Linux Mint Ditches AMD For Intel With New Mintbox Mini 2 (betanews.com) 46
An anonymous reader writes: Makers of Mint Box, a diminutive desktop which runs Linux Mint -- an Ubuntu-based OS, on Friday announced the Mintbox Mini 2. While the new model has several new aspects, the most significant is that the Linux Mint Team has switched from AMD to Intel (the original Mini used an A4-Micro 6400T). For $299, the Mintbox Mini 2 comes with a quad-core Intel Celeron J3455 processor, 4GB of RAM, and a 60GB SSD. For $50 more you can opt for the "Pro" model which doubles the RAM to 8GB and increases the SSD capacity to 120GB. Graphics are fairly anemic, as it uses integrated Intel HD 500, but come on -- you shouldn't expect to game with this thing. For video connectivity, you get both HDMI and Mini DisplayPort. Both can push 4K, and while the mini DP port can do 60Hz, the HDMI is limited to 30.
Gaming (Score:1)
"you shouldn't expect to game with this thing" - Well of course not, it is running a flavor of Linux. I have honestly tried doing Linux based gaming once a year or so just to see where it is at. Currently, Steam for Linux is amazing, but the content after the storefront itself just isn't. I basically had the option of a handful of indy games and Rocket League. Not much else was available, sadly. And then, the Linux gaming box was once again shelved for the next several months while I continue to play games
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Sadly, your anecdotal experience doesn't really explain much. If it is anecdotal, perhaps one should say how many games they actually have, as I certainly have more than a handful, and more particularly, what games you actually play. If you do not play Civ,, if you do not play Witcher, if you do not play Saints Row, If you do not like Euro Truck, American Truck simulator, on and on and on, then sure, nothing but Rocket League(I would crush you), but really, the way you put it feels more dishonest, and also
Re:Gaming - Not WINE either. (Score:2)
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What would be your the top 25 games (both commercial, and indie) that you wish you could play natively under Linux ?
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GTA:V
Naval Action
Mafia II
Mafia III
Red Dead Redemption (and pretty sure I'd want II to work as well.)
Call of Duty: WWII
L.A. Noire
PGA Golf
Madden '15
many many many more
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Baaaaaaaaaaa.
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Tu sais que Slashdot est pour les utilisateurs anglophones, non?
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Inte det heller :C
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Dass verstehe ich nicht :(
Actual Mint Team announcement... (Score:2, Informative)
Can be read here [linuxmint.com], instead of going to another site.
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jesus how many levels of distro abstraction are we going to
If you don't like all the rehashing, there is LMDE, which is a rolling Linux Mint setup running on Debian itself, instead of Ubuntu. Major version 3 is set for release around the same time as Mint 19 (this coming June [linuxmint.com]).
Mint is doing great (Score:1)
MintBox is another revenue source for the Mint project, as opposed to just depending on donations. Mint is also wildly popular. They're one of the few Linux distros actually running things really well for the average user.
Gaming (Score:2)
quote: "...but come on -- you shouldn't expect to game with this thing."
I expect to game on a Raspberry Pi, you insensitive clod!
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That's it (Score:1)
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Instructions unclear, sold all my socks.
Power supply? (Score:2)
I presume a mini box in this day and age is going to use USB-PD i.e. power over USB-C
In reality, it's likely using some 12v barrel adapter.
USB-C PD offers a 12v option...
I love these little boxes, but what happens is that they go in the closet and then a year or two later they come out and they use some semi-proprietary DIN plug pin-out and you've lost the power adapter. At least the Raspberry Pi uses a standard USB-Micro cell phone cable port. All the new Chromebooks are using USB-
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I keep the boxes, then when I put it in storage, I put the adapter and the device back in its original box. That way I also have all the little fiddly bits that it came with too that everyone loses.
Or, if it's something I've used for years and tossed the box, I leave the power connected, and then wrap the d
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The standard may support it, but the vast majority of chargers are not going to support 100W. Worse, many offer out of spec power options and many of the existing chargers are broken and possibly dangerous. See, for example:
https://www.makeuseof.com/tag/... [makeuseof.com]
Further, there's the question of expense. Not only the price of the additional circuitry in the device, but the charger itself. If you look at that link above, for example, the cheapest 60W charger is $39.99. You can pick up a universal charger that
Intel NUC? (Score:2)
No, COMPULAB Switched (Score:5, Informative)
The recently-released Fitlet2 [fit-iot.com] is what switched from an AMD SoC to an Intel SoC. The Mintbox is simply a branded Fitlet, with SSD and RAM included (Fitlet can be bought barebones) and Linux Mint pre-installed. Nothing more than that. So the Mint Team didn't really have a say in what SoC the new generation unit used.
That being said, I have a Fitlet 1 myself and I love it. I'm quite a fan of Compulab's whole range of micro and mini computers. Which is why I'd like to see them actually get credit for this machine, which they make.
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Your laptop or full size desktop is already a micro computer.
And a mini computer is much larger than that.
I don't know how you can call those very small computers... nano computer?
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I've seen them called mini PCs
I don't think a mini computer counts as a PC.
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Nitpicking very much? ... 30 years? 40 years? Ah, perhaps only 25 years ... ... there where no minis or micros ...
The terms microcomputer and minicomputer are no longer in use, in their original sense, since
Anyway, my university time I spend with PC (Macs and Windows), Workstations, mainframes and supercomputers
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Second that. I have been running a fit-pc2 for over 8 years now as a (home) server. It has been running 24/7 at about 7-10 watts. I've upgraded the hard drive to get a bit more space, other than that everything is original. Great little device.
Overpriced... (Score:5, Informative)
2200G (Score:1)
This is a huge oversight by this Mint "project". It seems that Intel is doing everything they can to keep the new APUs from reaching market.
They're clearly bribing manufactures to only pair the processor with sub-standard systems, shitty screens, bad memory, etc.
Is this a surprise? (Score:2)
The new Ryzen APUs are actually quite powerful (Score:2)
How much did Intel pay? (Score:1)