| ▲ | joe_mamba 7 hours ago | |||||||
Yeash, but not as good as an alternative to a PI back then, since 8 year old notebooks 10 years ago (so 18 year old notebooks today) were too bulky and power hungry to be a real alternative. Power bricks were all 90W and CPU TDW was 35-45W. But notebooks from the 2018 era (intel 8th gen) have quite low power chips that make a good PI alternatives nowadays. The mobile and embedded X86 chips have closed the gap a lot in power consumption since the PI first launched. Now you can even get laptops with broken screens for free, and just use their motherboard as a home server alternative to a PI. Power consumption will be a bit higher, but not enough to offset the money you just saved anytime soon. | ||||||||
| ▲ | jasomill 2 hours ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||
You can get a 5-year-old laptop with a perfectly working screen for free if you're on good terms with the owner of a company who has a stack of them sitting in a storage closet waiting for disposal. :) Which is basically just cutting out the middlemen in a transaction that might cost $100 on eBay. Used corporate laptops are particularly cost-effective if you're interested in running Windows, as unlike Intel NUCs and most SBC products, they typically include hardware-locked Windows 10 Pro licenses which can be upgraded to Windows 11 Pro for free. | ||||||||
| ▲ | kalaksi 5 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||
Laptops are still pretty bulky and power hungry in comparison if you're looking for very SFF and passive cooling. | ||||||||
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