and service components like the hard disk and optical drive in the Ion 330-BD.Īt the front of the unit, all you will find is a power and disc eject button. However a couple of points to note here is that the integrated Blu-ray drive readily endows this ASRock machine as a perfect HTPC sidekick right out of the box. The ASRock ION 330-BD is undeniably larger than the Acer AspireRevo, and compared to the AspireRevo, the ION 330-BD looks sadly dull. Mini-ITX form factor motherboard, 171 x 171mm.NVIDIA Gigabit LAN controller w/ FirstPacket Technology.Intel Atom 330 (1.6GHz) with 1MB L2 Cache.The design of the ASRock ION 330-BD is fuss-free and it comes equipped with a dual-core Atom 330 processor, 2GB DDR2-800 RAM, 320GB HDD and even a Blu-ray drive. Before we take a closer look at this tiny nettop, as usual we tabulate its detailed specifications below.
The Ion 330-BD is equipped with the more powerful dual-core Atom 330 processor and as the "BD" tag in its name suggests, it comes equipped with a Blu-ray drive. Not one to be left behind, ASRock too has jumped in on the Ion bandwagon and what we have here today is their Nettop Ion 330-BD. The Acer AspireRevo was the first Ion product we reviewed and while the NVIDIA GPU did bring much needed improvement in HD decoding, its performance was hampered by the meekly powered single core Atom 230 processor. No matter though, soon Ion based products starting trickling in. With Intel expressing obvious disdain for the Ion, it was no surprise then that initial take up on the chipset was slow. Furthermore, Intel claimed that the Ion was an attack by NVIDIA on their chipsets and went on to state that the higher power consumption and costs were against the Atom's philosophy of providing a low cost computing solution. Unfortunately, Intel did not take too kindly to this initiative and were not supportive of the platform combination and maintained that Atom processors should only be used with their very own 945GSE and 945GC chipsets.
With the GeForce 9400 mGPU and its integrated graphics engine on board, this greatly enhanced the Atom based platform's HD video crunching abilities, enabling users to play 1080p HD videos with a caramel-like smoothness. The Ion, in summary, is a platform that pairs Intel's Atom processors with NVIDIA's very own GeForce 9400 mGPU chipset (mGPU stands for "motherboard GPU" as coined by NVIDIA). It obviously needed help, and NVIDIA came to the Atom's rescue with the Ion.
Sudo dkms install -m lirc-nct677x-src -v 1.0.4-ubuntu9.Intel's Atom may be an efficient and capable performer when it comes to basic computing tasks like word processing and web browsing, but it stutters when it comes to Blu-ray and HD video playback - mostly due to Intel pairing it with a rather old integrated GPU based chipset. Sudo dkms build -m lirc-nct677x-src -v 1.0.4-ubuntu9.10 Vi debian/patches/series # remove the lirc_dev-2.6.33.patch line and save Sudo apt-get build-dep lirc-modules-source Install a custom version of lirc-modules-source and remove a patch. Sudo aptitude install lirc-modules-source There was one glitch which is again remote controller and again lirc needs to be patched. For everyone that followed my Boxee tutorial about set up on AsRock 330 ION good news cause upgrade from Ubuntu 9.10 to 10.04 went smoothly, and as support to 9.10 will shortly end I advice everyone to do it.