yes indeedy, here's a spec taken from a site i don't wanna linky to may contain competitors etc
CPU support Socket 939-based Athlon 64 processors
Chipset NVIDIA nForce4
Interconnect NA
Expansion slots 1 PCI Express x16
1 PCI Express x1
Memory 2 184-pin DIMM sockets
Maximum of 2GB of DDR266/333/400 SDRAM
Storage I/O Floppy disk
1 channels ATA/133 with RAID 0, 1, 0+1 support
4 channels Serial ATA II with RAID 0, 1, 0+1 support
Audio 8-channel audio via VIA Envy24PT PCI audio controller, VIA VT1617A codec, and Wolfson WM8728 DAC
Ports 1 PS/2 keyboard
1 PS/2 mouse
1 serial
4 USB 2.0 (rear)
2 USB 2.0 (front)
1 Firewire via VIA VT6307 (rear)
1 Firewire (front)
1 RJ45 10/100/1000 Gigabit Ethernet
1 analog front out
1 analog bass/center out
1 analog surround out
1 analog rear out
1 analog line in
1 analog mic in (front)
1 analog headphone out (front)
2 digital S/PDIF outputs (RCA and TOS-Link)
1 digital S/PDIF input (TOS-Link)
BIOS Phoenix AwardBIOS
Bus speeds CPU: 200-250MHz in 1MHz increments ( note that with the Y revision bios this is actually up to 300 )
DRAM: 100, 133, 166, 200MHz
Bus dividers HT: auto, 1x, 2x, 3x, 4x, 5x
Voltages CPU: auto, 0.8-1.7V in 0.05V increments
DDR: auto, 2.7-2.9V in 0.1V increments
Chipset: auto, 1.6-1.7V in 0.05V increments
Monitoring Voltage, fan status, and temperature monitoring
Fan speed control CPU, system
That's the SN25P as far as I'm aware the SN26P is exactly the same with only the addition of and SLI capable mobo
*ninja edit* as audio is a big concern of yours I dug this out for ya, tbh it's all randomness to me but sure it'll help you
Shuttle hides the FN25 motherboard's most interesting feature up in the top corner of the board. Here, we find VIA's Envy24PT audio controller, VT1617A codec, and a Wolfson WM8728 DAC. With support for 24-bit audio at sampling rates up to 96kHz, the Envy24PT hints at high-definition audio, but it's not quite that easy. With analog output, codec and DAC sampling rates and resolutions also come into play, and that's where the SN25P's implementation falls a little short. The Envy24's first six output channels are routed through the VT1617A codec, which only supports resolutions up to 20 bits and sampling rates up to 96kHz. The Wolfson DAC supports 24-bit/192kHz audio, but in an eight-channel configuration, it only handles channels seven and eight.
It would be wasteful just to use the high-end Wolfson DAC for channels seven and eight, but VIA's Envy24PT drivers actually allow users to route two-channel stereo audio through the WM8728. This pipes stereo output through the SN25P's rear 7/8 audio output, potentially offering superior fidelity to the VT1617A. At the very least, the driver switch allows users to enjoy two-channel 24-bit/96kHz audio output through analog speakers or headphones without having to worry about downsampling sapping fidelity