"Philips screws that were all the same size" this is what happens when something is designed to be maintained
@HardwareHaven5 ай бұрын
Indeed... indeed...
@GabrielSykes5 ай бұрын
Or it's just cheaper to bulk order a bunch of identical screws, what fast food place is gonna be maintaining their POS devices?
@VistasSrinagarun5 ай бұрын
Yeah it's better than a sff from hp or acer. 3-4 mixed nuts
@marcogenovesi85705 ай бұрын
@@GabrielSykes their POS provider will. Do you think the fast food place can also service all their cooking and refrigeration appliances, or do anything that isn't very basic operation and floor cleaning? They don't, they pay a service provider that sends technicians to service and repair stuff.
@unnamed7155 ай бұрын
@@GabrielSykes The kind that wants to keep selling fast food if/when their POS device craps the bed?
@chrislvxestech5 ай бұрын
I am disappointed that you didn't take this pc as an inspiration to start your own foreign pizza shop and flee the country to begin your new career. Otherwise, awesome video man!
@HardwareHaven5 ай бұрын
It was hard to fit that into this one. That’s all in part 2!
@chrislvxestech5 ай бұрын
@@HardwareHaven lol, can't wait!
@mnadamn5 ай бұрын
This is the way
@ConfidentialMeerkat5 ай бұрын
Pizza! Pizza! Pizza!
@skynn2235 ай бұрын
lmaoo
@TheAverageAaron5 ай бұрын
Former Marcos employee here, the BUMP 1 sticker means it was mounted to the wall and used just to display the orders needing to be made which usually had a ticket printer attached. It was a very simple program at the time i was there. I did troubleshooting when stuff didnt work. Most of the time ot was just restarting those terminals.
@TheAverageAaron5 ай бұрын
To*
@HardwareHaven5 ай бұрын
I definitely had to look up what BUMP meant haha. Which is sad because I worked in a fast food pizza place in high school
@scienceguy85 ай бұрын
I've seen this same PC, or something very similar, at my local Wendy's doing the same job. Attached to the back of a monitor facing the crew, showing order ticket info.
@freedustin5 ай бұрын
its wild they need 4 cores for that...
@Reman19755 ай бұрын
@@HardwareHaven These computers are usually connected to a heat and splash proof extruded alloy button box that's used (With about 20 labelled membrane switches) to scroll through orders and mark completed ones as done. That keyboard is sold as a "Bump bar" because it's primary use is to "Bump" order items onto the front of house screens once they're ready to be bagged.
@Driveby-25 ай бұрын
I got some Lenovo ThinkHub 500's for free from a company that was upgrading their kiosks.11.6" rotating touchscreen, i5-7500T Processor with vPro enabled, 128gb SSD, speakers, mic, tons of HDMI.. I use it with a surveillance camera setup to store footage and monitor the cameras in realtime.......yeah and it also runs a local Valheim and Minecraft server after a massive RAM upgrade and a new SSD.. Moral of the story? Never underestimate the usability of these type of machines.
@Jaabaa_Prime5 ай бұрын
This is why no one should ever buy a Pi now.
@univera11115 ай бұрын
@@Jaabaa_Primepreach.
@nickm91024 ай бұрын
@@Jaabaa_Prime The Pi still has its uses, but yes. I had the chance to see one of the registers that NCR makes used as an all-in-one PC. With the touch screen they didn't even need a keyboard or mouse to use windows on it.
@MohamedGlaied2 ай бұрын
But this is being used in that enviorement because it's FANLESS , these computers are used in areas where too much dust is expected to get in the fans so they resort to them
@jonjohnson28445 ай бұрын
I don't think the J1900 was ever considered a 'mobile' CPU, it was made exactly for this kind of application.
@HardwareHaven5 ай бұрын
You're correct, that was a mistake! I mistakenly saw bay trail and called it mobile.
@destrierofdark_5 ай бұрын
it absolutely is a mobile cpu. it's mobile cpus that also happen to be useful, and get used for, these tasks. bga1170 is the socket, which was then succeeded by bga1090. you could argue that some cpus on that socket, namely the c suffixes, would be truer to this statement since they have nonfunctional onboard wifi that is then fused off to make a c suffix chip, whereas the regular ones do have it enabled and functional.
@monkepog32365 ай бұрын
@@destrierofdark_ You are correct in noting that the J1900 has a BGA1170 socket, which is specific to mobile CPUs. The "C" suffix chips are indeed special variants of Bay Trail-T processors that have non-functional onboard Wi-Fi and are designed for use cases where Wi-Fi isn't required. The Intel Atom Z1900 (J1900) is a mobile CPU designed for small electronics, tablets, and smartphones, with a focus on low power consumption and compact form factors.
@destrierofdark_5 ай бұрын
@@monkepog3236 that bga socket isn't specifically mobile, nor is any cpu on that socket specifically mobile. they're used in thin clients and alike applications just as much as they are mobile ones, and no, the c suffix parts aren't "purpose designed", but better suited. for those suffixed chips, they are the non-suffixed variants with the wifi functionality fused off presumably because it didn't pass the binning tests to be a non-c part. by extension of not having onboard wifi, they're better suited to applications that don't require it.
@yuchan0633 ай бұрын
We call it 'Embedded CPU' 😅
@TheD4VR0S5 ай бұрын
"you might have noticed that is the desk I recently got as an upgrade for my wife" That's awesome. My wife isn't upgradable
@cheebadigga40924 ай бұрын
lmao
@georgedone79975 ай бұрын
This CPU, J1900, is part of a range which contain a silicon bug called LPC CLK degradation. Countless devices failed after about 3 years (for example NAS devices from QNAP). The fact that this device still works after more than 3 years is probably because it was designed not to rely on LPC to boot (there are some bootstrap pins which indicate SPI or LPC boot).
@jamminr5 ай бұрын
^^^ This. Unfortunately this. I recently had a QNAP die on me and had no idea this was a thing until i started researching. Drives, I expected to die over time. Actual hardware itself - sadly, no. First thing i did when he said J1900 was cringe.
@georgedone79975 ай бұрын
I repaired quite a number of those. For less severe cases there is a resistor fix which might work for another year or 2. And for severe cases the CPU can be replaced of coursrle using a high quality SMD rework station such as the WDS-620. But there is a point where is nit worth investing further in fixing old hardware which should not be broken in the first place.
@martinmethod4275 ай бұрын
Umm... I'm currently holding onto a J1900 powered Acer Aspire X Prebuilt with a manufacturing date of 2014. Apparently it had Windows 8.1 before I inevitably gave it a Kingston SSD with Ubuntu and a (very much) senseless upgrade from 4GB of RAM to 16GB of RAM. Just now gave it a mini-PCIe Wi-Fi card and antennae.
@ColdestLivewire5 ай бұрын
That would explain why my old jellyfin server randomly stopped booting
@MaximNightFury5 ай бұрын
@@martinmethod427 Ayy I've got the same exact model! The only downside is the RAM... it doesn't like more than 8 GB... how the hell did you upgrade past that??
@skylar43355 ай бұрын
A little insight on this for you from a former food service employee this isn’t a POS system but instead connects to the pos system and displays the orders in the kitchen and the com ports are for check printers and a little controller thingy the allows you to scroll through the orders and bump them off the screen when they’re completed!
@uiopuiop34725 ай бұрын
this system skibidis my toilet... probs cool but idk
@myacidninjatheamazing10255 ай бұрын
hence why it says BUMP 1. I had to image these hunks of e waste
@nickm91024 ай бұрын
In this case it could have been a POS system. When you look at the side with the connection ports the one on the far right that looks like a phone jack is labeled CD, this refers to a Cash Drawer. If used as a POS terminal it likely would have been connected to an office server that could do the heavy processing.
@myacidninjatheamazing10254 ай бұрын
@nickm9102 yes but considering it says BUMP 1 on it, it was connected to a KVS and bump bar instead of a POS
@nickm91024 ай бұрын
@@myacidninjatheamazing1025 I never Questioned the use of the unit. I simply pointed out that the unit was configured in such a way that it could have been a POS unit. The reality of the situation is that the system likely used the same box for every peripheral location and relied on the server to determine the function. The label indicates what is likely the last use in the restaurant environment. I can't be certain of either as I didn't Install, maintain, or remove the system from the site. I am making an educated guess based on the systems that I have Installed, maintained, and removed.
@richardmarkert77365 ай бұрын
I have two of these machines. One ran Windows and was the Drive-Thru timer, and the other was a front-side order display/bump bar machine. The second one is passively cooled as well and is actually now my firewall. It's also a J1900 with 4gb ram and a 64gb SSD and two Gbe NICS running OPNSense.
@Coldfirebe5 ай бұрын
If you can get this cheap enough it would be great for some simple home server stuff. Home assistant, dns, download server or just to mess around ! It would be amazing to keep this out off the tech graveyard
@HardwareHaven5 ай бұрын
Agreed!
@vitoswat5 ай бұрын
Actually until last year I was running j1900 pc as the proxmox host. It run 2 VMs and bunch of containers but nothing fancy. RAM however was a limiting factor so I had to upgrade.
@ronz1019 күн бұрын
With forethought and a few tweaks, home theater time!
@anthonyherchenroder97635 ай бұрын
With all of those com ports, I bet it would make a good terminal server for microcontrollers and or some of those old Unix workstations. Now you have an excuse to find an old SUN or SGI workstation and get it running.
@brwetide5 ай бұрын
in home voip pbx!
@kyleclowes48605 ай бұрын
I remember using a subway POS to play Google Stadia on it, as it was the only game streaming service that wasn't blocked by the company.
@brockbreacher5 ай бұрын
That's honestly dope as hell to have done lol
@goosenotmaverick11564 ай бұрын
I support these kind of shenanigans. I don't have any stories like this. Or at least nothing cool like this lol
@pyroslev5 ай бұрын
If you lived on the road and wanted to do an SSD NAS of some sort, this could be kind of an option. Low power, no moving parts, keeps good temps. Or if you're a mechanic and need a PC to mount on the toolbox for diagnostics.
@kendrakirai5 ай бұрын
"Odoo is [...] an ERP software suite" is a hilarious thing to hear if you hail from certain sectors of the internet, i just have to say.
@HardwareHaven5 ай бұрын
Can you elaborate? 😅
@Andrea_Selena5 ай бұрын
@HardwareHaven belief me you don't want to know. Because that is quite a can of worms.
@kendrakirai5 ай бұрын
@HardwareHaven I'll just say it's a term for a certain kind of role playing and leave it at that. Delve deeper at your peril. :)
@HardwareHaven5 ай бұрын
Ah, I see. 😂
@Reynsoon5 ай бұрын
Limsa catgirls...
@TheRealXyzven5 ай бұрын
We used this as an always accessible supervisor system to console into our L3 switches at our colocation in case there were changes made that were not accounted for. They work super well for simple tasks and it never needed rebooting using Ubuntu Server. Great little box saving us trips to the colo.
@Kartratte5 ай бұрын
Had same idea
@techmaster1705 ай бұрын
I have an old Par500 POS at home in my dads shop running bhodi linux and a usb sound card and he uses it just to play music/talk shows. The occasional looking up parts cost and such. Got it free from work when we were upgrading machines a few years ago.
@giannistsolebas69625 ай бұрын
Repurpose of an old PC system. The reason I love hardware computing SO MUCH.
@markshade83985 ай бұрын
In the restaurant industry IT technology was slow as molasses in winter for many many years. 1980s programable cash registers/ordering systems stayed in use for nearly 25 years. Even when new stuff started coming out, the industry was soooooo slow to adopt it simply because changing out IT solutions across 200 - 7000 locations is a huge undertaking.
@maphantom5 ай бұрын
Ah, working in similar industry tech wise we are talking for years about updating or IT infrastructure. It is just a huge monetary undertaking because of magic two word issue. Custom software.
@KameraShy5 ай бұрын
@@maphantom Working in manufacturing, they avoided changing technology until there was some kind of crisis. Not just money for the hardware and software, but also dealing with the impact on operations was massively painful. People were just used to and comfortable with the old system.
@poeskey3 ай бұрын
I KNEW I recognized that pc from somewhere. I worked at a dominos as well that ran on chrome os, that blew my mind. Also as a side note, the Bump 1 stick meant that this computer was at the front of the makeline as you would Bump the orders from there first, to the second screen which you would then bump again and it would push the order through to the printer at the cut table (where the pizzas come out of the oven and you cut them). So you had 2 systems, one at the front of the makeline that showed you what pizzas were coming through and then once you had the dough stretched and sauced you would then bump it down to then see what you needed to add to it. Also on the minecraft serverfront, you could have the server auto generate chunks to a certain point. I was using an old macmini, core2duo, and attempted to have it auto generate up to 10k chunks in each direction which took forever, but it is possible.
@michaelgasperik4319Ай бұрын
I was a facility maintenance tech for a domino's pizza franchise for many years. When we upgraded all the pos and host/server computers I Inherited about 100 IBM Lenovo ThinkCenter computers. They are all dated between 2002 and 2004 and have pentium duo-core processors running windows Vista pro. I sold most of them to a computer repair shop and I turned one into an emulation game machine running botacera. But I still have about 10 kickin' around in storage.
@12Mantis5 ай бұрын
If nothing else a simple system like that would work great for retrogaming.
@DarkAttack144 ай бұрын
Maybe buttt a lot of emulators take some decent power to run
@AndrewAHayes4 ай бұрын
It would be just fine for a MAME cab, I have an old Thinclient running mine at the moment, but it will be upgraded with my current gaming desktop when I get my new gaming PC, it uses lots more power but I will have some better emulators running also
@psychopath_syd5 ай бұрын
working as a ERP Dev for 2years and Odoo is the least complain I got from clients. Such a solid system
@XashA12Musk5 ай бұрын
What is the full form of ERP ?
@psychopath_syd5 ай бұрын
@@XashA12Musk enterprise resource planning. you can see it as a all-in-one business management
@TrentR425 ай бұрын
I'm in this exact same boat. I just got some backpack PCs from a defunct VR company. Planning on documenting the teardown.
@AbeelSiddiqui5 ай бұрын
Getting strong "little guys from cathode ray dude" energy from this video
@LeeZhiWei82195 ай бұрын
Hey dude, I noticed the serial ports are an RJ-45 port. You could probably use it to control those Cisco-esque console ports, using an RJ-45 straight through, as a terminal server. Just a suggestion.
@YonatanAvhar5 ай бұрын
I also thought about that, but I can't think of a good reason to not just connect to the switches over SSH
@LeeZhiWei82195 ай бұрын
@@YonatanAvhar I guess it's for like older switches maybe. When you don't have SSH, you can only use telnet. Might as well use a terminal server, it's more secure. Also, I guess if you don't want to lug a laptop into the server closet to configure it via the terminal first, cause Cisco doesn't provide any other ways of configuration out of the box.
@christopherdecorte15995 ай бұрын
The rj45 ports are used on many industrial equipment in the gaming industry they are used for player tracking systems in the casino but you need need to make the custom cables usually only 3 wires are used for transmit, recieve, and ground also be aware sometimes you need diodes and resistors to filter the flow. Could make an interesting terminal to control other systems but I think wifi or cat connections makes better sense these days.
@OscarCarlsson19865 ай бұрын
Many server motherboards still come with serial ports, you can use it as a poor man’s IPMI.
@ivanbrunello60685 ай бұрын
@@OscarCarlsson1986 AFAIK IPMI works on a dedicated lightweight processor (e.g. ast2400) which can control power independently. Given that I agree that setting up a serial tty could be a life saver in case inband network is failing
@Jaabaa_Prime5 ай бұрын
00:30 Oh my, a very divisive question, pineapple on a pizza or not . . . and a default to "Y"? Wow! 😀😀😀
@simontay48514 ай бұрын
You can put anything you like on a pizza including pineapple.
@Dyl_Apple3 ай бұрын
@@simontay4851personally I like pineapple, anchovies, and balsamic glaze drizzled over it to top it off.
@GrantCrabe2 ай бұрын
You realize pizza is a carb based crust a fruit based sauce and dairy based cheese. Yes tomatoes are a fruit. My point is anything belongs on pizza if you want it there.
@tehshingen2 ай бұрын
Pineapple is a perfectly good topping for someone else’s pizza, but none for me thanks.
@GrantCrabe2 ай бұрын
@@tehshingen I think most people forget that pizza sauce is a fruit sauce. Tomatoes are a fruit. The basis of pizza is crust fruit sauce cheese. My point is put anything you want on pizza
@thetyguy77835 ай бұрын
I love the fact that the PC space is accommodating for both ultra-budget/side-of-the-road hardware hacking and repurposing, as well as top of the line multi thousand dollar, skunk-works, custom builds, and pretty much everything in-between.
@Roxor1285 ай бұрын
I'm hoping that stuff like the Steam Deck will see it take over the games console niche as well.
@lztx5 ай бұрын
I worked at Domino's Australia until 2005 and we used a different system to the one used in the USA. It was the same supplier that did Hungry Jack's, STM. We had a single Linux or Unix system with Wyse serial terminals for each order screen, makeline, cut bench and customer display. My store was really old it was a Pentium 166. I left just before the Windows based replacement (Pulse) came.
@infinatious5 ай бұрын
Glad to see the “Little Guys” series expanding to more channels
@mrkdosmil28795 ай бұрын
To be fair, this channel has been doing videos on weird computers a long time ago
@HardwareHaven5 ай бұрын
Not sure what that is, but sounds interesting! Link?
@rapjul5 ай бұрын
@@HardwareHaven kzbin.info/aero/PLec1d3OBbZ8LGjvbb0GQwlQxWXmI2PA88 from @CathodeRayDude
With all the COM ports it would make a great multi user TTY server or BBS (LOL). Heck I even think Jeff @CraftComputing could use one of these to wire directly up to his new invention to remotely flash new firmware for testing. At least then he wouldn't have to re-plug it when testing.
@HardwareHaven5 ай бұрын
Possibly! I might ask if he wants it haha
@FrustratedApe5 ай бұрын
This looks to have been used as a KMS (Kitchen Management System) controller. Usually used with a touchscreen or hardware bump bar for acknowledging or bumping products to the next screen/clearing once prepared. Probably the most common brand for KMS is QSR.
@terryevans19765 ай бұрын
I always enjoy these oddball reuse videos. Thanks!
@thegreyfuzz5 ай бұрын
Might be a good fit for driving laser cutters or CNC machines in a dusty/dirty environment.
@BillDubie5 ай бұрын
Just a suggestion: Run BOINC on it with whatever project strikes your fancy. If you don't mind the power draw, you'll be helping research, education, and other worthy causes. I'm running it on an old HP Netbook with Raspberry Pi desktop OS. Because of the limited 2GB RAM, I've set it to only a single project (World Community Grid). Just boot it up and fuggetaboutit.
@rainzeros83935 ай бұрын
"a very large pizza chain here in the us" and yet this is the first time I'm hearing about it
@CJinMono5 ай бұрын
Same
@pekanut5 ай бұрын
US is a very large country. So you may not have seen everything in your country yet
@randomwarehousestudios5 ай бұрын
Same
@caseysmith5444 ай бұрын
Was a large chain, not anymore since Godfathers had bought out failing store locations in Midwest.
@3182john4 ай бұрын
I’ve heard of them, drive a semi all over. They’re actually pretty large in certain areas.
@darknessblades5 ай бұрын
For tape you would need something like Kapton tape. then give it a few layers of kapton tape, making sure to fully warp it. or you could 3D print a small flat bracket that covers the PCB. like a MINI case
@thiagoassisfernandes5 ай бұрын
that would be a great signal k host signal k is a marine software that gathers data from radar, sonar, AIS... those serial com ports would be handy, since most of the devices in a boat have them although nowadays it all connects via wifi, the serial is more reliable on storms and busy marinas..
@myacidninjatheamazing10255 ай бұрын
the COM ports in a restaurant environment would be used for bump bars for the KVS screens hence it saying "BUMP 1" on it. the bump bars would allow you to clear orders, recall orders, zoom the screen on orders, select the next page, and a few other things. basically, THIS specific system would be used to display the orders that came in FROM the POS for (in a mcdonalds) the food orders, or if they have mccafe, it would show those orders and print a reciept for that order when you hit the "serve" button on the bump bar
@SZYTOM5 ай бұрын
9:50 "nobody will use it as a gaming machine" - mybe not for playing AAA games, but I find this system useful in home made retro arcade game machine
@nickm91024 ай бұрын
I'm fairly sure that it would work for a Game Cabinet.
@samnadim99135 ай бұрын
Com ports or serial ports you can have this thing be a backup on your network gear to get back online after losing network access. For example you get locked out after messing up the IP on a switch in your rack, you log into that thing on the same rack and local into the router or switch you messed up its IP to get it back on the LAN. Or if you don’t want router to respond to management requests you can do management traffic from serial on that instead on the same rack
@kevinshumaker37535 ай бұрын
I am using way too many USB to 9 pin serial for controlling Scanner and Ham radios. I currently use M73 TFF machines, but would love to get ahold of a few of these for testing. I run base Debian CLI...
@HardwareHaven5 ай бұрын
I'm curious about this... I know very little about Ham radios, but now I'm intrigued
@kevinshumaker37535 ай бұрын
@@HardwareHaven I use a Uniden BCT15X, Uniden BC125AT scanners, along with several ham radios (Baofeng, Radioddity, and others) that all have some version of serial interfaces for control and programming. I use several USB sound cards to feed their audio to an Icecast streamer for in-house listening. Living in the mid-west, listening to NOAA, and RACES, and other folks discussing weather and neighborhood issues on the radios comes in handy. Even if I never transmitted (I am a licensed HAM operator, though) it would still be better than the RTL-SDR setups I used before.
@JoryIsHere8 күн бұрын
I had a client that used these in fast food restaurants. These computers are absolute tanks. I think I only replaced 1 in maybe 10 years, and they probably had a couple dozen total. Most of them were mounted in order prep areas in very hot and humid environments, often directly above cooking areas or above food storage areas with heat lamps. They were used to show food orders for prep and had a printer attached that would print the order so it could be put in the bag when done. They also had a super chonky "keyboard" attached that was really just a metal box with a few buttons to cycle through orders and clear them when they were done.
@acid31295 ай бұрын
About 10 years ago i was working with a demolition company we where tearing down a distribution warehouse that had stopped paying rent got kicked from the site and the land owner decided to build a storage unit complex i was tasked one day with smashing the interior office walls down i got quite a shock when i smashed a partition and found a fully intact server room still with machines and servers the company had built a server room next to the office section and to stop yhe noise built a insulated sliding door that was so well intergrated into the wall no one noticed it until i broke through i hot a whole tray of 3rd gen i7 cpus and a bunch of unused 2tb hdd when they cost a small fortune sold most of it kept an i7 and a bunch of drives and used the money i made to build a sick pc
@mattd60855 ай бұрын
Let punctuation into your life.
@acid31295 ай бұрын
@mattd6085 no what part of worked for demolition company made you think I was good at english
@mattd60855 ай бұрын
@@acid3129 I can't imagine you were good at demolition on your first day, that's why people practice things. Practice basic literacy.
@acid31295 ай бұрын
@mattd6085 all I did do was bang walls
@mattd60855 ай бұрын
@@acid3129 Do you have no desire at all to better yourself? And unless you got hurt often, banging walls still requires a level of skill and knowledge to not have the ceiling drop on your head or the the floor to give way
@elmariachi51335 ай бұрын
I recently bought an used industrial PC on eBay. It was full with remote control configurations (Many VNC connections to subsystems and a lot of very specific light management software) , including IPs and some account data to Austria's national theatre. They did not bother erasing the SSD .. well I did then, because I had more important stuff do to than to abuse the situation.
@Ren_00965 ай бұрын
Seems like a great pc for a 3d printing farm
@brettellis75635 ай бұрын
yeah, i was thinking octoprint could work
@tmofee5 ай бұрын
I used to replaced the ones they used to use at McDonald’s before they did a massive upgrade, those things are excellent for heat . Some of them used to hang off the back if monitors right above cooking stations and they were almost invincible
@gamereditor59ner225 ай бұрын
Dang! That's awesome! Keep it up! 😎👍
@cheebadigga40924 ай бұрын
Wow this is awesome! I appreciate the insights to these kinds of let's say nieche systems. Kinda surprised they use somewhat standard hardware, unlike maybe anything that conneceted to the serial ports when the device was in use at the pizza place. I personally would much prefer something like a Pi as a thin client for obvious reasons but you don't get to see much of these types of systems on a day to day basis without really looking for it so this one was a blast! Thanks YT algorithm - once in like 5 million times it recommended a really great video. Subscribed!
@bhirawamaylana4665 ай бұрын
Now I understand why my Pizza always late, they use overprice underpower tech 🤦♂️.
@MarcoGPUtuber5 ай бұрын
The pizza's late because Hardware Haven took the computer away
@stephenlipton5255 ай бұрын
Actually its not underpowered. in its day it was perfect in its use case. KVD (Kitchen Video Display) Epos equipment is generally one or two generations behind the mainstream general market when all the gremlins have been discovered and patched. That thing could run 24/7 for years and when I was younger, something like that would have been the dizzy heights that could only be dreamed about. You really only need a computer to do its designed functionality reliably and without fuss.
@309electronics55 ай бұрын
They don't use overpriced under powered tech. You dont know that these things are made for the Pos/embedded/application specific area of the market. These dont have to run gta 5 at 500 fps or even be a full fledged server...
@codebeat41925 ай бұрын
You can think about older laptops and do the same, for example laptops with a broken screen. Most of these laptops have a VGA or HDMI video output and can be still very usable when connected to an external screen. Just by removing the screen of the laptop you get a very neat form factor computer with a mouse and keyboard integrated. Or you can do what I did, take out the motherboard and put it onto a board into a (storage) cabinet, add a wireless mouse and keyboard (with a dongle/receiver) and add an extra extremly silent fan for extra cooling. I did this in my shed. You will be surprised how much better it will perform when it is outside the narrow case and when the cooling conditions are much better.
@pitz_nous5 ай бұрын
I've worked for mc donald for 1year here in France, and with one of my manager friend, we were the "tech ppl" he explaned to me how every pieces of the network system was terifing with both very outadated specs, missused features and prices of top of the line hardware, for exemple we had a tablet in one room tha was powered by 2x 100mb/sec poe that could scan NFS's in a whole small room, all of the OSs where proprietary super locked often just connecting to remote server for basic function, and what was not using proprietary OS just had windows XP and was still remoting on firm's server
@PiotrK20225 ай бұрын
@HardwareHaven Thermalpads are used on small cores, like PCH, GPU, etc... It's because thermalpaste is harder to apply correctly on such small core. then thermalpad.
@codeman99-dev5 ай бұрын
Yeah, this is peripheral beast. Use it to build a DIY 3D Printer. Bonus points for every COM port you use for real features. Extra bonus points if one of the peripheral devices is a "bump" button!
@jasonnugent9635 ай бұрын
Definitely appreciate the "re-use" vibe here. Imagine how many of these get ewasted.
@MK-of7qw5 ай бұрын
Mmmm. Still has that greasy pepperoni scent.
@HardwareHaven5 ай бұрын
Surprisingly it didn't. I was a bit shocked.
@uendarkarplips72635 ай бұрын
A “bump” or “bump bar” is typically a kitchen display used to track all orders in a queue
@the_real_tosterzy5 ай бұрын
can it run doom
@TibiGamer3DS5 ай бұрын
well, the ipod can run doom with rockbox so 99% yes it can
@Null_Experis3 ай бұрын
There is a surprising amount of modern AV equipment that still has serial management ports on them, so you could easily repurpose this thing as a robust little serial control box with internet access that would allow you to manage devices remotely, even from your phone.
@alabamacajun77915 ай бұрын
I suggest home automation where you are not pumping vertexes in games nor gigabytes of streaming video. Run your AVR on another box. Many of your environment sensors; weather, security and remote controlling are low data rates. With the decent video you can have a nice looking wall panel creating a futuristic looking vibe from low-tech.
@aaronbuildsa4 ай бұрын
I used a similar J1900 based "silent PC" as my pfsense router for years - despite the J1900 being on borrowed time (see other comments re the silicon bug), but it worked well and kept up with the 1Gbit WAN just fine. Finally retired this year and replaced by another device of identical form factor, this time powered by an N100 w/ 2.5Gbit NICs - they're inexpensive, silent and just keep trucking on..
@SFoX-On-Air5 ай бұрын
I have a similar device at home. It's been hanging around for so long that I only remembered it because of this video. It used to coordinate robotic arms for welding. Now, it runs CasaOS and serves as my primary backup server. When I'm done with a project (videos, which are very large files), I store them on the device (it has a SATA SSD with a terabyte). CasaOS then automatically makes a copy and uploads it to an internet cloud for redundant backup. I set this up because I used to edit on a laptop. When I finished, I just wanted to close the laptop and be "done." I didn't want to leave it on for another 30 minutes until all the syncing was complete. With this current solution, I let another device, which consumes less power and makes no noise, handle the upload. And how long it takes is completely irrelevant to me... I don't have to monitor it.
@filter4now5 ай бұрын
I've built POS system for a local pizza place 12 years ago. Thing is - the online built in credit transaction fees are way, way cheaper than the standalone machine was. Security is an issue - I always advise stores with POS to secure their routers and use a separate VLAN for guest wifi
@BoloH.5 ай бұрын
I have fiddled with these fanless industrial PCs a lot, and some of them have really high-end hardware, like Core i9s. In general they always have good connectivity, pretty good ambient temperature rating and ability to use quite a wide range of DC power, 12-24 V being the typical one, but I've seen some that will run on 9-48V, which is great.
@shadowmage19755 ай бұрын
It is a kitchen display system unit. Many restaurants don't own those, they are leased and maintained by a third party company.
@blackxiivexil82555 ай бұрын
Hi. Very interessting Video. 1 thing - dont measure batteries unloaded. The voltage may be okay but under load they easily drop when broken/faulty - may not for a RTC backup - but certainly on battery powered systems ;)
@CodaCM5 ай бұрын
Bingus Studios needs to get his hands on one of these
@ronz1019 күн бұрын
Head spinning but watched all the way through. A swap parts inventory and general working knowledge, like you have, is indispensable. 🎉
@3_character_minimum4 ай бұрын
I work for a company that has some hardware to sell. And our handeld measurement units are ridiculously underpowered for what is possible. But for a handheld unit it is very servicable which is great for our tech guys.
@theWSt5 ай бұрын
Nice! What I like most about the system is the slim form factor. Recently I built a new router out of an N100 based passively cooled mini PC. It works great, but it's also pretty bulky. This one is flat and has these mounting brackets to screw it under a table, shelf, or even on the wall.
@thany35 ай бұрын
The thermal pad, instead of thermal paste, is there to fill a gap. Paste can't do that. A pad can, and it's the also reason the pad has to be of a certain thickness.
@Corruptedpuppy4 ай бұрын
11:39 you have to update the kernel to get your display to be fixed, some older kernels won’t detect certain drivers an mint doesn’t always have the most recent kernel installed for a fresh install
@TechX13205 ай бұрын
I got a similar computer from a 2nd hand shop near me recently. I set it up on Windows 7 x64, 8gb RAM, a taken apart ssd like you did. I hooked it up to a simple 19" 1080p tv and use it for simple game emulation from NES all the way up to PS1 with no issues. I'm thinking about getting a USB based touch screen monitor and making my own UI in C# for a custom emulation station. Just some simple large on screen buttons to navigate/launch emulators... I know I could just use something like OpenEMU or even better, swap to linux and just launch from there, but on Win7, it is virtually flawless
@nathanlee1054 ай бұрын
I have one of those mini PCs and all I currently use It is to run Linux and then connect to my main computer via Steam Link.
@fm95723 ай бұрын
My desktop is a used Thinkcentre T-73 that was thrown out when a local textile mill closed. It came with a 4th gen I-3 'energy saver' I replaced with the 2nd fastest 4th gen I-7, and maxed out the RAM from 4gb to 16gb. I also installed Ubuntu Linux, and it works great for what I use it for. It's been running like this for over 4 years now.
@megidont4 ай бұрын
"[...] this thing has a lot of these COM ports which I imagine are used for connecting to a variety of point of sale devices using a UART connection or whatever, but I'm kinda curious what else this could be used for." Honestly? virtually any task of getting low-volume data from one place to another, no matter how complex or simple the source or sink may be. I personally have deployed on my desktop a VT320 terminal (mostly for output and monitoring data, little input), a line display, receipt printer, and a dot matrix printer. but it's also extremely useful for offline headless deployments; rather than SSH'ing into a box you can keep it as far from the 'net as possible and require physical access to control it. There's novel uses in art, too; you can get some interesting aesthetics from the reception of data sent faster than the receiver is expecting if you play your cards right.
@sirhawkknightmk33285 ай бұрын
The problem causing the display issue on Linux is caused by lack of open gl drivers that are shipped with mesa. The chip is so ancient you need mesa-amber legacy driver package (at least thats what it is called in arch). You also need x11 and not wayland as wayland requires a version of opengl that this chip does not support
@rnc74685 ай бұрын
Useful to know, thank you!
@tpttecmic5 ай бұрын
My first thought would be toss it in the server closet and serial console server for all the other servers. Now you have a management node. You could also run a management network off one of the other NICs then it would be a full management system. Toss DNS and LDAP and maybe Kerberos and a CA and very full featured management node
@ShieyV2komputroniks5 ай бұрын
Tbh for warehouse those would been usefull. The normal Desktops at our work are dusty and loud after 2 years
@TheMeowthTeamV210 сағат бұрын
i have something kinda simular to this, its called the posx evo-tp1. I got it from a thrift store in 2022 for 12 dollars and it needs some screws for its stand and not only that it's sata adapter broke and the touchscreen cable had a rip in it so that sucks
@bobbycone24 ай бұрын
I like to work on my cars a lot and this would be a great little system to pop in my garage, have a keyboard and small screen mounted and just use it to look up videos, websites and order parts whenever I need to. Cool option.
@AaronEiche2 ай бұрын
I used to work for a car manufacturer, and we had a number of machines just like this for prototyping Infotainment systems.
@Toastmaster_500024 күн бұрын
Robotics is what I had in mind for this. Low power, passively cooled, relatively small, lots of serial ports, and a "good-enough" CPU for some basic functions.
@OldManBadly5 ай бұрын
They are very specific to the job they are intended to. it is part of a touch screen cash register system, where the touch screen likely just provided serial data, plus serial credit card processing, and probably even a serial port driven printer. it's not intended to do anything special, just to do the same basic crap over and over, communicating with a server that actually keeps track of the data. Much of the BIOS and the data bus is given over to those comm ports. That is par for the course. The hard drive would be for boot and likely to have loadable screens without having to hit the server, think of it as a precursor to jquery and json driven data sets. Suggestion would be to clean it up, make sure all the ports are working, and sell it on for a couple of hundred. You would be far ahead.
@mikelieberman692410 күн бұрын
The video resolution glitch you saw was something that I have seen with hooking up an Acer model G206HL via the VGA D-SUB port to an Intel core i3 onboard video chip to Debian (both 11 and 12). However when using the DVI port the problem disappeared. I do note that when using the D-SUB port, but turning off the monitor, once logged in, and repowering it fixed the display resolution. I haven't tried it, but I wonder is a DVI to D-Sub cable might resolve the problem. The multiple serial ports would make this a great little security box attached to door/window/heat/water sensors. Wiring some pairs in loop-back and some to act of open or closed. :-) it could when sound an alarm, email warning... if in the USA (I'm not but was before) email a SMS service to text a warning. Doing this, it could run Debian in Command-Line mode, so not GUI overhead. 🙂
@scottjohnston309817 сағат бұрын
I had no idea what "keys" were that plugged into ports with no wires. software that communicates with hardware will have them, and be unable to "talk" on the network, until that key is plugged in to a non network port. local only.
@LarsZu5 ай бұрын
Digital Signage Monitors often have an OPS Slot. So these PCs are integrated into the monitor and are user changable for different input cards or PCs.
@firestormv015 ай бұрын
This little machine can still be useful for a variety of homelab things. With working USB ports, you could make it a DBAN /test rig for hard drives or you could make a small terminal server out of the serial ports (provided you can find the pinouts). I just recently had to make a terminal server out of a Pi and some usb-serial UARTs for devices that could only be controlled via serial. Since this thing has three serial ports, it'd be pretty easy to do the same (assuming they can be enumerated in Linux and usable via minicom).
@AT_Videography4 ай бұрын
In my opinion, due to its limited cpu power, but plethora of serial ports, you could potentially use it as a networking switch. I used a raspberry pi that had been modified to accept 6 ethernet ports, and two optical ports. I use it to this day as a networking switch between all the clients in my house, and even a data center on occasion when needed. Food for thought.
@victorterancasАй бұрын
This seems to be usefull in industry environments with a lot of dust, were passive cooling makes you avoid tons of hours of maintenance.
@arrestedeffort3 ай бұрын
As someone who lives in the area that Marco's was founded in, it's wild to me to hear it referred to as a "very large pizza chain" after all this time. When I first moved here, it was only a local chain. I wonder if the quality's the same in other places in the US as it is here. Personally, Marco's is my favorite, though I wouldn't be surprised if it isn't as good in some other locations.
@Vectorous5 ай бұрын
I salvaged 4 HP prodesks from work. Tiny little PCs with 7th gen i5 cpus... I'm out of ideas on what to use them for! I already run two Dell poweredge servers so all my VMs run on them.
@ricardog21655 ай бұрын
Donate to a charity and get a tax deduction.
@chriscowally5 ай бұрын
Maybe use with SDR. Software Define Radio
@Elkarlo775 ай бұрын
One Advice: I have a Storage/Printroom PC as well. You want a Windows PC/MAC OS there or something a little more beefier which can run Orcaslicer at ubuntu at a decent speed. You can print from the Smartphone app. But a good search and fast edit of an STL needs a Mouse and a decent PC.
@ThomasMcMillan15 ай бұрын
Most GPS modules communicate via UART, so you could put this in a car as a tracking base and use other sensors like it.
@yuan.pingchen30565 ай бұрын
We are in an era where mainstream PCs have more than 4 core processors, so the best way to utilize this low-power thin client that lacks pcie gen2 x4 expansion slot is dual 2.5Gb network port routing (executing pfsense firewall ) As long as a 2.5Gbe switch is connected to the LAN port, it is suitable for small home studios. It is best to turn off its virtualization function and only give it a single role. As long as its processor is not always under full load, then it It will be a very useful machine.
@monad_tcp5 ай бұрын
11:08 typical linux experience, and that's why Windows can only lose to MacOS
@cmritchie044 ай бұрын
Com ports can be used to program commercial motorola two way radios, pages and even other brands. Can also be used to monitor remote communications via IAX_RPT software will need a sound card and microphone/speakers
@jeolman13 ай бұрын
the only question you need ask yourself with old hardware like this: "WILL IT PLAY DOOM ?!?!"
@kirkb49895 ай бұрын
The J1900 definitely benefits from dual channel memory operation due to the memory bandwidth limitations of single channel ram especially for the integrated graphics. It looks like the oem of that board only designed it for a single ram slot so unfortunately THAT is not an option for this system.
@dasmin11355 ай бұрын
You can use that as an IoT home server. There are plenty of sensors which used serial interface in TTL mode.