Warning: wall of text incoming
Hi everyone, I am looking to downsize my total collection, which involved parting out my current system and going for something a little more pre-built. I am debating between the Hades Canyon NUC, ASRock Deskmini, or a gaming laptop, and I see upsides and downsides to each, and I wanted to hear your opinions. From my research, it seems that for each option, a GTX1060 or equivalent model will cost roughly the same, perhaps to within $200 of eachother. The NUC and Deskmini are cheaper than a laptop, but you'll have to buy your own memory and storage for the NUC, and additionally a CPU+cooler for the Deskmini.
As it stands, here's what I see:
Hades Canyon
Gaming laptop
Size and performance relative to size: Basic requirement of SFF
Upgradeability: I don't necessarily want it, and I know that sounds weird, but hear me out. I'm sure as many of you know, PC building can get expensive very quickly. A few years back I was really into photography. I had a nice DSLR (that allows you to swap lenses). As long as there are lenses out there to buy, I wanted to buy them, and made a few less-than-intelligent purchases on expensive lenses that I didn't get a lot of use out of before selling them at a loss. So eventually, I sold everything I had and bought a bridge camera (think of it like a high-end point-and-shoot that doesn't allow you to switch lenses). It still takes nice photos, and I don't have the desire to spend thousands on lenses. In essence, I purposely limited my myself in order to save lots of money in the future, and I don't regret it.
Noise: Considered to be a medium priority. If I'm in the middle of an intense game, chances are I probably won't even notice it. I'm not giving it carte blanche to be as loud as it wants, but if the fan's gotta work kinda hard, so be it.
CPU cooler space: If there isn't adequate space to cool the CPU, it may become too hot and throttle, defeating the point of performance relative to size. Or, the fan could spin really fast to keep it cool, defeating the point of keeping the noise low enough.
Number of wires: I love the idea of having as few wires as possible. The bottom of my desk looks like a spider web, and the fewer wires the better.
Replace my desktop + current laptop with just 1 laptop: Would be nice, but I can live with having a desktop/laptop instead of 1 to replace both.
(BONUS) Storage space: Typically, every component (CPU/GPU/memory/chassis, etc) comes in a box, and those boxes must be stored somewhere. In my little apartment, space is at a premium. The less room occupied by boxes the better!
Hi everyone, I am looking to downsize my total collection, which involved parting out my current system and going for something a little more pre-built. I am debating between the Hades Canyon NUC, ASRock Deskmini, or a gaming laptop, and I see upsides and downsides to each, and I wanted to hear your opinions. From my research, it seems that for each option, a GTX1060 or equivalent model will cost roughly the same, perhaps to within $200 of eachother. The NUC and Deskmini are cheaper than a laptop, but you'll have to buy your own memory and storage for the NUC, and additionally a CPU+cooler for the Deskmini.
As it stands, here's what I see:
Hades Canyon
- Pros
- About as small as you can reasonably get
- Considerable power for the size (~GTX 1060 Max-Q performance)
- According to SimplyNUC, very quiet under load
- Cons
- No CPU/GPU upgradeability, so it cannot necessarily be considered future proof IMO
- Pros
- Very small
- Power relative to its size
- Upgradeability to different CPUs/GPUs
- Cons
- Upgrade path is very expensive for MXM cards, expecting to pay a hefty premium for upgraded GPU
- Lack of space for CPU cooler (only around 2 inches from CPU to roof of case)
- GPU cooler reportedly becomes very loud under load.
- Pros
- Small-ish
- Power relative to its size
- No wires other than the power cord
- I can replace my desktop + current laptop with just 1 laptop.
- Cons
- Upgrade path is very expensive for MXM cards (assuming it has one, which it should)
- No CPU upgradeability (although I did see one Ryzen-based laptop with a socketed CPU)
Size and performance relative to size: Basic requirement of SFF
Upgradeability: I don't necessarily want it, and I know that sounds weird, but hear me out. I'm sure as many of you know, PC building can get expensive very quickly. A few years back I was really into photography. I had a nice DSLR (that allows you to swap lenses). As long as there are lenses out there to buy, I wanted to buy them, and made a few less-than-intelligent purchases on expensive lenses that I didn't get a lot of use out of before selling them at a loss. So eventually, I sold everything I had and bought a bridge camera (think of it like a high-end point-and-shoot that doesn't allow you to switch lenses). It still takes nice photos, and I don't have the desire to spend thousands on lenses. In essence, I purposely limited my myself in order to save lots of money in the future, and I don't regret it.
Noise: Considered to be a medium priority. If I'm in the middle of an intense game, chances are I probably won't even notice it. I'm not giving it carte blanche to be as loud as it wants, but if the fan's gotta work kinda hard, so be it.
CPU cooler space: If there isn't adequate space to cool the CPU, it may become too hot and throttle, defeating the point of performance relative to size. Or, the fan could spin really fast to keep it cool, defeating the point of keeping the noise low enough.
Number of wires: I love the idea of having as few wires as possible. The bottom of my desk looks like a spider web, and the fewer wires the better.
Replace my desktop + current laptop with just 1 laptop: Would be nice, but I can live with having a desktop/laptop instead of 1 to replace both.
(BONUS) Storage space: Typically, every component (CPU/GPU/memory/chassis, etc) comes in a box, and those boxes must be stored somewhere. In my little apartment, space is at a premium. The less room occupied by boxes the better!
Last edited: