SDVO adaptor cards are designated as ADD (advanced digital display) or MEC (media expansion card) or the equivalent ADD2+. Older ADD cards were
AGP-based and did not provide a standard interface, posing difficulties for driver development. The second generation ADD2 cards are PCI express and employ a standard interface. There are, however, two distinct flavours of ADD2 cards: ADD2-N (normal) and ADD2-R (reverse). "Normal cards use the first channels on the PCI-E connector while Reverse cards use the last channels." The ADD2-N cards are reported to work without fuss under Linux with Intel chipsets ranging from the 915 through to the 965. A different source claims that ADD2-N are for
ATX form-factor systems while ADD2-R is for
BTX form-factor systems. However, some BTX systems require ADD2-N (e.g. HP dc5700), so you will have to consult your system documentation. According to Reseller Advocate (RAM magazine) a
Media Expansion Card (MEC) is "an x16 PCIe card with an
SDVO silicon module for VGA, DVI, S-Video, composite, or component output combined with an x1 PCIe analog TV tuner" introduced as a "945G platform add-on descended from the old ADD and ADD2 cards." The application note for the 945G describes the SDVO card interface as requiring a full x16 PCI-E slot. ==Intel chipsets supporting SDVO==