The Compute Card includes a 7th-generation Intel Core processor, built-in graphics capabilities, storage and wireless connectivity options. Intel hasn’t stated which chips will be offered but options ...
The Intel Compute Card is a tiny computer about the size of a few credit cards stacked on top of one another. First unveiled in January, the first Compute Cards and accessories should be available ...
Intel released its Compute Card, a 95 x 55 x 5mm computer in a credit card-sized package, at the 2017 Consumer Electronics Show. It is designed for digital signage, All-in-Ones, smart TVs, and ...
NexDock will provide a range of chassis for Intel's new modular compute cards at a fraction of the cost of a full-blown device. About a year ago, iTWire wrote about NexDock and its use of the ...
[url=http://arstechnica.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=32577275#p32577275:3uvqggc6 said: Wickwick[/url]":3uvqggc6]If it's just plugging into a USB slot I wonder if the ...
This week the Raspberry Pi Foundation launched the Compute Module 3, a tiny computer-on-a-module that looks like a stick of laptop memory. The $30 Compute Module 3 has a quad-core ARM Cortex-A53 ...
I've recently upgraded by computer's graphics card to a GTX560 that I bought used from a friend, and I'm looking into possible uses for my older card, a GTX460v2 with 1GB of RAM. First, I'm wondering ...
Modularity is a fun topic for us. There’s something satisfying about seeing a complex system split into parts and these parts made replaceable. We often want some parts of our devices swapped, after ...