ASUS has introduced a series of DY-APE Resolution motherboards, with most of the break-ups being moved to the back. The idea is to make sure that the collected PCs do not show different cables that spoil the system ' s appearance and prevent cooling. However, the installation of cables is also simplified.
The idea of moving the splits to the back of the mother's pay is not new; this is already proposed by Gigabyte as part of the Project Steel series. It released the Z690 Aorus Elite Steel, which has power distributions and interfaces on the back. It also released a video map of GeForce RTX 3070 Gaming OC Steel with power cuts at the bottom of the body. For all of this, the Aorus C300G Steel was released with a mother-friendly chassis.
ASUS showed two DY-APE revisions that also have power cuts, as well as interface interfaces, including SATA, front USB, fans, and others, on the rear side. ASUS will offer such fees both for Intel processors, with models expected on B660, B760 and H610 chips, as well as for AMD chips based on B650.
But more importantly, unlike Gigabyte, the ASUS concept does not close down. The ASUS has involved producers such as Lian Li, Cooler Master, Cogar, SAMA, Phanteks and Jonsbo, who have introduced bodies compatible with ASUS fees. This gives a much greater chance of spreading the concept.
Although it is obvious that ASUS is more of a experiment, and it is unlikely that the fees offered by it will immediately be widely distributed, there is, however, a chance that the Taiwanese manufacturer will actually launch a revolution in the installation of cables in the PC, about the timing of the release of the DYY-APE Reform.