Wait for next-gen APU, would be a really neat comparison between them, the battle of iGPU
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Running The Intel NUC6i7KYK On Linux With Skylake Iris Pro Graphics
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Originally posted by r1348 View PostToo slow for gaming, too powerful and expensive for HTPC... what is the real use scenario for this?
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Originally posted by r1348 View PostToo slow for gaming, too powerful and expensive for HTPC... what is the real use scenario for this?
My problem is that we do need better motherboards with this chip. So that we can build fairly small systems that are larger than ITX (e.g. what many call SFF using mATX-ish boards) so we can have PCIe slots. Just my opinion. With such a beast, you could have a nice all-in-one computer that isn't a small refrigerator in size.
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Originally posted by TheLexMachine View Post
"Yeah, yeah, but your engineers were so preoccupied with whether or not they could that they didn't stop to think if they should." - me, on the Skull Canyon NUC. Seriously though, it has no usage scenario other than being a compact enthusiast PC. In reality, it's not well designed and the hardware/software is very very wonky, so it isn't worth the overly high expense of putting a build together, since it really only demands the highest costing config you can buy today. Many buyers have ended up with bricks after using it for a few weeks or months, based on what I've read on the official NUC forums and elsewhere.
Why can't people realize that their needs are not the business needs...
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Originally posted by Passso View PostA low powered server. This is exactly the type of hardware I use for remote computing/web service/database so I can run it 24/7 on a local network or connected to internet. Add whatever you want as a service, free your mind.
You can use it as you wish, but devices designed as servers don't usually come with a skull etched on the case.
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Originally posted by starshipeleven View PostFYI: This thing is clearly aimed at the high-end mediacenter/console-like gaming.
You can use it as you wish, but devices designed as servers don't usually come with a skull etched on the case.
It is not aimed as server but is cool small device i like it... well only problem might be its price
Last edited by dungeon; 31 December 2016, 03:00 PM.
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Originally posted by Michael View Post
Unfortunately I have no Thunderbolt GPU enclosure.
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Were you able to get proper resolution with the native HDMI output? I'm using the HDMI output to an ASUS VE228H monitor and I'm getting a "Unknown Monitor" under Settings>Display and the resolution is low (1280 x 768 dpi). Using the HWE enablement stack and the latest Intel Driver stack for 16.04.2 LTS.
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