HI there,
I am finally at the point of setting up an HTPC for my theatre (I currently use a WDTV Live Hub)
I would love your thoughts regarding the proposed setup from newegg.ca
Intel NUC BOXD54250WYKH1 2 Intel HD Graphics 5000 Mini / Booksize Barebone System
Item #:N82E16856102055
Intel Core i5-4250U
Intel HD 5000 Series Graphics
support 2.5-inch drives
http://www.newegg.ca/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16856102055&cm_re=BOXD54250WYKH1-_-56-102-055-_-Product
Crucial Ballistix Sport 16GB (2 x 8G) 204-Pin DDR3 SO-DIMM DDR3 1600 (PC3 12800) Laptop Memory
Item #:N82E16820148730
http://www.newegg.ca/Product/Product.aspx?item=N82E16820148730
Crucial M500 CT480M500SSD3 MLC Internal Solid State Drive (SSD)
480GB
http://www.newegg.ca/Product/Product.aspx?item=N82E16820148699
Microsoft Windows 8.1 64-bit - OEM
The system will use the MC library from my main home computer and connect to a 12TB server in my home which contains all the media. All my other computers in thew home use Windows 7. Will there be any issues if this one uses Windows 8.1?
thoughts?
I am hoping to purchase in the next few days
dave
I have a very similar device running in my house as a secondary HTPC. It's the same model NUC, but with 8gb of ram and a smaller samsung evo ssd (256GB). My NUC is running windows 8.1, and I've had no problems connecting to my MC server on Windows 7.
I'm very happy with the NUC for what it is, but I'll offer a few observations about my experience with it so far:
Pros:
1) Fast and fairly responsive
2) Can run Red October HQ (MadVR) on relatively high settings with
non-interlaced content
3) Can play some video games
4) Very low power consumption: draws about eight or nine watts at idle, around fifteen to twenty under load, and less than a watt when sleeping (s3). This is as measured by consumer Kill-A-Watt device not a multi-meter, so it may be off a bit, but should give you an order of magnitude.
5) Very small and can be mounted on the back of a television to conceal wires.
6) Motherboard Wake on LAN support is good* (* but see some potential wi-fi related cons below)
7) Integrated IR remote function worked great for me, and the remote can actually wake the PC from a complete power off state, which is neat. To be clear, I'm not talking about waking from hibernation (s4 or s5); the IR input actually seems to be able to wake the NUC when it's been shut all the way down by windows and powered off. I have been unable to get similar results with Wake on LAN, the cold-wake function seems limited to the IR input. I should note that one other forum user did have some issues with his IR receiver (earlier this year) on a similar NUC model, so YMMV.
Cons:
1) The integrated graphics seems to have real problems using high quality settings on Red October HQ with
interlaced content. I had to set MadVR to use DXVA to get acceptable performance with interlaced content.
2) All USB ports are USB 3 ports. That may sound like a pro, but USB 3 ports give off interference that can cause problems with devices that use the 2.4 GHz band (bluetooth devices and wifi devices). See this intel white paper on the subject:
http://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/io/universal-serial-bus/usb3-frequency-interference-paper.html. In my case, plugging a logitech bluetooth keyboard/mouse receiver directly into a NUC USB port resulted in either no keyboard function at all, or dropped keystrokes and extreme mouse lag. Plugging the same bluetooth receiver into a USB extension cable plugged into the exact same USB-3 port resulted in good keyboard and mouse function, because it pushed the bluetooth receiver six inches away from the source of the interference. The keyboard was working so badly, that I couldn't even do basic system setup on my NUC until I figured out the USB 3 issue. This issue doesn't affect all bluetooth devices, but I'd
strongly recommend having a USB extender or hub on hand if you plan on using a wireless keyboard or mouse.
And finally, the big issue (for me):
3) WiFi problems. You don't mention whether you were planning to use wi-fi with the NUC, and if so what adapter you're planning to use with it (the default NUC kit does not ship with wi-fi support). I used an intel AC7260, and I sincerely wish I hadn't. It drops wi-fi connections intermittently, especially after a sleep/wake cycle. When this happens, I have to either reboot the system or manually stop and restart the wi-fi adapter. Intel's forums are full of people with this problem. The consequence of this is that the wi-fi connectivity gets borked and borks Wake on Lan periodically, meaning that I can't reliably use Gizmo to remote control the NUC. When the adapter drops the connection, I have to use the keyboard to wake the PC and then manually restart the network adapter, which is a pain. Not necessarily a NUC problem, so much as it is an intel wi-fi adapter problem, but if you plan to use wi-fi with the NUC, you'll need to buy an adapter. I cannot recommend the intel AC7260.
One important thing to note in shopping for a wi-fi adapter: an external usb wi-fi dongle is potentially susceptible to the same USB-3 interference problems outlined in 2) above, especially if it's a single band adapter. I tested an external USB wi-fi dongle (made by Panda), and in my testing, it worked very poorly when plugged directly into the NUC's USB ports. A USB extension cable improved the functioning of the wi-fi dongle, similar to 2) above. I
did not have any connectivity issues with the NUC's built in ethernet adapter, so if you're planning to run wired, you should have better results.
Those are my observations on the NUC so far after about two months of steady use. Hope this helps!