The board itself got some nice features, it can be run on an external PSU via the barrel jack or an internal ATX one, it has 2.5Gbits ethernet, two of them and they are also power PoE. Four sata connections, plus a NVMe. Also connection for audio like a normal motherboard has.
Being ITX it will fit in almost any case that can take ITX, well almost. If you watch the video, you will see there is a problem with the CPU fan and the case that was chosen.
Now looking at prices, this board is £130, which includes the CPU and 16GB of ram.
So you can pick up a MITX board for around £100, a cheap AMD Ryzen 3 with graphics for around £60 and 16GB of ram for around £40. So around £200 plus cooler and drives, which you have to buy for the Arm unit. Then case and PSU if needed. So for an extra £70 you get a machine which not only runs normal x86 operating systems, but also most software, maybe not superpower powerful, but will work fine and will run better than the ARM
The one advantage about the ARM machine is energy, it will use a lot less.
For a Nas or something like the Radxa would be ideal. It is a very interesting system. Maybe i am missing something.
Before anyone says anything, yes, I know I have gone down the ARM path with my Mac mini and a machine that can't be updated, but Macs are a different kettle of fish to a what we would call a PC. I still have my old PC and at some point it will be updated, I normally use it to play games these days, but for extra video rendering it will come in useful.
oh yes, the video link, which is interesting, even if he is a bit strange
https://youtu.be/6C8QTf7GLfs?si=FX4pacY0UoVrbQZr
Thoughts
Adrian
Desktop machines Mac mini pro with macOS Ventura, also pc Ryzen powered with windows something or other.
Zooming with Zzoomm FTTP,
Desktop machines Mac mini pro with macOS Ventura, also pc Ryzen powered with windows something or other.
Zooming with Zzoomm FTTP,



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