@[email protected] to [email protected] • 9 days agoWho would buy a Raspberry Pi for $120?www.jeffgeerling.commessage-square4fedilinkarrow-up110arrow-down10cross-posted to: [email protected]
arrow-up110arrow-down1external-linkWho would buy a Raspberry Pi for $120?www.jeffgeerling.com@[email protected] to [email protected] • 9 days agomessage-square4fedilinkcross-posted to: [email protected]
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilink2•9 days agoExactly. And it includeded a 500GB m2 (SATA, not NVME, but still), with a spare m2 slot available. As opposed to an SD slot + USB port… Dual gigabit NICs and importantly can be configured to boot after power loss (which the pi of course also does). And Intel QuickSync may not be perfect but it is well supported with mainline kernels. Only drawback is that it draws a few extra watts compared to the Pi.
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilink2•9 days agoI recently got a used custom Tiger Lake NUC and QuickSync does some heavy lifting for Jellyfin. Much better transcode performance than the dedicated AMD GPU I was using on an older system.
Exactly. And it includeded a 500GB m2 (SATA, not NVME, but still), with a spare m2 slot available. As opposed to an SD slot + USB port…
Dual gigabit NICs and importantly can be configured to boot after power loss (which the pi of course also does).
And Intel QuickSync may not be perfect but it is well supported with mainline kernels.
Only drawback is that it draws a few extra watts compared to the Pi.
I recently got a used custom Tiger Lake NUC and QuickSync does some heavy lifting for Jellyfin. Much better transcode performance than the dedicated AMD GPU I was using on an older system.