Intel NUC Kit D54250WYK review
Tiny, quiet, power-efficient and fairly quick - the best barebones PC we've ever seen
We were also interested to see how the NUC would perform as a media centre PC. We installed Linux Mint on it, which went fine once we’d switched the boot options in the BIOS from UEFI to Legacy, and set the XBMC media centre application to launch on boot. We could then control the media center entirely from a tablet using the XBMC app, stream audio to it from a phone via Bluetooth and out through our TV, and even shut the PC down from the app – useful if you don’t want to have a keyboard and mouse attached.
We wish Intel would supply a Mini HDMI or Mini DisplayPort adaptor with the NUC to make it easier to attach to your monitor
This left one problem, which was that we didn’t want to reach round the back of the TV to find the NUC’s power button to switch it back on again. To solve this, we went into the BIOS and enabled the Wake System from S4/S5 and Deep S4/S5 options in the Power section of the BIOS interface. The Deep S4/S5 option stopped the NUC from turning on of its own accord, as well as reducing power consumption when “turned off” from 1.5W to 0.7W. We could then use a Wake on LAN tablet app to turn the NUC on without going anywhere near the power button.
We’re impressed with the Intel NUC. It’s tiny, silent, uses less than 8W when idle and 24W under load, and makes a great media centre or unobtrusive general-purpose PC. It’s not cheap, at over £500 once you’ve added the necessary bits, but it’s a powerful bit of kit which is simple to hide out of sight. It’s an impressive feat of engineering and a Best Buy.
Details | |
---|---|
Price | £302 |
Rating | ***** |
Award | Best Buy |
Processor socket | N/A |
Processor support | Intel Core i5-4250U |
Processor heatsink supplied | yes |
Memory slots | 2 |
Supported memory type | DDR3 |
Memory | 16GB |
Dual-channel support | yes |
Form factor | NUC |
Chipset north bridge | Intel H87 |
Chipset south bridge | Intel H87 |
Passively-cooled north bridge | yes |
Graphics Processor | Intel HD Graphics 5000 |
Graphics Memory | 32MB |
Graphics memory type | shared |
Ports | |
USB2 ports (front/rear) | 2/2 |
Firewire ports (front/rear) | 0/0 |
Legacy ports | none |
Graphics/video ports | Mini DisplayPort, Mini HDMI |
Other ports | 3.5mm headset jack |
Internal Expansion | |
Size | 117x112x35mm |
PCI slots | 0 |
PCI-E x1 slots | 2 |
PCI-E x4 slots | 0 |
PCI-E x16 slots | 0 |
Dual 3D architecture | N/A |
IDE ports | 0 |
Serial ATA ports | 1 |
RAID drives | N/A |
Floppy ports | 0 |
3.5in drive bays | 0 |
5.25in drive bays | 0 |
Other bays | none |
Features | |
Wired network ports | 1x 10/100/1000 |
Wireless networking support | none |
Sound | Intel HD Audio |
Sound outputs | 3.5mm headset |
Speaker configuration | none |
Supported memory cards | N/A |
Power supply wattage | 65W |
Cables included | none |
Power consumption standby | 3W |
Power consumption idle | 8W |
Power consumption active | 24W |
Buying Information | |
Price | £302 |
Supplier | http://www.dabs.com |
Details | www.intel.com |