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Spec:
128.2 × 128.2 × 41 mm
Windows 11 Pro
AMD Ryzen™ 7 7735HS Processor
8 Cores / 16 Threads
3.2 GHz Base Clock (Up to 4.75 GHz Boost)
16MB L3 Cache
AMD Radeo 680M Integrated Graphics
24GB (12GB×2) LPDDR5-5500 Memory
Storage: 1TB M.2 2280 NVMe PCIe3.0×4 SSD
Wi-Fi 6 + Bluetooth 5.2
Ports:
2× USB-A 3.2 Gen 2 (10Gbps, Front)
4× USB-A 3.2 Gen 1 (5Gbps, Rear)
1× USB-C 3.2 Gen 2 (10Gbps, DP 1.4, 4K@60Hz)
1× HDMI 2.0 (4K@60Hz)
1× DisplayPort 1.4 (4K@60Hz)
1× 2.5G RJ-45 Ethernet Port (10/100/1000/2500Mbps Auto-Negotiation)
1× 3.5mm Audio Jack
Display Support:Triple Display OutputHDMI 2.0 + DP 1.4 + USB-C (DP 1.4
)Up to 4K@60Hz on Each Display Output
https://acemagic.com/products/ace...hs-mini-pc
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- The 7735HS (2023) is manufactured in 6 nm at TSMC. The 7735HS is the refresh of the Ryzen 7 6800HS (2022) with 50 MHz higher boost speed and a potential higher TDP up to 54W.
- 680m graphics.
- Still pretty beefy, especially with the 24gb soldered RAM.
Only downside, is that there isn't any TB4/USB4 or Oculink ports. That limits the gaming possibilities greatly. You could sacrifice one of the m.2 drive slots though.- The 7735HS (2023) is manufactured in 6 nm at TSMC. The 7735HS is the refresh of the Ryzen 7 6800HS (2022) with 50 MHz higher boost speed and a potential higher TDP up to 54W.
- 680m graphics.
- Still pretty beefy, especially with the 24gb soldered RAM.
Only downside, is that there isn't any TB4/USB4 or Oculink ports. That limits the gaming possibilities greatly. You could sacrifice one of the m.2 drive slots though.16 GiB is a good (not great) amount of RAM for Windows. The iGPU will use up to 8 GiB when gaming, and probably 2-4 GiB when not. So the typical user would get 16 GiB when doing light gaming, which is mainly focused on a single task. When not gaming, which normally involves more multitasking, the user gets 20-22 GiB. (By gaming, I mean lightweight gaming, not newer AAA at higher resolutions. This machine can play games, but it isn't a gaming PC afterall.)
Everyone bashes the soldered RAM. It is justified to avoid machines because of it. I normally do since I like to upgrade and shift components around all the time. But for the average user who isn't savvy and wants a one-and-done machine, I think 24 GiB of RAM in a system like this is a comfortable amount. And the faster, lower-powered soldered RAM is actually better if you don't ever want or need to upgrade.
16 GiB is a good (not great) amount of RAM for Windows. The iGPU will use up to 8 GiB when gaming, and probably 2-4 GiB when not. So the typical user would get 16 GiB when doing light gaming, which is mainly focused on a single task. When not gaming, which normally involves more multitasking, the user gets 20-22 GiB. (By gaming, I mean lightweight gaming, not newer AAA at higher resolutions. This machine can play games, but it isn't a gaming PC afterall.)
Everyone bashes the soldered RAM. It is justified to avoid machines because of it. I normally do since I like to upgrade and shift components around all the time. But for the average user who isn't savvy and wants a one-and-done machine, I think 24 GiB of RAM in a system like this is a comfortable amount. And the faster, lower-powered soldered RAM is actually better if you don't ever want or need to upgrade.
And it is your LAST sentence that gets me. Please LOOK at the specs... DDR5 5500 WHICH IS SLOWER then DDR5 5600 which is what usually comes with exchangeable RAM. Now, soldered RAM can run as fast as DDR5 8000, but you need THAT RAM to hit those numbers.
Bottom line, I think you should try to get yourself a 780m with 16GB of exchangeable RAM and upgrade in a few years when prices drop.
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