No. The schematic clearly shows a 4-pin (12V only) or 7-pin (19V) DC-in. Using ATX will destroy the board. The schematic lists the exact voltage (pin 1,2 = 19V; pin 3,4 = GND).
(Socket H2), supporting Intel 3rd Gen processors like Core i3/i5/i7. : Includes slots, supporting up to Connectivity & Storage 4 x SATA 3.0 ports for high-speed SSD and HDD connections. 1 x PCIe x16 slot for dedicated graphics cards. 6 x USB 2.0 ports for peripheral connectivity. Performance & Reliability
Proprietary boards often have non-standard front-panel headers. Plugging in the reset switch incorrectly is minor, but mixing up USB 2.0 and USB 3.0 power lines can fry a port. The schematic provides the exact pinout for every header.
: Enthusiast groups on platforms like Facebook Retro Computers are active hubs for users seeking manuals for legacy hardware.
Reviews of the actual motherboards based on the ML1-94V-0 design generally categorize them as reliable "workhorse" boards for their era. :