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[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]Re: [tlug] fanless pcs
- Date: Tue, 3 Jul 2018 22:31:35 +0900
- From: Curt Sampson <cjs@example.com>
- Subject: Re: [tlug] fanless pcs
- User-agent: NeoMutt/20170113 (1.7.2)
On 2018-07-03 20:39 +0900 (Tue), Benjamin Kowarsch wrote: > Has anyone used the Taiwanese Liva Z fanless pc? > > http://www.ecs.com.tw/ECSWebSite/Product/Product_Overview.aspx?DetailID=1729&CategoryID=-1&DetailName=Feature&MenuID=-1&LanID=0 Yes. I have two, a Celeron N3350 and a Pentium N4200. Specs and vendors at <https://github.com/0cjs/sedoc/blob/master/hw/sff.md>. The 2-core Celeron N3350 (¥22k) is too sluggish to be worthwhile; Chrome really bogs down on it. The 4-core Pentium N4200 (¥25k if you're willing to wait a couple of weeks for delivery) is much better value and has been my main desktop system at work for a half year now and I'm very pleased with it. I do mainly Python development, which does from time to time involve large C builds (I end up building local versions of Python from source on a regular basis, in fact a half dozen times just today, by chance) but I don't do enough of it that I feel I want to upgrade to a real desktop CPU. Chrome is not totally snappy, but is good enough, even though I do a lot of browsing. I honestly don't usually notice the difference between it and my Core i5-3450. (PassMark CPU and other specs at <https://github.com/0cjs/sedoc/blob/master/hw/cpu.md>.) I have 8 GB in both systems, but I've used them with 4 GB and even that worked fine in my fairly lightweight fvwm desktop environment with minimal visual tools. Right now, with 16 tabs open in Chrome and a couple of dozen urxvts (many running vim) it's using 3.77 GiB of memory. Opening VSCode brings that up to 4.33 GiB, though. One of the really nice things about them is the on-motherboard 32 GB MMC solid-state drive. It's about as fast as any run-of-the-mill SSD and provides enough space for reasonable development in my experience, even with a half dozen Python interpreters, lots of virtualenvs, and a few full-size (Debian, Ubuntu, etc.) Docker images on it. I did add a 32 GB USB 3.0 flash drive to my work machine on which I keep less frequently accessed stuff, such as my book collection from Dropbox and a large pile of less-frequently-used repos from GitHub. Stuff on there is too slow to use for more than occasional development, though. I'm also pleased with the display support. I'm sure it wouldn't do for gaming, but it runs my 4K monitor off the DisplayPort interface just fine at 60 Hz, and at one point I did have a second 4K monitor hooked up to the HDMI output, though that ran at only 30 Hz. > I am looking at using something like that as a development station, > basically running Ubuntu and various different builds of GCC and Clang, > plus VIM or VS Code for editing and a browser and PDF reader for reading > documentation on a second display. So nothing heavy. I'd definitely put 8 GB of RAM in it. Otherwise, so long as you're not constantly doing massive compiles, it would probably be fine. And it's cheap enough that if you do get annoyed at it being too slow you can either fork out for a VM in AWS or GCP with some real ooomph or just buy another machine without feeling too bad about it. On 2018-07-03 09:17 -0300 (Tue), Schwartz, Fernando G. wrote: > Not recommeded for development (compiling), I guess. Even in mild > European climate, similar hardware I've found (brand name "ZOTAC"), > reaches threshold temp in internal storage easily (bites 50 degrees > Celsius). Just to mention that component, I guess. Issue < smartctl -a > /dev/sda > and the problem is clearly there. Temperature hasn't been an issue for me. Not having any sensors other than the one on the CPU, all I can say about case temperature is that, even after ten minutes of four `openssl speed` processes grinding away I can still keep my hand on the case indefinitely. The CPU itself idles at around +59.0°C and, during that ten minute 4-core openssl run it gradually rose to +98.0°C; 'high' and 'max' are advertised as +105.0°C. It might be more of an issue if I weren't in an air-conditioned office. Summary: If I needed another desktop machine, I'd probably buy another N4200; it runs one or two 4K monitors, speed is OK, and the size (hardly bigger than my hand) is very convenient. I've looked at the i5-7200U version as well, but it's considerably more expensive, especially if you wouldn't be buying an M.2 SSD for the N4200. (The i5 model doesn't have the on-board 32 GB MMC drive.) Once I start spending ¥50k instead of ¥25K I'd start to consider a significantly more powerful desktop CPU. A ¥13k Core i3-8100 benchmarks four times as fast, so you could probably put together a nice Mini-ITX system for under ¥80k cjs -- Curt J. Sampson <cjs@example.com> +81 90 7737 2974 To iterate is human, to recurse divine. - L Peter Deutsch
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