The Celeron has pretty weak graphics. If I were building a light-duty gaming machine, I'd want to drop in a 7750 or similar.
A dual core 1.8Ghz SB/IB/HAS with a 7750 wouldn't be a l33t haxxorz CoD FPS-rig, but it'd play a mean game of WoW at 720p.
Alternatively, it seems like hedging bets - as you speculated, some people might have a specialized card they wanted to run. That card might be 4x, 1x, 8x, 16x, whatever - the slot is physically capable of supporting it, whatever it may be. I could see a RAID controller for a server, TV tuner for an HTPC, or something specialized like a "pro" sound card breakout machine for a semi-portable recording rig.
Better to have the choice, imo.
I have a question about NUC, Brix and thin mini-itx:
Does anyone know if they share the same size DC-in port/connector?
P.S. Looking at this Intel PDF on page 26-27, there is a recommended power jack type (at least for the thin mini-itx)
Why the hell don't a single one of those have USB 3.0? Seems ridiculous.
Update:
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...82E16813138368
The Biostar Celeron 847 now carries a 15% discount code. (ends 11/4) This brings price to ~$55 with free shipping.
Is there anyway we can tell how many are left in stock?(EDIT: I Just checked by adding 100 to my cart. ...Newegg shows 25 left)
They were at 112 a month ago, so they either returned some stock or they're selling pretty quickly now! 11/4 is next Monday - if they sell enough, could the Biostar come as soon as next week? Any bets?![]()
20 left now. (BIOSTAR NM70I-847)
Computer Bottleneck said:Just checked, last day for the promo code and 11 left.
I wonder if we are going to see a blow out sale coming up for those last units (if they don't sell out with the current promo code) in an attempt to make way for the Biostar 1037U?
Just nine left now. Not sure which time zone Newegg runs in, but however you look at it, the deal doesn't have much time left.
Even so, they have the inventory down to single digits now. They could probably launch the 1037U board now at any time, and still continue to sell the 847s slowly if there was enough of a price difference between them.
Computer Bottleneck said:Inventory is back up to 46 for BIOSTAR NM70I-847. (Price is now $64.99 with free shipping)
ZOTAC NM70ITX-C-E 1007U (88.99 with $6.98 Shipping ) finally got added to Newegg Embedded Solutions:
+ USB 3.0
- Zotac
:whiste:
I've had mixed results with Zotac. Two died in systems I've built for others. I currently have two flaky boards. I think that's 4 out of maybe 6 or 7.
Quantity has increased to 66 and the price is now $59.99 with free shipping.
Several times in this thread, 1037U laptops have been mentioned (in addition to 1037U desktop barebones).
Hey there,
I've just bought Gigabyte's C1037UN-EU & 4 Gigs of ram for it. I already had a LCPOWER LC-1340mi for case (and it comes with a 75W PSU, though quite a bit bigger then my PicoPSU), So I'll be sharing some things about it in the following week(s).
There might be three versions of this board: C1037UN/C1037UN-L and C1037UN-EU. The first two having a smaller heatsink and a fan, the last one (the one I bought) is the one with a big passive heatsink.Thanks for sharing your results!
So it sounds like the motherboard you received doesn't have a fan - that answers one of our questions from earlier (some photos were showing it with a fan). Who did you order it from?
Do you by chance have a Kill-A-Watt or any other type of power meter? One of the big differences we have seen is that some of the 1037U systems have rather poor power usage at idle... It would be great to have a data point for the Gigabyte if you know the numbers. :thumbsup:
Keep us posted on how things work out!
Here's an interesting system. It's the NDiS B323 from Assured Systems, made for the digital signage market.
Test Setup and Extra Info
In order to start testing the board, we equipped it with one GeIL Black Dragon 4GB DDR2133 (@1333) memory module, but also a Hitachi Travelstar 5K250 250GB HDD. We installed the latest Windows 7 x64 from scratch and got the tests going.
Power consumption test results
System Full Load measurement was recorded while running the AIDA64 System Stability Test and checking on Stress CPU, Stress FPU, Stress Cache, Stress System Memory, Stress GPUs.
In IDLE, we have recorded a value of 19.17W, while in Full Load about 44.86W.