UK PC supplier Tranquil PC has begun taking orders for a compact desktop PC based on Intel's upcoming dual-core Atom chip.
The £299 PC comes with a "dual 1.6GHz" Atom of model number "Z330". Intel's current, single-core desktop Atom is simply called the 230, and the dual-core version is actually expected to debut as the 330. …
The ATOM is a great little chip, put into a terrible motherboard. Is this new motherboard/chipset going to be any more power efficient than the last one? Time will tell...
The 200 series netbook/nettop processors are already x64 processors. No idea about the Atom Z5x0 processors that are aimed and MIDs. So in that regard the 300 series are 64 bit like the 200 series cousins.
Why would Intel go through all the trouble to make such an awesome little chip (In power usage, not raw performance), then couple it with a hog of a Northbridge?
Sometimes I wonder if the guys at Intel are aware that a PC's total power consumption comes for the TOTAL of its components.
The current Desktop 230 Atoms ARE 64bit, the current Mobile 270 Atoms ARE NOT 64bit. I've run 64bit Debian Linux on my Desktop Atom and it flies! And I felt terribly ripped off when I learned my Netbook was only 32bit after starting with the desktop version :(
"When the 1 TB disk is full, is the owner expected to buy another "home server"?"
Meh, I expect that chucking a couple of 1Tb USB disks would do the job quite nicely.
I could see the use of it as a terminal server/gateway box running a *nix-esque OS though - firewall, mail server/web server if you have a fixed IP, media server [for local stuff only, unless you have a nice 10Mb uplink...] all in one box, with fairly low power usage.
If it's proper silent, I might be tempted to throw my half terabyte hard disk on one of these, get a fixed IP and start toying, actually.
Anyone know of any similar kit that can run Windows/*nix to a useable degree with similar specs/cost? Other than an old Thinkpad, of course...
Steven R
Paris, because I hear she likes slapping disks. Or something phonetically similar...
Dual-core Atom to be released by month's end
UK PC supplier Tranquil PC has begun taking orders for a compact desktop PC based on Intel's upcoming dual-core Atom chip. The £299 PC comes with a "dual 1.6GHz" Atom of model number "Z330". Intel's current, single-core desktop Atom is simply called the 230, and the dual-core version is actually expected to debut as the 330. …
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Posted Monday 8th September 2008 16:20 GMT
Ash
Mobo/chipset power consumption #
The ATOM is a great little chip, put into a terrible motherboard. Is this new motherboard/chipset going to be any more power efficient than the last one? Time will tell...
Posted Monday 8th September 2008 16:20 GMT
Peter
Intel 2x0 series processors #
The 200 series netbook/nettop processors are already x64 processors. No idea about the Atom Z5x0 processors that are aimed and MIDs. So in that regard the 300 series are 64 bit like the 200 series cousins.
Posted Monday 8th September 2008 19:32 GMT
Phillip
Ash is right... #
Why would Intel go through all the trouble to make such an awesome little chip (In power usage, not raw performance), then couple it with a hog of a Northbridge?
Sometimes I wonder if the guys at Intel are aware that a PC's total power consumption comes for the TOTAL of its components.
Mine's the one with a Geoge in the pocket...
Posted Monday 8th September 2008 19:32 GMT
E
"was designed for home server roles" #
Is that a joke?
When the 1 TB disk is full, is the owner expected to buy another "home server"?
Soon "home server operators" will be offered cluster file systems for their "home server" farms?
Posted Monday 8th September 2008 22:09 GMT
Daryl Quenet
EMT64 Correction #
To correct Tony & Peter
The current Desktop 230 Atoms ARE 64bit, the current Mobile 270 Atoms ARE NOT 64bit. I've run 64bit Debian Linux on my Desktop Atom and it flies! And I felt terribly ripped off when I learned my Netbook was only 32bit after starting with the desktop version :(
Atom 230 Spec Sheet:
http://processorfinder.intel.com/details.aspx?sSpec=SLB6Z
Atom 270 Spec Sheet:
http://processorfinder.intel.com/details.aspx?sSpec=SLB73
Posted Monday 8th September 2008 23:48 GMT
Steven Raith
@E #
"When the 1 TB disk is full, is the owner expected to buy another "home server"?"
Meh, I expect that chucking a couple of 1Tb USB disks would do the job quite nicely.
I could see the use of it as a terminal server/gateway box running a *nix-esque OS though - firewall, mail server/web server if you have a fixed IP, media server [for local stuff only, unless you have a nice 10Mb uplink...] all in one box, with fairly low power usage.
If it's proper silent, I might be tempted to throw my half terabyte hard disk on one of these, get a fixed IP and start toying, actually.
Anyone know of any similar kit that can run Windows/*nix to a useable degree with similar specs/cost? Other than an old Thinkpad, of course...
Steven R
Paris, because I hear she likes slapping disks. Or something phonetically similar...
Posted Tuesday 9th September 2008 08:45 GMT
paul
HDMI #
Why why why do they not include these things?
Posted Tuesday 9th September 2008 10:17 GMT
Parax
@HDMI.. #
exactly.. I have the $$$ but no where to spend..
still looking for a media box for the TV.
I need wireless media streaming from the NAS and iPlayer for the TV!
Posted Thursday 11th September 2008 07:46 GMT
E
@Parax #
Why not just get cable? Anything worth watching will be in re-runs for the next 20 years.
Unless you are archiving news... in which case I hope you are not living in the USA or UK!
This topic is closed for new posts.