Zotac unveils RX 480 powered Magnus mini-PC
With Core i5 Skylake CPU and Radeon RX 480
Zotac has unveiled yet another VR Ready Magnus mini-PC that will be powered by Intel's Skylake Core i5 CPU and AMD Radeon RX 480 graphics card, all packed in a compact mini-PC chassis, the Zotac Magnus ERX480.
Gigabyte adds Kaby Lake CPUs to its Brix mini-PC lineup
Three Kaby Lake CPUs to rule them all
Gigabyte has refreshed its Brix mini-PCs with Intel's latest 7th generation Core Kaby Lake CPUs, including Intel Core i3-7100U, Core i5-7200U, or Core i7-7500U.
Zotac's Pascal-based Magnus EN10 gets priced up
Quite a lot for a mini PC
Zotac has finally revealed a few more details about its Magnus EN10 mini-PC which is powered by Nvidia's latest Pascal-based Geforce GTX 1060 and GTX 1070 graphics cards.
Zotac adds Pascal GPUs to its Magnus EN10 mini-PC
Both the GTX 1070 and the GTX 1060
Zotac has added Nvidia's latest Geforce GTX 10 series mobile GPUs to its Magnus EN10 mini-PC, including the GTX 1060 and the GTX 1070.
Zotac releases VR mini-PC
Price not bad either
Zotac have created a liquid cooled mini-pc which can handle VR specs for a reasonable price.
ZOTAC creates a VR ready mini-PC
ZBOX as a way into VR
Zotac’s MAGNUS EN980 ZBOX mini-PC might provide you with a PC that can handle Oculus Rift or HTC Vive VR headset.
Onda M2 mini-pc released at $200
4GB RAM, 128GB SSD
Mini PC’s are being churned out rapidly with some specs much better than others. The latest from Onda fits into our rather nice for the price category.
Zotac announces new ZBOX mini PCs based on Braswell SoC
The ZBOX BI323 and ZBOX CI323 nano
Zotac has announced two new ZBOX mini-PCs, both based on the same 14nm Intel Braswell Celeron N3150 SoC, the ZBOX BI323 and the ZBOX CI323 nano.
Zotac announces new ZBOX Magnus EN970 system
Compact gaming desktop system
Zotac has unveiled its latest ZBOX mini-PC system, the Magnus EN970, which will pack a bit more punch than your average mini-PC.
Beelink Pocket P1 review, a micro-PC with a twist
Review: Pocketable Windows PC and, uhm, powerbank?
Here's a thought – why not use Intel's tablet platform to build a compact, fanless mini PC? What could possibly go wrong?