I started on Elitedesk 800 G1s when Raspberry Pis got hard to find and expensive, and I now feel they are better in every respect if you don’t need the GPIO pins.

Every time I open them up to upgrade something I’m impressed with the level of engineering. There are quality manufacturer manuals for them, the cooling is good and they look great

    • thirdBreakfast@lemmy.worldOP
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      6 months ago

      I normally only run one unless I’m doing some dev work, but one G2 plus a 4 bay NAS, a switch, a WAP, and a wireless modem and it sits on 30-55W. This is definitely part of the magic - I assume the i7 6700T is a laptop variant? The other two are i5 6500Ts

    • 𝒍𝒆𝒎𝒂𝒏𝒏@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      6 months ago

      Yep! You can run almost anything on them, these are just x86 machines. However there are much smaller ones that aren’t x86 and are actually proprietary ARM-based endpoints, but those are easy to spot usually as they don’t have a lot of IO.

      As for these ones though, people often repurpose them as low-power servers or firewall boxes.

      There’s an entire video series & articles called “Project TinyMiniMicro” where a server/homelab outlet ServeTheHome compares multiple popular models, looking at things like performance, cooling, upgradeability (some of these have half height PCIe slots inside), fan noise, thermal throttling, and a lot more.

      Definitely worth a watch or a read if you’re considering getting one of these, it’s pretty comprehensive.

      • originalucifer@moist.catsweat.com
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        6 months ago

        ive tossed hundreds, but i thunk ive got a box with a few around here somewhere. when i was using them i seeeemed to remember specifically picking the ones with a native windows rdp client, which would indicate x86. (win7 era)

        im just looking to setup little media clients to connect to in-house flatscreens.