DFI
Public TSEC:2397) | |
Industry |
Computer hardware Electronics |
Founded | 1981 |
Headquarters | New Taipei City, Taiwan |
Area served | Worldwide |
Key people |
|
Products |
Automated Teller Machines High-Speed Weigh-In-Motion systems Industrial PCs Motherboards Slot Machines Smart Grids |
Revenue | NT$2.311 Billion / $73.1 Million (2013)[1] |
NT$258.2 Million / $8.2 Million (2013)[1] | |
NT$253.3 Million / $8.0 Million (2013)[1] | |
Number of employees | 780 |
Website |
www.dfi.com.tw www.dfi-itox.com |
DFI, or Diamond Flower Inc., is a motherboard manufacturer based in Taiwan, designing and manufacturing of computer hardware products such as motherboards, Smart Grids, Slot Machines, Automated Teller Machines, High-Speed Weigh-In-Motion systems and industrial PCs.[2]
Corporate information
History
DFI was first established in 1981 by Y.C Lu. At that time, DFI began as a graphics card maker with a turnover of 100 cards. In 1992, DFI abandoned its graphics card production and switched to the production of motherboards as the graphics card market was too limited at the time and did not have potential to grow. After 5 years, DFI quickly gained a reputation in the Asia-Pacific region. It peaked as high as one of the top 15 motherboard manufacturers at that time.
In 1998, DFI became the sole design partner for the Intel 810 series chipset, which gained more attention. In 2003, DFI internally reorganised its line into 3 distinct groups. One was the standard OEM line, another is the Infinity budget range, and the last as the LANParty range.[3][4] The head of the LANParty range was Oskar Wu, who joined DFI after he resigned from ABIT after the NForce series.[5]
Currently, as of 2006, DFI had left being one of the most competitive manufacture as it used to be in 90's, as of 2009 DFI told its LANParty team there would be no more LANParty products.[6] They now specialized in some industrial computing and legacy parts for old computers.
Name
Recently there has been confusion over what DFI means, however Design for Innovation appears to simply be a slogan, a situation with close parallels to Lucky Goldstar with their slogan of Life's Good and Micro-Star International's slogan of My Style Inside.
Actually, DFI, stands for Diamond Flower International. Diamond Flower being the name of David and YC Lu's mother, translated from mandarin.
Location
DFI is located in Hsi-Chih City, Taiwan with regional offices in the United States, Europe, China and Japan.
Popular products
DFI caters to the enthusiast market with motherboards with advanced overclocking features and a design with ultraviolet-reactive connectors on a black PCB. There are two versions of the LANParty line with the UT similar to the full LANParty gear except for the omission of the PC Transpo bag, UV sleeving kit, FrontX Panel, and less UV-reactant cables.
DFI introduced their Junior lineup in the mid summer of 2008 with two products, p45 and 790gx, but have somewhat been extended with a nvidia chipset and X58 chipset in late 2008. The junior lineup "JR" is micro-ATX and they usually support Crossfire or SLI setups with dual-slot videocards. This series has proven to be a valuable segment in the future for small, powerful computers. However, they don't contain the same power circuitry ("VRM/PWM") and BIOS options as their full-sized "ATX" counterparts.
There are other LanParty series like LT and DK(Dark). Lanparty UT is still the most high end line of products and few chipsets are reserved under the name.
The different variants include some of these popular products in the Lanparty series:
Socket AM3
- DFI LP JR 790GX-M3H5
- DFI LP DK 790FXB-M3H5
- DFI LP BI 785G-M35
Socket AM2/AM2+
- DFI LP JR 790GX-M2RS
- DFI LP DK 790GX-M2RS
- DFI LP DK 790FXB-M2RSH
- DFI LP DK 790FXB-M2RS
- DFI LP DK 790FX-M2RS
- DFI LP UT 790FX-M2R
Socket AM2
- LANParty UT nForce 590 SLI-M2R/G
Socket 939
- LANParty UT Crossfire CFX3200-DR
- LANParty UT Crossfire RDX200 CF-DR
- LANParty UT nForce 4 SLI-DR Venus
- LANParty UT nForce 4 SLI-DR Expert
- LANParty nForce 4 SLI-DR (UT Version also available)
- LANParty UT nForce 4 SLI-D
- LANParty UT nForce 4 Ultra-D
- LANParty UT nForce 3 Ultra-D
Socket 754
- LANParty UT nForce 3 250 GB
Socket A (462)
- LANParty NFII Ultra
- LANParty NFII Ultra B
- LANParty KT400A
Socket T (LGA775)
- LANParty UT X48 T3RS
- LANParty UT X48 T3R
- LANParty UT X48 T2R
- LANParty LT X48 T2R
- LANParty JR GF9400 T2RS
- LANParty JR P45 T2RS
- LANParty DK P45 T3RSB+
- LANParty DK P45 T2RS+
- LANParty LT X38 T2R
- LANParty UT P35 T2R
- LANParty LT P35 T2R
- LANParty DK P35 T2RS
- Blood Iron P35 T2S
- LANParty UT Crossfire ICFX3200-T2R/G
- LANParty UT Intel 915P-T12
- LANParty Intel 925X-T2
- LANParty Intel 875P-T
Socket (LGA1366)
- DFI LP UT X58-T3eH8
- DFI LP JR X58-T3H6
- DFI LP DK X58-T3eH6
Socket (LGA1156)
- DFI LP Dark P55-T3eH6
DFI also has another line primarily aimed at budget overclockers. This line is the "Infinity"/"Bloodiron", which started with the nForce 2. The "Bloodiron" is just the Infinity series renamed.
AMD lineup
- nForce 4 DAGF
- nForce 4 Ultra Infinity
- nForce 4x Infinity
- nForce 4 SLI Infinity
- RS482 Infinity
- nForce 2 Infinity
- CFX3200-M2/G Infinity
Intel lineup
- Intel 975X/G Infinity
- Intel P965 Express
DFI is also manufacturing various motherboards for mainstream users. This product line is the "General" line. For those wanting to build silent computers, there is a product line called "Silent PC".
DFI-ACP
DFI is also manufacturing motherboards for various industrial purposes. DFI-ACP is a Wintel based platform provider for non-PC business, products range from board level, open frame, add-on boards to barebone systems.[7]
See also
- List of companies of Taiwan
- ASRock
- Asus
- Biostar
- Elitegroup Computer Systems (ECS)
- EVGA Corporation
- Gigabyte Technology
- Micro-Star International (MSI)
References
- 1 2 3 "Financial Statements For DFI Inc (2397)". Bloomberg Business. Retrieved 6 March 2015.
- ↑ "Company Profile". DFI. Retrieved 7 March 2015.
- ↑ "DFI Motherboard Roadmap". DailyTech. 29 May 2006. Retrieved 7 March 2015.
- ↑ "DFI PRO 875: Introducing the LAN Party Series". AnandTech. 10 June 2003. Retrieved 7 March 2015.
- ↑ "The 0scar Wu BIOS revisited". Mad Shrimps. 16 November 2008. Retrieved 7 March 2015.
- ↑ "The (LAN)Party is over for DFI". bit-tech. 3 June 2010. Retrieved 27 February 2015.
- ↑ "DFI goes industrial with growing ACP sales". DIGITIMES. 28 April 2005. Retrieved 7 March 2015.