Asus VC62B-B006M, Intel Core i3-4030U, 2 x SO-DIMM (Up to 16GB RAM)
SATA 6Gb/s 3.5" or 2.5"/2 x 2.5 via Vivo DualBay, Intel HD Graphics 4400,
4-in-1 card reader, 802.11 B/G/N/AC, Bluetooth BT4.0, VESA Mount.
Rear panel has x USB3.0, 2 x USB2.0, 1 x HDMI, 1 x DisplayPort, 1 x LAN(RJ45) Port, 4-in-1 Card Reader, 1 x Mic In, 1 x Headphone Out, 1 x S/PDIF Out
No OS, neat little Mini PC, requires HDD/SSD and DDR3L SO-DIMM RAM.
Nice price for an 4th Gen i3 Barebones PC.
Latest comments (54)
Bendown
18 May 16#54
Thanks, have ordered one
brookheather
16 May 161#53
Best to use an SSD with a USB3 adapter that supports UASP. This is the one that I am using:
Hmm. Have a weird problem. Set it all up fine, installed windows 7 & latest drivers. However, as I went to plug in my Logitech K400 it will only work when the keyboard is behind the PC (which is where all the ports are on this). I put this down to network interference but took it into another room with only the monitor - it did the same there
Does the same with a K400r - with or without Setpoint drivers installed.
Edit - used a non powered USB hub so that the dongle was at least facing the front and it works, but pretty laggy. This is with ethernet (wireless disabled)
Bendown to GNKelly07
16 May 16#52
Thanks, will give this a go, I wonder what the experience will be like regarding speed
brookheather
16 May 161#51
No.
3guesses
16 May 16#50
That looks interesting, thanks for sharing 8-)
Ruffuz
16 May 16#49
does it come with keyboard and mouse?
brookheather
16 May 161#48
You can also copy an existing Windows installation to a USB drive so it runs as a Windows To Go installation using this tool here:
By the way it's possible to use a 2.5" SSD with a 3.5" hard drive for storage if you use a USB/SATA adapter for the SSD - you can boot Windows 10 from it if you install "Windows 10 To Go" (a regular Win 10 install won't boot) - instructions here:
For best performance use a USB3/SATA3 adapter with UASP. You then have fast booting from the SSD and a large hard drive for storage.
Bendown
14 May 16#46
Mine now up and running. Nice, only gripe is button on back, is there a way to turn this on without having to use the rear switch?. will it wake on lan
brookheather
14 May 16#45
I don't have any problems with my K360 keyboard and Anywhere mouse - all connected to a single dongle on the rear.
Bendown
14 May 16#43
Thns, thats what I have ordered. Shame as I had couple of sticks of the other type lying around
brookheather
14 May 16#42
You need DDR3L 1.35V memory - it won't work with standard DDR3 1.5V memory.
Bendown
14 May 16#41
Installed some memory in mine and it keeps bleeping, I guess it does not like it, have ordered a 4 gig piece from amazon. Delivery tonight. Looks a nice bit of kit though
brookheather
14 May 16#40
Received mine as well this morning - the network card is a Realtek 8821AE Wireless AC for those wondering... it also seems to be a low-end card as maximum AC speed is 433Mbps.
Bendown
14 May 16#39
Mine arrived this morning via Yodel, surprised but happy. Will give it a try later
3guesses
13 May 161#38
Have you checked your roof?
Bendown
13 May 16#37
And mine, not good news, do they deliver saturdays if at all?
GNKelly07
13 May 16#36
No. Nor will I any time soon. It's with Yodel :disappointed:
Bendown
13 May 16#35
Anyone received their box yet and have any feedback?
Bendown
12 May 16#34
Purchased, hopefully will go under tv to play MS Flight sim, assuming the graphics card is up to the task
davocc
12 May 161#33
from what I can see it doesn't appear to have native h265 decoding, it must do this in software; it will handle up to 1080p apparently at roughly 60% CPU utilisation (not sure of the benchmarking for this). For KODI I think it's more forward looking to find one that has hardware support for this; beware though, I've found recently that there are 10-bit h265 files which aren't handled by the hardware of some chipsets (e.g. Cherry Trail doesn't do it in hardware, it does 8-bit h265 though). General x264, AVI, etc. should be quite ok though.
pc5020
11 May 16#32
balls, missed it
xela333
11 May 16#31
Easily. Pretty much any Intel processor these days would handle tasks like that just fine
piginabox
11 May 16#30
ah, of course. My guess was 'other computer' but your suggestion makes much more sense.
Brilliant for the price. Just can't think of a reason to get one.
Ruffuz
11 May 16#25
PC probably
3guesses
11 May 161#24
Me too - they had >20 left when I checked last night, thought I'd have no trouble ordering this morning...
gimmeDdeal
11 May 16#23
Is the processor good enough to use as a normal desktop for browsing, movies, word processing etc?
shabbird
11 May 16#22
thanks. thought they had lots in stock :disappointed:
piginabox
11 May 16#21
OC?
3guesses
11 May 16#20
Have tried USB-PS/2 adapters before (5+ years ago!) without much success.
3guesses
11 May 161#19
No they sold out last night.
spannerzone
11 May 16#18
yeah hopefully just an error .... I find it very hard to believe it won't support over 1b drives.
spannerzone
11 May 16#10
There's a comment on Youtube review saying a max of 1TB 3.5" hard drive limitation so check for yourself. The dualbay allows 2 x 2.5" drives or 1 x 3.5" drive
xela333 to spannerzone
11 May 16#12
That's a little off putting if true. Can anyone confirm?
cjed to spannerzone
11 May 16#17
Just misguided I think. The actual promo video has the quote "On top of the TerraBytes of storage space you can get with Vivo Dualbay ..." (around 3:38 in this video) and as it's a standard SATA III interface it would normally be up to the OS to drive it. I'd be *very* surprised if it had any artificial disk capacity limit.
Noclouds
11 May 16#16
It measures 190 x 190 x 56.2 mm (a NUC or Brix, at just about half that size, is a so-called palm top rather than a small desktop, so to speak). I suppose technically you could build your own using a 170mm x 170mm M-ITX motherboard, a smallish case, a more powerful desktop CPU and a larger power brick, or else larger case/internal PSU. Not criticising the product, though, it sips little energy, great that you can just slot in a full size desktop 3.5" hard drive if you have one you're not using, and great discounted price compared to a similar 4th gen NUC or Brix!
0BS1D1AN
11 May 16#15
Can't see how that could possibly be the case. They're not like Flash drives where the file system changes as you go up sizes. It's always NTFS. :neutral_face:
crazygoldfish
11 May 16#14
Wow, great price
3guesses
11 May 16#8
I was annoyed at missing out on the recent Dell PowerEdge T20 £70 deal, so this might do instead. Shame it doesn't have PS/2 ports so I can use it with my KVM.
shabbird to 3guesses
11 May 16#11
its still available. just £3 more now so its £72 after cashback
xela333 to 3guesses
11 May 16#13
Could you get a cheap USB to ps2 adapter our do they not like kvms?
3guesses
11 May 16#9
Cor, only 38 in stock. I guess people will have to move fast...
jake_mike
11 May 16#7
'71 people are about to buy this!' - haha the power of hukd lol :smile:
For the versatility that this offers, it's an amazing price.
spannerzone
11 May 16#4
Blimey that's amazing price for an i3 NUC style PC.... hot hot hot
jouster
11 May 161#3
Great little machine. Could be overkill for a KODI machine but for anyone wanting a cheap OC especially if they have memory and SSD laying around it would be brilliant. Tempted myself but I really don't need any other computers
Opening post
SATA 6Gb/s 3.5" or 2.5"/2 x 2.5 via Vivo DualBay, Intel HD Graphics 4400,
4-in-1 card reader, 802.11 B/G/N/AC, Bluetooth BT4.0, VESA Mount.
Rear panel has x USB3.0, 2 x USB2.0, 1 x HDMI, 1 x DisplayPort, 1 x LAN(RJ45) Port, 4-in-1 Card Reader, 1 x Mic In, 1 x Headphone Out, 1 x S/PDIF Out
No OS, neat little Mini PC, requires HDD/SSD and DDR3L SO-DIMM RAM.
Nice price for an 4th Gen i3 Barebones PC.
Latest comments (54)
StarTech.com USB 3.0 to 2.5" SATA III Hard Drive Adapter Cable w/ UASP - SATA to USB 3.0 Converter for SSD/HDD - Hard Drive Adapter Cable
Does the same with a K400r - with or without Setpoint drivers installed.
Edit - used a non powered USB hub so that the dongle was at least facing the front and it works, but pretty laggy. This is with ethernet (wireless disabled)
http://www.easyuefi.com/wintousb/index.html
http://www.howtogeek.com/196817/how-to-create-a-windows-to-go-usb-drive-without-the-enterprise-edition/
For best performance use a USB3/SATA3 adapter with UASP. You then have fast booting from the SSD and a large hard drive for storage.
Easily. Pretty much any Intel processor these days would handle tasks like that just fine
http://www.cpubenchmark.net/cpu.php?cpu=Intel+Core+i3-4030U+%40+1.90GHz
That's a little off putting if true. Can anyone confirm?
Could you get a cheap USB to ps2 adapter our do they not like kvms?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uesKTOuytXo
General review:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ptao_MROXC4