System specification – Kontron KTQM67-mITX User Manual
Page 18
KTQM67 Users Guide
KTD-N0819-K Page 18
Intel AMT (Active Management Technology) is a part of vPRO and is hardware and firmware technology
that builds certain functionality into business PCs in order to remotely monitor, maintain, update,
upgrade, and repair PCs. Intel AMT relies on a hardware-based out-of-band (OOB) communication
channel that operates below the OS level, the channel is independent of the state of the OS (present,
missing, corrupted, down). The communication channel is also independent of the PC's power state
(however standby power required), the presence of a management agent, and the state of many
hardware components (such as hard disk drives and memory). AMT is not intended to be used by itself;
it is intended to be used with a software management application based on 3rd party software. If AMT is
not required then KTHM65/KTHM76 might be an alternative or AMT can be disabled in BIOS. For more
information search for “AMT” on Intel Homepage.
A few types of 2
nd
Generation Core 2 processors and the Celeron processor only support two SODIMM
and not all four SODIMM sockets available on the KTQM67/Flex and - /ATXP. In the table above the
“Qty. of SODIMM slots” indicates if actual processor supports 2 or 4 SODIMM slots.
Slot 1
Slot 0
KTQM67/mITX has two DDR3 SODIMM slots and
any of the two slots can be used.
Intel ® AMT works as long as RAM is installed in
any of the slots.
KTQM67/Flex and KTQM67/ATXP versions have
four DDR3 SODIMM slots. Only some processors
support all four slots, if not one of these CPU’s then
only Slot 0 and Slot 2 can be used.
Intel ® AMT works as long as RAM is installed in
either Slot 0 and/or Slot 2
Slot 3
Slot 2
Slot 1
Slot 0
System Specification