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PELADN WI-6 Mini PC, Intel 12th Alder Lake N100 (Max 3.4GHz) Mini Desktop Computer 8GB 256GB $209 Delivered @ peladn Amazon AU

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Another decent deal on those n95/100 mini pc's. supposidly n100 is slightly better than n95.
12 th gen intel processor, comes with W11 pro
support for 4K @60 Hz, dual wifi network, and other stanadard ports (USB A, C ethernet) etc.

Both SSD, and RAM seem to be upgradable according to photos


About this item
【Powerful 12th Gen Intel Alder Lake-N100】PELADN WI-6 Mini PC is powered by the latest 12th Gen Intel Alder Lake-N100 Processor (4C/4T, 6MB Cache, up to 3.4GHz, 6 W TDP) from 2023 and delivers more than 25% higher performance than N5105/N5095. The compact size makes the mini computer the first choice for your light office work, 4K video playback, online education, design, etc.
【8GB DDR4 + 256GB SSD, Upgrade Friendly】 PELADN WI-6 N100 Mini PC comes with built-in single-channel 8GB DDR4 RAM (Max 3200MHz) and 256GB M.2 SSD. Thanks to the large capacity, you can switch between more applications and store more favorite documents or movies.
【Dual HDMI, 4K Dual Screen Display】 Mini desktop computer is equipped with Intel UHD Graphics (750MHz max), delivers powerful graphics performance, supports 4K video playback, connect PC to a projector as a home theater, enjoy a variety of entertainments. Two HDMI 2.0 ports allow you to efficiently multitask on two 4K@60Hz displays. Includes VESA mount to set up an all-in-one PC and free up desk space.
【MULTIPLE CONNECTIONS】 PELADN microcomputer has Gigabit Ethernet support, 2.4G+5.0G dual-band WiFi, and Bluetooth 4.2. Easily Compatible - All your existing applications will work. It can be connected to your mouse, acoustic or headset. It can work with servers, surveillance equipment, office equipment, monitors, projectors, TVs, and so on. Built-in fan cooling, so you don't have to worry about your product overheating when multitasking.
【After-sales Service】 If you have any questions about the product, please feel free to contact us via Amazon message. We will respond within 24 hours. Your support is our motivation to improve our products. This product comes with a one-year warranty.

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closed Comments

  • -2

    Do all these minipc's why so cheap?
    Are the chipsets built in with spy software or something reporting back to dear leader?

    • +2

      Are the chipsets built in with spy software or something reporting back to dear leader?

      you can get rid of their windows if you are in doubt and install your own windows or linux or something else

      • -1

        Yeah but the chipset itself… could have some backdoor code in the chips themselves.
        ie. not OS dependant.

        • +1

          its an intel chipset (or CPU) dude, not a Huawei.

          • -8

            @USER DC: nah in somewhere on the mobo that you or others may not be awrare of and thus dear leader (nicer korea) can get hands on

          • +4

            @USER DC:

            not a Huawei

            Yes, make them feel sorry for you once they have hacked into your bank account to see how much money you have.

            Meanwhile.. Google and Facebook..

          • +1

            @USER DC: so it has Intel Management Engine, tech for a truly connected world

            Intel did it first

            maybe not for nefarious purposes, but third parties were immediately able to leverage it

            Only then did others less capable of innovation copy it.

            "the work of the devil can only be done with the methods mere mortals devise themselves"

            Google and fb are another thing entirely of course
            "the worst among us live off the land, and are not easily noticed"

          • +1

            @USER DC: @turd is saying that the backdoor maybe built into the firmware driving the chipset, not the OS (windows, linux, mac etc). his point is valid because there had been an instance of compromised firmware with intel chipset in the past. firmware level backdoors are impossible to find unless using detection methods external to the compromised machine.

      • If that was true would anti-virus or anti-malware software find it?

        • +2

          Nope they wouldnt, they only scan software?

        • no
          the backdoor can be programmed like e.g. to wake up every few ms for maybe 1000 ticks to process data(send, receive , archive etc) only when all other peripherals are off(i.e. pc is turned off or os is not running in the ram etc )

          • @backupper1:

            pc is turned off

            If PC is turned off.. there isn't going to be any "waking up." by any malware.

            Imagine a malware that's still going to be active when there's no power… that's scary!

            • -1

              @PuppieWayne: there is a battery on all motherboards.
              and such compromised hardware has capacitors or extra batteries as power source.

              • +1

                @backupper1: Those batteries are for bios and time, there isn't enough to power up any volatile memories where any malware can be executed.

                No idea where you getting this extra batteries architect from.

                Malware needs CPU to run.. if PC is switched off, OS and software are all not running… how is malware going to run?

                • -1

                  @PuppieWayne: i would suggest to consult a hardware professional if they are in your personal or professional circle because they can explain in details that is not possible here.
                  e.g.: cpu need not necessarily be the pc cpu. a small completely embedded device with its own firmware, cpu, ram, wifi, power sources etc can be on the hardware board physically connected to the connection traces to ‘see’ the data. another way is to have malicious code as a part of the firmware/device drivers of the peripheral itself.
                  this article is somewhat in context of how the hardware gets compromised : https://www.wired.com/story/plundervolt-intel-chips-sgx-hack…

                  • @backupper1: You are not reading my reply correctly.

                    Firmware hacking and rootware exist.. but there is no malware, hacking or whatever you call them, that can exist or happen if the PC is turned off. Which was what you said initially.

                    The article you just linked is talking about voltage control WHEN THE PC IS SWITCHED ON.

                    • @PuppieWayne:

                      but there is no malware, hacking or whatever you call them, that can exist or happen if the PC is turned off.
                      you DID NOT READ e.g. I posted. for in-depth info you can consult an embedded systems professional.

                      • @backupper1: "The technique, which one of the two teams calls Plundervolt, involves planting malicious software on a target computer that temporarily reduces the voltage of the electricity flowing to an Intel chip"

                        Tell me again - when was the PC was turned off? You didn't even read the link you posted.. seriously dude.

    • These are laptop components, so they are effectively a laptop without a screen.

    • Yeah, they definitely report back to the dear leader. Look, after we banned Huawei 5G towers, COVID is nearly gone. We now just need to burn all the existing Huawei 5G towers then COVID will disappear.

      • Im sorry but you must have the wrong dear leader, my dear leaders country never invented rona like another countrys ruler.

        ;)

    • In a way yes, some of the cheapest have been known to have adware installed on them before sale. Often the cheapest ones have fraudulent volume license/education keys too.

    • here comes the foil hat brigade , and it send your location back to aliens who will come and probe you …

      • They will pursuade you to vote or buy certain companies or items that are owned by them or such.

    • +1

      They're cheap because the parts are cheap. 20 dollars worth of ram and 30 dollars worth of storage. The plastic shell not being worth more than 10 dollars. The motherboard being cheaply built since it's for an extremely low powered, cheap and slow cpu.

      Do you also think a raspberry pi or any other sbc's are malware too?

  • due to the low amount of RAM (and I don't think it can be upgraded to a 16GB stick) I'd really recommend installing linux or maybe Tiny 11 (a cut down version of Windows 11, that has full update support etc.) on this as it'll really struggle with just 8GB and normal windows 11 install, in my opinion.

    • I'm running 16GB on n95 dude, no reason why n100 cannot run 16GB, or may be 32 GB too (unless motherboard limitation)

      • +1

        He's implying the ram is soldered on and cannot be upgraded afterwards so best to get the capacity you are looking for beforehand

        • https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/81mq-uJ7g2L.AC_SL1500.jpg

          you be the judge, but i can clearly see that it is not soldered and see the clips on the side

          not only that, its at the same side as the m.2 SSD too (so easy to replace both at same time)

          • -2

            @USER DC: Yeah I was about to edit my comment but was unable to as you already replied.
            The post listing also mentions upgradable ram slot although single channel only.

            • @roshanrbb: Yeah I don't always believe the promo photos shown for these mini pcs - I've found some that show second RAM spots (like this one) but the shots were from previous models. The Intel N100 chipset ONLY support single channel RAM, so a second slot couldn't be used anyway.
              EDIT: also 16GB is listed as max. RAM it can handle, but some people have been lucky and tested single channel 32GB SO-DIMMs working in their systems according to reddit.

    • You don't need much for linux.

      https://i.imgur.com/PnHTqGH.png

      I run a file server, Samba server, and tvheadend (2 tv receivers) on an Orange Pi Zero2, with 1 GB ram, never more than 10% CPU usage, costing $37.

    • Regarding the RAM size, I'm not sure how true this is for Intel-based mini PCs, but with my AMD one, 3GB of RAM is reserved for the iGPU, so out of my 16GB, only 13GB is usable by the system. If I only had 8GB, it's possible that only 5GB would be usable, which is way too little in my opinion. Just something to look into and keep in mind.

  • Any idea if the ram upgrade able?

    • +3

      Why bother when you can order the 16gb/512 for $40 more

      • cause one might have spare RAM's or SSD laying around ??

        or he wants to get like 2TB SSD or 4TB SSD

        • +1

          from memory 2TB is the maximum SSD size the N100 chipset supports - oh and it only supports M2 (SATA) SSD, not NVME.

          • @gizmomelb: The N100 certainly supports NVME (got one with an nvme ssd right now) - but some implementations may use that pci-e channel for something else and only put sata m.2 on the board.

            Not sure whether 2TB is a hard limit on either nvme or sata in these boxes - might be just the max the OEM has tested with.

  • Surely it doesnt come with an international plug

    • It did when I ordered it, it just meant they put an au cable because they looked at the shipping address.

      • How did you go with speeds, all reviews point to slow cpu 800hz, not even close to 1.3Ghz let alone 3.4Ghz

        • All benchmarks I've seen show around 3ghz all cores, you sure you're not mistaking that for the gpu clock speed instead?

          N95 is the one that runs 1-1.3ghz.

  • supposidly n100 is slightly better than n95.

    N100 has a newer gen graphics engine, so thats why a N100 can handle hardware decode AV1 and N95 can’t.

  • can these be powered by 12v from car ?

    • These are like at max 30W.
      So 12v 30w is going to be like 2.5 current amps

      So i dont see a problem why not, given you got right cabling stuff (you cannot use ac wallet plug in your car tho, you'd need a 12v charger to DC barrel plug adaptor

  • I felt this is a companion product for some of the people posting in this thread - https://www.woolworths.com.au/shop/productdetails/754074/arm…

    • +1

      That comment was about as useful as some of the moderators on this site, obviously

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