http://www.mini-box.com/s.nl/sc.8/category.13/it.A/id.417/.fThat is seriously fucking amazing.
1/31/2006 11:46:35 PM
Not at all and it isn't 120W. Read the specs more closely rather than the shit that gets fed to you in the headlines.
2/1/2006 12:02:33 AM
Uh, according to the product description on that site and elsewhere it's 120W.
2/1/2006 12:24:34 AM
^^good catch, it's max load is actually 140w. Fucking toolbag.
2/1/2006 12:26:27 AM
wow i could use that to power my pI 166.sweet.
2/1/2006 1:59:34 AM
Actually it's rated for P4 3.0+ ghz processors. Just can't run the agp video monster, raid array etc. 120w is beastly for any embedded pc.
2/1/2006 2:03:57 AM
I had a p4 2.1, 5.25" DVD, 7200rpm seagate, and a Radeon 9200 on a 95W power supply for a long time. It was crammed into one of these 4" wide cases:
2/1/2006 6:32:26 AM
that PSU is DC to DC, so you'd need an AC to DC adapter to plug something like that into the wallbut its impressive that they can get that much power out of something so small
2/1/2006 11:02:04 AM
^ it's dc-dc made for embeded applications like in a car.you wouldn't want to put this in a desktop. it's only 120W. most desktop PC's are 350W and up nowadays.
2/1/2006 12:25:40 PM
2/1/2006 1:10:42 PM
i want one.
2/1/2006 9:53:02 PM
^^You doober, it's a fucking power supply. No shit you need a dc source, it's for EMBEDDED APPLICATIONS. It saves considerable room in the area that needs it the most, on the board.You want to argue semantics over a switch versus a supply? That sounds like some shit I would try to do, but not until at least page three.It's got good press, good reviews, does exactly what it advertises in use, and is perfect in it's niche market. Keep on keepin on.
2/1/2006 11:53:40 PM
2/1/2006 11:54:01 PM
Noen, you've been had.
2/2/2006 12:03:18 AM
How? He made a retarded uber post. I could give two shits if it's a "true" power supply or not. I've yet to see any DC-DC psu that is this compact, for this kind of application.
2/2/2006 3:44:13 AM
how hard have you looked?
2/2/2006 12:18:29 PM
Tell me oh holy knower of all that is DC-DC, what application exists that needs x regulated power supplies and you heap great praise on a solution that provides x-1 regulated powers supplies and relies on the other regulated one to come from somewhere else?Where will these mini-itx solutions be placed that there is an availiable, regulated 12V line with enough power overhead that you can just hang this thing off of it and get an embedded PC solution where you didn't have one before with minimum additional power supply requirements. I'm trying to think of a situation, but I obviously don't know as much as you so I am drawing a blank.Tell me.
2/8/2006 1:20:36 PM
LET'S GET READY TO RUMMBBBLLLEEEEE!!!
2/8/2006 1:52:39 PM
^^robotics, automotive embedded pc's. For that matter ANY closed loop system that runs off a 12V DC battery. There are TONS of potential applications where having the required stepdowns from a regulated 12v down to a to-spec ATX pinout is very useful.You want more specific examples? I'd be glad to go on for PAGES on the applications of embedded pc's in battery powered devices.[Edited on February 8, 2006 at 2:11 PM. Reason : .]
2/8/2006 2:10:28 PM
2/8/2006 2:13:02 PM
It lets you do what the x-box 360 and mac mini do, have the AC adapter near the poweroutlet or in the cord instead of the case. As long as airflow is good, that means alot less cooling is needed in the case and also lets you have a much smaller actual computer case. Sure the overall size of the computer+ac adapter isn't MUCH smaller than just the case with a complete ac adapter/PSU... but the ac adapters can be kept out of sight, while you usually want a media pc/xbox type thing within reset-button distance of the tv etc.
2/8/2006 2:19:06 PM
^^You are going to tell me you can't regulate a 12V closed system? Idiot. OBVIOUSLY there will need to be a regulator.
2/8/2006 3:04:20 PM
2/8/2006 3:57:30 PM
well I just talked to an EE who has been in the field for 28 years, he thought it was clever and useful. You think what you like, put it down, don't use it. Go right ahead. I'll trust the word of someone with a lifetime more experience.Also, with ALL the EE/ECE kids on this board, why hasn't anyone else spoken up to say how horrible and useless and stupid this is? While it may not be what it's nomenclature claims, I still fail to see how its a useless device.
2/8/2006 4:28:38 PM
Wow, so I worked you all the way into a corner where your best "argument" is it is either useless or not. Can you make your whimpering white flag salute any more pathetic?
2/8/2006 10:05:00 PM
seeing as my original post was
2/9/2006 1:44:13 AM
2/9/2006 8:10:20 AM
2/9/2006 9:59:05 PM
Noen wins only because he stopped caring whether he won or lost. On the other hand Tiberius has seemed to find himself a new alias.....I considered buying one for my car pc but went with another model that provided delayed shutdown.
2/9/2006 10:16:24 PM
It obviously has a use, but claiming it as a 120w power supply is a bit of a stretch, when with a simple (and small) filter they gain 84 of their 120 watts.
2/9/2006 10:29:39 PM
the size is impressive that's about it...personally the m1-atx and m2-atx, and opus are the only one's worth buying imho for the price you get a regulated output, intelligent shutdown (one of 8 modes), has integrated blade fuse just in case. by the time you bought the picoPSU and other parts to regulate the source and for smart shutdown it far exceeds the cost of the pico.see this also:http://www.logicsupply.com/product_info.php/cPath/40_63/products_id/228really the regulator and smart shutdown features are what add to the overall size, remove those and most could probably provide a psu close to being so smalli think both of you are right... yes, it's not that GREAT, but it serves the purpose it was designed for...[Edited on February 9, 2006 at 10:46 PM. Reason : .]
2/9/2006 10:45:11 PM