KAMRUI-Chain via Amazon has for
Prime Members: KAMRUI N100 Mini Desktop Computer (AK1PLUS) on sale for $149 - $15 off when you 'clip' the coupon on the product page - 15% when you click '
Redeem Save 15% promo code:
Y6WK8RUL' on the product page =
$111.65.
Shipping is free.
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Thanks to Deal Editor
iconian for finding this deal.
Product Specs:
- 12th Gen Intel N100 4-Core / 4 Thread (0.8GHz base frequency / 3.4GHz max. Turbo frequency) Processor
- 12GB 4800MHz LPDDR5 RAM
- 1x M.2 Slot w/ 256GB M.2 2280 Solid State Drive / SSD
- 1x SATA Slot (empty, supports up to 2TB 2.5" SATA SSDs)
- Intel UHD Graphics (750MHz)
- 802.11ac Wi-Fi 5 / Bluetooth 4.2
- Windows 11 Pro 64-Bit
- Silent Cooling Fan
- Dimensions: 5.04" x 5.04" x 2.03"
- Ports:
- 2x HDMI 2.0 (w/ up to 4K60Hz resolution dual-display support)
- 1x Gigabit Ethernet Port
- 2x USB 3.2 Type-A
- 2x USB 2.0 Type-A
- 1x 3.5mm Audio Jack
Top Comments
The license is likely baked into the motherboard, assuming it's legit to start with.
However, look up massgravel.
But if you're talking locally, you don't even need transcoding these days.
I was able to direct stream 4K to 4 different devices on a Raspberry Pi 4B.
The only limitations at that point are storage speed and bandwidth.
60 Comments
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Frigate is probably the most popular solution with motion detection support.
I run it in a Proxmox container, but I also have Shinobi and Zoneminder for bridging various cameras that don't work well in Home Assistant natively.
Check here under NVR and Cameras: https://community-scripts.github.
It's probably not the processor, but the storage.
They aren't selling these with top tier RAM or SSDs, just enough to get you going.
That's why I always buy them bare bones.
I'm seeing mixed information on this because it looks like the Amazon listing combines a lot of different models.
One answer on Amazon from someone who doesn't seem very knowledgeable says no, while another says yes.
This teardown shows one DIMM slot, but I believe it's for the N97 model: https://youtu.be/TPaWire2E7k
However, I would assume based on the fact that it's 12GB and not a typical capacity like 8GB or 16GB that it would be soldered in. And I doubt they'd bother to solder in 8GB and run 4GB in a DIMM.
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LPDDR doesn't necessarily always mean it's soldered, just FYI.
LPCAMM is starting to come out, which is also LPDDR.
The scripts on that page actually make it very easy. You just run them and they do all the configuration for you.
All of that software can also be installed on bare metal, but the beauty of having them in containers is that you can experiment and find something you like in a safe environment. And, best of all, it's free.
Most of the good Windows alternatives like Blue Iris cost money.
This is the card I'm talking about. https://coral.ai/products/pcie-accelerator/
However, it sounds like you're just starting out, so this would be something to consider later on.
And what do you mean you need to use PC software?
One answer on Amazon from someone who doesn't seem very knowledgeable says no, while another says yes.
This teardown shows one DIMM slot, but I believe it's for the N97 model: https://youtu.be/TPaWire2E7k
However, I would assume based on the fact that it's 12GB and not a typical capacity like 8GB or 16GB that it would be soldered in. And I doubt they'd bother to solder in 8GB and run 4GB in a DIMM.
N100 only supports single channel memory. So if not the typical 8gb or 16gb it's most likely soldered memory.
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