By clicking my link www.piavpn.com/HardwareHaven you’ll get an 83% discount on Private Internet Access! That’s just $2.03 a month, AND you’ll also get 4 extra months completely for free!
@billspencer85403 ай бұрын
This is a decent PC but it causes pretty bad EMI when the HDMI is used.
@mikehensley783 ай бұрын
Blue and Orange or Yellow front USB = Blue is high speed. Yellow or Orange is powered all the time(even when PC is powered OFF) to charge periphs.
@HardwareHaven3 ай бұрын
Interesting! Didn't even catch that
@s2meister3 ай бұрын
And with the correct keyboard you can power up the NUC if plugged into the yellow port, some BIOS settings need to be set.
@RoshiGaming3 ай бұрын
I was beside myself at my last job when I was cleaning out our storage room and found one of these. Took it to my boss and he said he didn't even recognize it and it must've been his predecessor who got it. It was a freebie from some random company so he didn't care about it and told me I could take it home. It's been running Proxmox for about 4 years now? I have pihole on it and some other small servers, mostly I use it as a "test" server with spinning up different OS' on it and whatnot. Really nice little machine. Completely unrelated, but just wanted to highlight how great it is that you allow your son to be around you when working on things and actively letting him "help". Some of my earliest memories are of my grandfather teaching me stuff about computers and it's always stuck with me as a great memory.
@kyleleroux1103 ай бұрын
I would love to see Windows 11 on here.
@truckerallikatuk3 ай бұрын
My Home Assistant has lived on a NUC11 for the past 2 years, and been rock solid.
@gmc97533 ай бұрын
I've got Home Assistant running on an i3 NUC about 12 years old.
@SilentDecode3 ай бұрын
I've got HA on a NUC8i3BEK2.
@GJoseeph3 ай бұрын
I have HASS vm in a x86 mATX where I run Proxmox as host, it's not 24/7, it's only when needed instead, I want to run HASS in another machine, maybe NUC or ARM, only to use as Smart home hub, what would you recommend for power efficiency and compability?
@creativemaster0073 ай бұрын
Do you guys have power backup in home ?
@GJoseeph3 ай бұрын
@@creativemaster007 nope for me it would be expensive, I know that it's a good practice, but I rather expend in a data backup (so I can restore the essential data I need to keep) than in a yearly battery replacement just for the shutdowns.
@ewasteredux3 ай бұрын
Great to see your co-host helping with the video!
@HardwareHaven3 ай бұрын
He'll probably take over the channel here soon, so be ready for a lot more videos covering dinosaurs and baby sharks
@mikehensley783 ай бұрын
baby shark doo doo do dododoo baby shark doo doo do dododoo ...... BabyShark.
@Lorondos3 ай бұрын
7 years later and we seem to have forgotten how to make a useful BIOS UI, seriously, that search alone
@Pitcairn883 ай бұрын
The OBS problem might be the fact you used the flatpack version. Flatpacks have much less permissions than native applications. Try using flatseal to change permissions. Maybe that would work.
@rigen973 ай бұрын
yeah I was about to say, seems like flatpak permission issue, cuz I experienced similar thing with downloads from a flatpak app disappearing
@davidwestra81813 ай бұрын
I use LMDE daily and will go out of my way to find a use a .deb before using a flatpack.
@Jp-ue8xz3 ай бұрын
stop recommending standalone packages, just use what's packaged for your specific system from the official repos, or (even better) compile your own version
@mgk8783 ай бұрын
I was thinking that. I'd guess the files were redirected into a sandbox somewhere. While these app bundles + sandboxing can make a whole lot of sense sometimes, it can clearly hurt the user. OBS is trustworthy software, there's no reason why it should be trapped in a sandbox by default.
@zeropoint463 ай бұрын
One fact you forgot to touch on for the server usecase is that if you get the i5/i7/i9 version you get vpro, which allows for remote power management and iKVM so you can remote manage the machine. This is huge if you're using it for proxmox and keep it away from your desk or even a remote location.
@photon923 ай бұрын
Trying to get vPro working might be a beast beyond the Scope of the individual buying a cheap server to do little things or to ticker with. I don't want to even want to try to tackle it... Additionally, it seems to be on most CPUs recently with no real support or official way to access it...
@zeropoint463 ай бұрын
@@photon92 really? what was hard? CTRL+P on boot, enable it, then you can at least control the power from a webui and if you want to get more technical just use meshcommander and you have KVM access. Really is not hard at all if you're already doing home sever stuff, you should have 0 issues.
@volppe012 ай бұрын
Only specific i5/i7/i9 models have vpro enabled . There’s also a premium for these compared to the non vpro versions .
@soli-ethd3 ай бұрын
6:21 ouch. Hate it when you have to spend so much time troubleshooting the problem and you were the problem the whole time
@HardwareHaven3 ай бұрын
My life in a nutshell...
@XxChocoTacoxX3 ай бұрын
PEBKAC. Happens to all of us at some point. 😅
@PoeLemic3 ай бұрын
Hilarious ... I didn't catch that the first time. I just thought it was a driver issue, because he had the keyboard on Bluetooth. Usually, you must plug KB's and make it wired.
@0xKruzr3 ай бұрын
once again I scroll down to the comments of a HardwareHaven video only to be immediately personally attacked. 🥲 /s
@flashyashy13 ай бұрын
PICNIC - Problem In Chair, Not In Computer
@infamoussteven3 ай бұрын
If I got it for free I'd make use out of it but if I had to pay $100 then it would likely be better to go for an 8th or 9th gen mini pc. I just picked up a Lenovo m720q with an i5 8500t, 8gb ram, and 256gb ssd for $80 shipped (It's going to become an Opnsense router).
@alexander0the0gray3 ай бұрын
You’ve gotta see what I’m doing on my Gen 7 NUC. I have a PCIe break out from the NVMe M.2 slot and it goes to a SATA board running RAID 8TB hard drives as a ZFS storage pool, with the ability to add up to 6 drives. It’s a Frankenstein NAS an additional drives. Plus the SATA SSD for the boot device. I love it
@soli-ethd3 ай бұрын
That weird font on Steam's updater is just something it does on Linux. You'll even see that on the Steam Deck if you're in desktop mode.
@cangel85633 ай бұрын
Yep, I see it pretty often since my steam deck is my main machine for now
@denvera1g13 ай бұрын
This UEFI is a common theme for Intel boards, we had a bunch of 4th gen Intel boards we used for in-house built computers(because pre-builts from Dell/HP/Lenovo couldnt fit the use case we needed) Honestly other than the Lenovo text BIOS Intel's GUI BIOS is IMO the best(Lenovo's is just so fast to navigate with arrow keys compared to other BIOS, Dell's looks nicer, but it takes so much more time to configure the same settings)
@Tiamorg3 ай бұрын
I have 2 nuc7, both with i5/32gb/256gb/2000gb for homelab stuff, one is "prod" with important stuff, and one is my sandbox. And as a main pc, there is my nuc11 i7/64gb/1000gb nvme/2000gb m.2 sata/4000gb 2.5 sata that will soon be retired to be a main homelab server, when i will get a new nuc. I just love these things, small yet powerful, efficient and reliable.
@0xKruzr3 ай бұрын
in terms of bang for buck I think the only thing that beats them these days is Minisforum MS-01s -- and even then you're talking about 4x the money minimum without adding any RAM/storage/etc.!
@BatteryPoweredBricks3 ай бұрын
I've had several PC's refuse to enter the BIOS without a keyboard attached, it's the strangest thing 🤷
@XanderRowlet3 ай бұрын
I recently upgraded my home server from an upside down Surface Book on a laptop pad, to an HP Elitedesk 705 G4. It has a Ryzen 5 2400GE and an RX560 w/ 16GB RAM. I’m immensely happy with it, temps are great since getting a ventilated lid, and the 4 core 8 thread architecture is much preferred to an older hyperthreaded dual core.
@TheShortStory3 ай бұрын
Been using a Nuc 11 performance model for many years now. Once I figured out which RAM sticks and NVME SSDs would be stable (it is very picky…) it has been 100% reliable. It’s only in the last three months it got a bit loud and I removed some dust. Back to silent, steady operation, via proxmox serving ~30 programs via ~20 containers and VMs including Plex, Jellyfin, Home Assistant and more. The only problems have been the ones I created myself.
@MarcoGPUtuber3 ай бұрын
Hardware Haven 3 years later Always great content!
@HardwareHaven3 ай бұрын
I look forward to these
@Kopi83r3 ай бұрын
Yo Marco!
@MarcoGPUtuber3 ай бұрын
@@Kopi83r Yo!
@Yarpopcat083 ай бұрын
Oh I actually have two of these! So cool to see one of my favourite youtubers showcase one of these
@SilentDecode3 ай бұрын
I have the NUC7i3BNK as my dockerhost for: 1. Plex 2. Jellyfin 3. Tautulli 4. Immich 5. PiHole 6. KitchenOwl
@sampellino3 ай бұрын
Thanks for making this! My wife and I just bought a house and I'm looking to set up a home Proxmox server and have little NUC PCs at every TV. All of these tests are basically everything I want to do.
@danr25133 ай бұрын
I have almost the exact same model. Mine is a Nuc7i7BNK. I mainly use it (although infrequently) when I can only do something on Windows. I like it and got it real cheap.
@JoeCorll3 ай бұрын
I love my 2015 NUC. It's old, but still chugs away with no issue. I'm excited to check out Moonlight!
@jeffhyche98393 ай бұрын
I have one of these old systems. Still chugging a long after so many years. Just having it as a small form system gives it many advantages. I'll probably still be using it long after I retire this i9 desktop.
@youngsweezy193 ай бұрын
I have 3 of these exact Nuc's sitting on a shelf. Glad I now have some ideas for them.
@mikehensley783 ай бұрын
As for bumping the Power button when using the combo jack... you can go into settings and change the way the power button reacts to presses.
@notkudu3 ай бұрын
6:14 that was funny lol
@HardwareHaven3 ай бұрын
For you maybe... lol
@PoeLemic3 ай бұрын
Hilarious ... I didn't catch that the first time. I just thought it was a driver issue, because he had the keyboard on Bluetooth. Usually, you must plug KB's and make it wired.
@PoeLemic3 ай бұрын
@@HardwareHaven Well, it was sure funny for us, too.
@blinddog12123 ай бұрын
Very real, very relatable.
@MortenEghj3 ай бұрын
Thanks for an great video . One idea for another video is “ how to plan your IP network plan for the homelab. Specially with the proxmox settings etc. A video and spreadsheet would be a great help for many.
@alexj.f.kennedy60843 ай бұрын
I like those NUCs a lot, they can be of great value especially if you are able to pick one up from local companies sorting them out due to them not supporting windows 11. I got the exact model u have with 8GB of RAM for 30€, i only had to go out and buy an SSD for it and was good to go to use it. Using it as a some sort of streaming box in the living room as the TV no longer support youtube or other streaming services for my parents, and running it with mint it is a really good experience. It would be an awesome little fella for cheap office tasking if u can find one for the price I did and the performance for basic office tasks is more than enough.
@crazyfurnaceguy12293 ай бұрын
4:37 Because the heatsink design, these two thermal pads are for PCH chip and integrated graphics chip cooling
@Cavi5873 ай бұрын
I have the i3 version and it's been my proxmox machine for about 2 years now! I run quite a few services and it doesn't even break a sweat.
@MM-he2iq3 ай бұрын
That BIOS is gorgeous! 6:32
@renesantosbr3 ай бұрын
I had one of these hooked to a egpu Asus XGStation Pro. It worked pretty well. Now I'm setting up it as my Nextcloud/Backups home server.
@mikehensley783 ай бұрын
Ive always wanted one of those little NUCs too.
@marc37933 ай бұрын
I have the i7 variant which i love, it has 12 threads so is quite capable. I've used for various tasks, virtualisation stuff with ESXi, running Home Assistant. It ran Blue Iris for a couple of years. Even a crypto node for a year. The fan however on mine is quite loud when it ramps up. I had driver issues from Windows updates a few years ago. Once the NIC would stop working. I had to find the original proper drivers it came with, which took ages to find on the Internet, but everything worked okay again. It's been on 24/7 for 5 years or so! 😊
@DaPrince1003 ай бұрын
i used a NUC8 as a lil LAN-party pc for a while. Due to its small size n thunderbolt support it worked amazingly with a small Gigabyte GTX1070 EGPU. Highly recommend.
@codeman99-dev3 ай бұрын
15:39 I like this calculation. That said, it's not quite reality. In a server use case over that time it is a high possibility you might need to replace storage at some point. The cost and time to restore maybe should be part of the considerations?
@janhenkins2 күн бұрын
Nice, I had an i3 NUC that I gave away due to only having a single NVME drive slot. I'm surprised that your i5 model has space for an additional SATA drive, so it is possible to be used as a proper Proxmox cluster node with a RAID1 mirror. Sweet!
@Driveby-23 ай бұрын
i got 9 of these for free when the company went to a new system for their kiosks. i3's and i5's ....... i use them for everything. i even have a half-height one I have put in my bag as an emergency computer when i have nothing else. the one thing i like about the older ones is that they operate on 12V while the newer ones operate on the standard 19V. you can also modify them internally to do things they're not supposed to do. Hope you enjoy it ! They've been wonderful.
@TheQuickSilver1013 ай бұрын
Personally I have an HP mini PC that I'm using right now. I wouldn't go out of my way to get a nuc, though if I had an opportunity to get one cheap enough I just might. Seeing your kiddo help was cute! Also it was surprising to see that little hand push the drive in 😅
@HardwareHaven3 ай бұрын
I thought it was a funny clip to randoly throw in haha
@ewenchan12393 ай бұрын
I deployed one for my FIL to use rather than my old Core 2 Duo Q6600. That thing, at idle, was sucking back 140 W. Gave him the NUC instead, and it actually ended up working better, even when only running the Core i3 7100U.
@LUNATIC753 ай бұрын
I'm using a Nuc7 to watch this very video. It's been my living room PC, for (cough) ad free KZbin for 5 years! Great little system and apart from its fussiness with Ram sticks, softened my hard line anti Intel stance... for a while! The J5005 CPU is showing its age now, but as it's Windows 11 compliant, I'll give it to my Mum next year, as her computer certainly isn't compliant.
@greenmoose_3 ай бұрын
ok thats weird, someone just gave me one of these exact same models (for free!) yesterday! I'm surprised Windows 11 installed without complaining the machine was out of spec with it being a 7th gen Intel! Gonna give that a try!
@robertopontone3 ай бұрын
I have 6 NUCs from different generations, the older a Gen5 and the newer a Gen12, all are working fine in different cases: virtualization server, windows and linux boxes. It’s a shame Intel decided to discontinue the NUC line.
@bader515003 ай бұрын
I think you should make them a ceph cluster to get the most out of them 🤔
@Raintiger883 ай бұрын
I have six of these things now. The oldest is a 3867U and yes, it's still useful. This one is running Emby and does just fine. The UHD610 iGPU is dated, but works like a champ for media. That said, it doesn't have another use case for me other than a pihole or emby server. Saying that it's slow is giving it more credit than it deserves in 2024. It seems to draw about the same amount of power as one of my N100s, so not like it's costing me more to actually use it vs trashing it for low level use cases.
@Smittron3 ай бұрын
I've got a NUC 7 with a J5005 CPU, 8 GB RAM and a 256 GB SSD that I initially used as a HTPC running Kubuntu. It's since been repurposed as a desktop running Debian with XFCE. This was a good investment.
@aleksanderreynolds92343 ай бұрын
We use NUCS for everything at work (I work for a medium-sized managed IT provider) and I use NUCS at home for most of my servers too, the new Asus NUCs seem pretty good. they are in a plastic versus an aluminium case but it's still built well. they don't get hot while running and have excellent fan performance. the tooless system is not bad either but it takes a bit to get the bottom of the nuc back on the very first time.
@DavidDavisL3 ай бұрын
Yep, many of us have learned that plug in the keyboard trick, too!
@Trevorwyatt183 ай бұрын
I had one similar to this that I really liked, it had an i3-8121u and an amd rx 540. It worked great for older games and emulation
@AMV12S3 ай бұрын
14:40 You are missing one really important thing: N100 has much less instructions than the NUC, these instructions are so important that you can install Mac on the NUC but can't on the N100. N100 is the modern Intel Atom.
@potra293 ай бұрын
Towards the beginning of this year, i found a barebones nuc7 with a Celeron J4005 at a flea market for only 10$. I slapped in 8gb of ddr4 ram and an old ssd i had laying around in it. I used it for a bit, but i later sold it for like 70 bucks. It was a great tiny machine for everyday use and some very light gaming. Intel really nailed it with the NUCs!
@Sero3_3 ай бұрын
Working with NUC daily as a product that ships out to clients, from my company's data they fails at around 3-5 years mark due to lack of cleaning and/or failure of SSD / Ram slots. Considering most fail NUCs are from fast food chains, IMO it's fair to say NUCs rocks in stability. I personally had an 8th gen i5 for ESXi too, sold and replaced it with a Deskmini A300 with 4750G freed from another project which now runs Proxmox (rip VMWare free license). NUCs were my goto for thin clients and small home servers, I would have picked it over any other mini PCs if it weren't for the high brand tax, which, nowadays from what I've heard have gone crazy with the brand transfer to Asus.
@elgato75573 ай бұрын
6:29 Just to add to this, I 100% agree. I recently bought a PC for my sister which was kitted with an Intel Desktop Boards mobo that runs the intel Visual Bios, and it is by far the best UEFI I've ever worked on and an absolute pleasure to use. I wish it was more widespread
@ADominacja3 ай бұрын
The NUC is basically absent in my country, but I'd happily get one if I could. That being said, I got my N100 minipc for just under $100, so I can't complain much
@HardwareHaven3 ай бұрын
Dang! Sounds like a good deal!
@GsrItalia3 ай бұрын
howly schmackos, great price.
@0xKruzr3 ай бұрын
imo Thunderbolt 3 on this is the killer feature that sets it apart from otherwise-similar N100 or N300 machines. it gives you access to faster networking than you'd otherwise be able to have which is potentially a gamechanger for the server use case.
@___aZa___3 ай бұрын
Thats insane! I just got one of these yesterday to use it as my Jellyfin media server! What a coincedence :D
@patchrick843 ай бұрын
That NUC build quality is night and day better than these common N100 PCs. I've had many a NUC over the past 10ish years and have loved them all. Still have a few running 24/7 doing various things.
@chaosen32 ай бұрын
I had a NUC8i7BEH running Xpenology for a few years and it worked perfectly. Funnily enough I then turned mine into a Hackintosh but found the lack of active cooling basically meant whenever I used it the CPU ran ridiculously hot. Like close to 70C with nothing open. I now use it as a headless Linux server mainly for docker containers but it does struggle when the CPU starts to get slammed. Just a shame there isn't a like for like modern NUC equivalent as I got mine originally for an affordable price (brand new too).
@pandaDotDragon3 ай бұрын
Even thought their CPUs are no more the best you can get nowadays the Intel NUCs were beautifully made PCs. Very well made and integrated. There is a gap between these and the modern NUCs where everything is packed together just to have the best specs... but without nothing around it (like a well polished uefi). I'm using a Skull Canyon and even after 8 years it's still relevant with several nice features (like the SPDIF embedded in the rear jack).
@Kisbalta3 ай бұрын
Hello! Nice presentation and benchmark of that NUC7. I am sure that the power draw can be reduced by using linux packages: Powertop, cpufreq and TLP-gui. Worth a try, i have an old laptop with a i5-5200U CPU, and it draws around 4,8 W in idle after power optimization with those tools.
@HardwareHaven3 ай бұрын
Might be worth looking into a bit more. I typically try to grab the numbers without doing much as a baseline comparison. I've had little luck with getting idle draw down on most systems using tools like those, but maybe it's worth another look!
@ravagingwolverine6663 ай бұрын
That's a cool pick up. I do like mini PCs and always thought the NUC design was really nice. I kind of had the same attraction to the Tiny/Mini/Micro computers when they were new. I wanted one(or a bunch), but not at those prices. Now I have several I got for well under $100 and I love them. I tend to prefer going used these days. You get some amount of cost savings up front compared to the N100, and typically still get a power draw low enough to not matter too much, as the break-even calculator shows. Though I suspect I'll eventually end up with an N100 box down the line used, and hopefully dirt cheap, when everyone else moves on to the next big thing. I recently did have a look at a some NUCs, but ended up buying a Zotac(an M model with a fan, fifth-gen Intel i5 5010U) instead due to it having two ethernet ports so I could have the option to use it as a DIY router. I have another Zotac, a fanless model with a Core M 5y10c that's currently acting as a media server(I don't do on-the-fly transcoding). I like that machine a lot, and the Core M is ideal for a fanless application. It also has two ethernet ports, so it's possible I could use that as a router instead when I finally make my decisions.
@GarethFairclough2 ай бұрын
My parents still have theirs. I got it for them to replace an old core 2 quad system which was really struggling. It's a nuc7 i5bnh. It was such a massive upgrade and so much smaller too. Much more efficient and quieter. Great rig, but with windows 10 coming to a close, I'll need to get them a new one with win 11 to help keep them somewhat decently safe. Ah well. :(
@cbl73333 ай бұрын
I was at a conference a few years back where Intel had a booth. They were showing off some NUCs and they pronounced it "newk" .. they are obviously wrong but that's ok :)
@Yandarval3 ай бұрын
The CPU foam pads are probably to help mitigate chipping the die. They will help keep the heatsink level as its tightened down during manufacture.
@406Steven3 ай бұрын
I have this same model at home on Windows 11 running my Plex, Satisfactory, and Conan servers while also being hooked to my TV for some gaming (it'll run Farcry 3 @ 1080p low) or as a Steam Link system to stream from my gaming PC. It's amazingly powerful for what it is, takes no power, fits anywhere... really just a nice overall system.
@Herr_U3 ай бұрын
Watching this on a NUC7i5BNH... The NUC7 was the first NUC with a decent iGPU. It also has two extra features that many miss - it has a built-in IR-reciever (quite handy when paired with - say - KODI) as well as a stereo microphones. They are basically small conferencing machines (just attach a webcam) that is like made for doing video-calls and presentations with (the actual use for the IR-reciever). Other things with it is that Intel published the files to 3d-print "hats" for it if you felt like hacking it a bit more. Quite nice little machine that far outperformed my expectations when I got it (and once it gets replaced it will live on as a general server).
@augustine_a.2 ай бұрын
Great videos, Subscribed ❤
@mjc09613 ай бұрын
Looking at that keyboard, thinking "that sure is a neat little 3D printed holder he has for the wireless dongle that he should probably plug in" :p
@AndyMitchellUK263 ай бұрын
I have a little MSI Cubi with the N6000 quad core. It has one job - it's my torrent box with an 8TB external so that I can maintain a decent share ratio on private trackers.
@fergusyoung67823 ай бұрын
my router is a custom fanless NUC5 from a company called seneca that was initially designed for use in digital signage. Lil m.2 network card got me up and running with OPNsense and its been great. Only thing is it refuses to power back up after losing power despite me enabling it in the bios - possibly due to the custom internal PSU that it comes with.
@Wesrl3 ай бұрын
I use mine for Docker with Odoo(for testing), CTFd, Ubookuti (library). I might add more but I am waiting
@SpyAlelo2 ай бұрын
Thunderbolt won't show on the device manager until you plug a Thunderbolt device in, I have the same exact NUC and that's what it takes. There's nothing wrong with it otherwise, sorry you had to go through so much trouble. I was as confused as you were when I first got mine.
@TroyFletcherKeyboards3 ай бұрын
Good video. My current server is a used screenless thinkpad. Laptop CPU, battery backup, and cheap!
@delipatedape7283 ай бұрын
Rad dude, I just happened across one of these. Cool little PC. My same generation NUC didn't support hardware transcoding when I tried to use moonlight.
@HardwareHaven3 ай бұрын
Hmmm weird. I don't think I had to do anything to get it working at least not in linux mint
@wilsondavenport69393 ай бұрын
My dad got one of these new for a cad program for his engineering degree, i really wish he would have gotten a custom pc tbh but he just didn’t wanna deal with that
@motmontheinternet3 ай бұрын
7:45 I don't know off the top of my head if Linux Mint comes with AAC encoding or not, that's probably your issue. AAC encoding costs money so free distros don't include it. I, uh, THINK ffmpeg adds AAC encoding libraries as part of its installation? It might work after that.
@johanb.78693 ай бұрын
Ideal for Linux. I use refurbished Dell optiplex mini's.
@ShawnShyguySatan3 ай бұрын
I have one of these (7i5BNH) that I use for Batocera Linux and it makes a killer emulation box. run up to PS2/GCN/DC/XBOX with almost no lag, and I load all the ROMs from my main server over the network. I think with an external GPU over thunderbolt, you could honestly do some pretty good gaming on one of these guys (although that obviously negates the form factor a bit)
@dunar10053 ай бұрын
14:55 the big difference here is though the size and the heat generation. The N 100 is built for short bursts while a full size desktop. CPU can run this all day. Those benchmarks are not real world. If you try to transcode some video, the I5 absolutely destroys the n100 after it is thermal throttling
@succuvamp_anna2 ай бұрын
I legit just subscribed because you forgot to plug the keyboard in :P
@robertopontone3 ай бұрын
Intel has (had?) a driver assistant software to install the proper divers and keep them updated. I am not sure it has been carried over Asus.
@colinscroggins3 ай бұрын
It still exists on Intel's site (since it is not NUC specific) and you can find it by searching for Intel Driver & Support Assistant. Worth using on any Intel based machine running Windows!
@greensgarage411Ай бұрын
Where did you get the USB receiver dongle holder I saw on your Logitech K400 Plus Wireless Touch keyboard (orange) in this video? If you made it, you should put some in your store.
@TheDesertsweeper3 ай бұрын
I have many of these. Their biggest problem is heat. You cannot push them. I have your 7th gen but in i7 and it's terrible at heat issues. The 5th gen was ok in I5. But even the 12th gen i7 cannot be pushed hard without hitting the limits and throttling heavily
@juanpablofajardoramirez10083 ай бұрын
awesome videos! I'd love to see your take on those old surface pc's you can find in thrift stores for 20 bucks heheh
@greenprotag3 ай бұрын
I did some similar experimentation with some 7th gen Dell Optiplex thin Clients. The HDMI AND DisplayPort even on older 7th gen integrated graphics supported 1080p 120hz and I believe 4k 60hz so you could EASILY stream HIGH end gameplay to a local source. A nice cheap 1080p 120hz gaming monitor OR a 4k 60hz TV could easily provide a NICE experience. Old NUCs and Thin clients are OFTEN available for under $99 and maybe as low as $50-60. A HIGH end HTPC experience can be had for cheap if you already have a nice gaming PC or maybe a gaming service like Xbox cloud OR GeforceNOW. Or maybe you are a crazy home lab-er with 5 GPUs in your cloud gaming server...
@charleshines57003 ай бұрын
The nice thing about these is they are not malware filled Acemagic computers. Intel would not jeopardize their reputation by allowing that to happen with something that has the Intel brand on it. They have been around for a long time and they don't do that.
@SSFighter170114 күн бұрын
I still have a proxmox cluster I built years ago with 2x 4th gen and 1x 5th gen i5 model NUCs (gotten cheap THEN). Maxed out RAM (16GB) and 1TB SATA SSDs and a cheap NAS used for iSCSI shared storage. It was so stable and required such little maintenance I switched it from lab stuff to hosting all my services. It’s probably overkill nowadays (I don’t self-host nearly as much as I used to) but “if it ain’t broke don’t fix it” right?
@zeroturn70913 ай бұрын
Best intro music on this app.
@theunholyguitaristofficial3 ай бұрын
I've always wanted to get my hands on one of these to play around with. Still have yet to get one lol
@maestrohun3 ай бұрын
Another cheap solution: ~40-60USD option is: buying a damaged old laptop, put into 8GB RAM and a small SSD. (I got a broken DELL lattitude with i5-5300 for very cheap, I put into 8GB RAM and 80GB SSD and it is perfect for daily usage, so I do not need to switch on the power hungry gaming PC. The power usage of this laptop is: 9-10W on idle, ~14-18W playing youtube 1080p, browsing the web is around 11-13W average: load site-scroll-read-scroll-read....)
@zstation643 ай бұрын
I'm still using a NUC4 i3 for my PiHole/Tailscale/etc machine. Solid.
@HardwareHaven3 ай бұрын
Heck yeah
@burnutec33 ай бұрын
I used to have nucs, but they cost much more in the eu. So now i have a Bmax mini pc with cel. 4100, works quite well, as a tiny " nas "
@DMoRiaM3 ай бұрын
6:25 - Epic moment!
@iiisaac13123 ай бұрын
If you are concerned about power draw, check out the Nucs that used the Intel Atom. As a bonus, the older generations of Atoms that were in-order-execution are not vulnerable to Spectre or Meltdown.
@granttaylor81792 ай бұрын
I have the i3 version of this with no Thunderbolt. I use it as my ex server. I installed Windows Server 2022 on it. They have an ir receiver built in so you can use a One4all remote control with the NUC
@johnscabintech3 ай бұрын
As always with your videos really great content. I would say get the N100 unless you can get the NUC for free or cheap say under 50. Less issues setting up and your often get a windows 11 digital license which you might not with the NUC. I got an N100 system with dual i226 network and DDR5 for 150 (the DDR5 ram makes a huge difference in my opinion even though is single channel its worth the upgrade, avoid the DDR4 systems).
@lars2k13 ай бұрын
Had an older version of such a NUC (might've been a 5, or even a 3, don't exactly remember) running my pihole. Until some day I got more ads, tried power cycling it, and it still wouldn't come online. The thing just died. It powered on, but did not POST. Replacing RAM didn't help, it was just dead. Now, it had a Celeron so not too big of a loss there, but interesting since one of these systems at one of my internships also died in the same way as mine did.
@SSFighter170114 күн бұрын
I’m surprised that the drivers didn’t automatically load. All NUCs i’ve played with have all Intel hardware, which Windows seems to “just work” with.
@evieprpl3 ай бұрын
the video files were probably in the home folder
@HardwareHaven3 ай бұрын
Sadly they were not. I looked nearly everywhere haha
@BrianMaddox3 ай бұрын
My biggest problem with the NUCs back in the day was that they’d thermal throttle really quickly under any heavy use. I always wished Intel would have done better cooling since otherwise they were great little machines.