That's bonkers!It was $150 but blew up in price due to coverage from a few YouTubers.
Wonder if it can be powered with a PCIE riser typically used for mining and a compact 3D printed case. Or with the PCIE baseboard.
Most YouTubers are far cheaper than that!I refuse to pay more than a YouTuber
Doesn't need its own power, doesn't take up additional real estate in a rack or shelf... IMO the pros aren't worth the cons but it's interesting for sure.Sorry for noob question. But what is the real life use case and benefits of this device vs "regular" tiny form factor computers?
My appeal was simply the price of getting an e-2286 together with a package.Sorry for noob question. But what is the real life use case and benefits of this device vs "regular" tiny form factor computers?
Thank you. This form-factor reminds me MikroTik CCR2004-1G-2XS-PCIeDoesn't need its own power, doesn't take up additional real estate in a rack or shelf... IMO the pros aren't worth the cons but it's interesting for sure.
ECC memory and official software support (if you need it of course).Sorry that specific one may not have been upon second glance, however I5, 7 and 9's are. If there a reason why the xeon would be more attractive that the I9?
Just to make sure you know, those compute units are not the same as the one from the start of this discussion. The ones you purchased require a case and board to use. Look up Intel BKCMCR1ABA CMCR1ABA NUC Rugged Chassis Element NEW BROWN BOX if you go that route offer 35-40 for it.I was not as aggressive as Holdingheavy08 suggested, perhaps to my detriment. OEMXS accepted an offer for two (2) Intel BELM12HBI316W NUC 12 Compute Elements i3-1215U (2 p-core 4 e-core, 8 threads total) 16GB DDR5 at $150 each. Still, a fair deal IMO.
Okay, I'll bite. This is a Xeon-E 2286M based computing element (aka the PCIe card) but without the NUC9 chassis though, right? Or does it come with the chassis as well? Technically it's not a terrible buy, since the E2286M is around the same ballpark perf-wise as the V2546 in the new(-ish) HP t755 thin client, and it'll probably have better chassis airflow (since it's designed to fit a double width GPU with a fan) and take DDR4 ECC SODIMMS up to 64GB. Technically it's an interesting toy...but I just don't know how good it is with the important stuff (VT-d, SRIOV, etc). Having to hunt down the intended chassis is such a drag, though....