A bit expensive, but something like this could be a worthy upgrade on the good old PC-Engine APU4 boards many self-hosters use.
It’s a good-looking device, but it was stupid of them to use M1 as the name when Apple’s got that name locked down as far as what shows up in a search engine.
Pardon my ignorance, I’m just starting to learn some things here; what are the applications of this device?
To serve as a router or firewall.
Thank you!
that’s cool, sbc’s just keep getting better
Those are two boards stacked together, right? Or am I confused about what sbc refers to?
single board computer
Yeah, but the other person says this two boards computer counts, hence the confusion
i guess that would be a double board computer :)
It is two, but the top board is optional. So i think it’s still a sbc with an optional addition on?
Oh ok then, I don’t really know much about SBC, I thought it was a literal term.
My APU4 running OpenWRT kinda struggles to run SQM on my 1.2gbps connection, cuts the download speeds in half, I wonder if this i3 could do any better.
Very likely as the CPU and the Intel NICs in the APU4 are over a decade old now.
Dang, I was actually interested until I saw the possible non standard USBc port instead of a flipping barrel jack. Give me PD or give me a barrel jack.
Yeah, I noticed that too. USB-C, but 12-19V really limits the choice of power connectors you can use. However, I guess any modern USB-C laptop psu will work.
For a fixed installation I don’t think the power delivery mechanism matters that much. For something you’re moving around yeah 100% use a standard plug.
any immobile infrastructure doesn’t really matter right, you’re going to set it up once and never move it
Am I missing the wireless, or does it not actually have any?
As specifically mentioned in the aricle, it doesn’t have any Wifi. I consider this a plus for a gateway device like this.
I love the fanless design. I have a four 1 GB board, it served me very well. No fans either.