<br>A couple of related comments. I'd tend to avoid motherboards with "on-board" critical components. I've got one sitting right beside me with an ethernet card taking up one PCI slot because a nearby lightning strike took out the on-motherboard ethernet chip (and the garage door opener and the central heating controller card). I'd be very careful of motherboards that are connected to long external cables. Monitor cables aren't as long as ethernet cables but most of these low voltage chips aren't designed to handle surges. (And yes the computer itself which was on a surge suppressor survived without any problem). You can't "swap" critical components on the motherboard to diagnose a problem.
<br><br>I'd also suggest going with AMD rather than Intel. They have their dual core chips at extremely low prices now and have historically been somewhat better than Intel at minimal power consumption when the chip is idle. It can also be argued that their instruction set extensions should be better for certain transcoding applications (though I don't know if the tools available are tuned at that level).
<br><br>Robert<br><br><br><br>