Compulab’s Airtop Uses Natural Airflow to Be Dead Silent

Compulab Airtop NAF Fanless PC 00

Israeli manufacturer of computer boards for embedded systems Compulab has unveiled Airtop, its latest miniature fanless PC that relies on natural air flow to stay completely silent.

Fanless desktop PCs don’t represent a novelty, it’s just that until now they weren’t built with impressive components, and they certainly didn’t come in such a ridiculously small form factor. Launched in three different versions that have different applications, Compulab’s Airtop fanless desktop PC is firm proof that it’s possible to have a dead-silent computer without having to spend a lot on sound dampening materials.

“Compulab’s key corporate-value is innovation” said Gideon Yampolsky, Compulab CEO. “For several years we have been researching a new concept of natural air-flow (NAF) cooling and for the last 3 years we developed Airtop as a practical implementation of the technology. It is noteworthy that Airtop’s cooling capacity surpasses that of similar active cooling desktops. However, the real breakthrough in NAF technology is its scalability. Unlike conventional fanless cooling that scales with surface area, NAF scales with volume, making it an effective solution for many real-world cooling problems.”

Airtop relies on a patent-pending passive-cooling system that’s based on natural airflow. Thus, it is able to dissipate up to 200W of thermal power, much more than what the energy-saving components it has could ever produce. Airtop-W is powered by an Intel Xeon Processor E3 and a full-height NVIDIA Quadro M4000, suggesting that it’s meant to be used as a workstation. Airtop-S, on the other hand, has the same CPU, but comes with 32GB ECC RAM, 4 HDDs in RAID and 6 Gbit Ethernet ports, fact that indicates at its application as a server. Airtop-G, which is running on an Intel Core i7 CPU and an NVIDIA GeForce 950 GPU, is meant for living-room entertainment or gaming. On top of these all, there’s an Airtop-DIY that comes without a CPU. All models can come with Linux Mint or Windows pre-installed, or can be offered without any OS.

“Compulab believes users should have the freedom to fit their computer to their exact needs, and Airtop is our most user-friendly computer to-date” added Irad Stavi, Chief Product Officer at Compulab. “It was very important to us to allow users to choose hardware, install and upgrade it at will. Too often, passive-cooling stands in the way of easy service, so Airtop is noteworthy for addressing the challenge of excellent serviceability of a fanless system.”

Compulab is already taking pre-orders, and the miniature fanless PCs are expected to ship in Q1 ’16. As such, Airtop-DIY starts from $1,128, Airtop-S will start at $1,810, Airtop-G starts at $1,968, and last but definitely not least, Airtop-W will cost upward of $2,999. All Airtop models come with a 5-year warranty.

For more details about these fantastic fanless PCs, head over to the manufacturer’s website. There you’ll find the complete technicals specs, along with comprehensive explanations of how the NAF cooling system works.

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Meet Utilite, a $99 quad-core ARM-based PC running Ubuntu

Meet Utilite, a $99 quadcore ARMbased PC running Ubuntu

That box you see above? It's a quad-core ARM-based PC running Ubuntu called Utilite. The desktop system, made by Compulab, will be available next month starting at $99. While there are plenty of Android dongles built on ARM SoCs out there, few (if any) can truly offer a PC-like experience. The company -- best known for its Trim Slice, Fit-PC and MintBox products -- wants to change this.

Utilite packs a single-, dual- or quad-core Freescale i.MX6 Cortex-A9 MPCore processor (up to 1.2 GHz), up to 4GB of DDR3 RAM (1066MHz), an mSATA SSD (up to 512GB), WiFi b/g/n, Bluetooth 3.0, HDMI and DVI-D outputs, two Gigabit Ethernet sockets, four USB 2.0 ports, one micro-USB OTG connector, audio jacks (analog and S/PDIF), a micro-SD XD slot and two ultra-mini RS232 interfaces -- phew!

Rounding things up is support for OpenGL ES, OpenVG and OpenCL EP plus multi-stream 1080p H.264 on-chip decoding. All this fits in a chassis mesuring just 5.3 x 3.9 x 0.8 inches (135 x 100 x 21mm) and only consumes 3-8W using a 10-16V supply (unregulated). Those are impressive specs for the price, and the system sure looks positioned to compete favorably with some of the x86 boxes out there.

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Source: FanlessTech

CompuLab MintBox 2 unveiled with four times the power, same Linux Mint flavor

CompuLab previews MintBox 2 four times the power, same Linux Mint flavor

Now that Linux Mint 15 is available, it's only fair that we get a new MintBox to match. The CompuLab and Linux Mint teams won't disappoint us on that front: they've just previewed the MintBox 2, a big upgrade to their open source mini PC. The new version drops AMD processors in favor of an Intel Core i5 that's reportedly four times faster than the AMD T56 in the MintBox Pro. The refresh also doubles the storage to 500GB while adding a second gigabit Ethernet jack for server duties. CompuLab and Linux Mint haven't said how soon they expect the MintBox 2 to ship, but they're expecting a $599 price at Amazon.

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Via: FanlessTech

Source: Linux Mint Blog

CompuLab to serve fanless AMD PC-3’s stuffed with minted penguin

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With the Ubuntu variant Mint roaming free as one of the more attractive Linux breeds, why not lock it up in its own mini-case? That'll happen soon thanks to mintBox, a joint venture with CompuLab, which will put the OS in two of its fanless PC-3's -- the T40N and T56N -- priced at $476 and $518, respectively. That might seem steep for the tiny 6 x 6 x 1-inch AMD G-series boxes, but with a Radeon HD 6290 APU and USB 3.0 / eSata ports, power is above par for its class. CompuLab will give some of the proceeds to Mint's team, so if you maybe want to throw some cash at the so fresh, so clean Linux distro, hit the source for more details.

CompuLab to serve fanless AMD PC-3's stuffed with minted penguin originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 31 May 2012 22:06:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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