I Bought an N100 Mini Pc, Then Another
Key topics
The debate around N100 mini PCs has sparked a lively discussion, with enthusiasts weighing in on their pros and cons. Some commenters, like bdcravens, argue that refurbished MFF PCs offer better value, while others, such as theothertimcook and glimshe, swear by the N100's low power consumption and versatility, using them for tasks like hosting Jellyfin. As Raspberry Pi prices have skyrocketed, alternatives like the N100 have become increasingly appealing, with outime and theshrike79 reporting successful deployments. The conversation highlights the trade-offs between x86 and ARM-based systems, with antonkochubey noting the N100's OS advantages, and out_of_protocol pointing out the potential for more powerful Ryzen CPUs in similar form factors.
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- 01Story posted
Aug 26, 2025 at 5:36 AM EDT
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(my comment from a thread yesterday)
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=45017074
They’re amazing bits of tech for the price.
I prefer the slightly larger boxes like the Beelink EQ14[1] that have internal PSUs with 100-240 VAC inputs (e.g. non-polar IEC C8).
[1] https://www.bee-link.com/products/beelink-eq14-n150
[0] https://www.ebay.com/str/evolutionecycling/Desktop-Computers...
Wanted a travel NAS that would run on USB-C power. Thought about a Raspi5 + M.2 HAT + case. Checked the final price at checkout.
Bought a GMKTec Nucbox G7 instead. RAM is soldered in, but it has 12GB which is more than enough for the foreseeable future. 512GB SSD - again, more than enough and I can upgrade it later.
Now it runs Debian with a local Plex installation along with my Gl.inet router so I can get my series fix even if the internet is spotty when I'm traveling :)
Certainly, if the main use-case is fastest speed in a straight line - get something with a Ryzen like the Acemagic I mentioned at the end with Geekbench scores.
Braindead YouTube-solution would be to buy this device, connect to TV, wireless mouse and install Windows 10/11 LTSC, install firefox + favorite addons. N100 is barely enough for 4k@60, and Ryzen gets a bit more juice to live comfortably
I have an old AMD geode from PC Engines, and I’m pretty sure it doesn’t have that problem.
Now I just have a small usb-powered fan aimed at it and it runs fine. Fortunately for me it's in the basement so I don't have to see or hear it, but the fanless versions run super hot in my experience.
I like to host stuff from my house, and take a sick pleasure in not caring when my self-hosted personal projects fall offline. This is the luxury of personal projects.
For something other people are paying for, I (too) would rather not have to think about tripped breakers or ISP maintenance knocking out the service.
> Now, if something is public facing and making revenue (or risks revenue/reputation by going down), I will absolutely run that on a popular cloud VM, or on Hetzner's bare-metal offering split up into various microVMs. If possible, I'll run it on a CDN - like my blog, a homepage, or a documentation site.
I am concurring with the article, sorry if it was not obvious. Added a (too) now :)
Now it's running Ubuntu, Cockpit, Podman and ZFS for the redundancy, plus some extra tweaks to make the chassis LED display the zpool and volume status from a glance.
The kicker is that they each have 2.5GbE Ethernet with POE! This allows me to power control them by power cycling the switch port.
I then have a webhook that gets hit from MAAS. They pxe and get provisioned with an os image, the same images also work on large real servers, so this is a pretty awesome mini lab for testing and tinkering.