HTPC Credentials

The DeskMini's ventilated chassis (allowing for rapid cooling) and the BIOS fan control ensure that fan noise is not a concern at all for typical office workloads or light HTPC duties. The Intel HD Graphics 530 is a known quantity when it comes to refresh rate accuracy and decoding / rendering efficiency. Therefore, we will only address the network streaming efficiency aspect in this section.

Network Streaming Efficiency

Evaluation of OTT playback efficiency was done by playing back our standard YouTube test stream and five minutes from our standard Netflix test title. Using HTML5, the YouTube stream plays back a 1080p H.264 encoding. Since YouTube now defaults to HTML5 for video playback, we have stopped evaluating Adobe Flash acceleration. Note that only NVIDIA exposes GPU and VPU loads separately. Both Intel and AMD bundle the decoder load along with the GPU load. The following two graphs show the power consumption at the wall for playback of the HTML5 stream in Mozilla Firefox (v 46.0.1).

YouTube Streaming - HTML5: Power Consumption

GPU load was around 19.24% for the YouTube HTML5 stream and 0.01% for the steady state 6 Mbps Netflix streaming case.

Netflix streaming evaluation was done using the Windows 10 Netflix app. Manual stream selection is available (Ctrl-Alt-Shift-S) and debug information / statistics can also be viewed (Ctrl-Alt-Shift-D). Statistics collected for the YouTube streaming experiment were also collected here.

Netflix Streaming - Windows 8.1 Metro App: Power Consumption

The DeskMini is not particularly power-efficient as a HTPC platform. However, for a multi-purpose PC that might be used to play YouTube videos or the occasional Netflix video, it does help to know that power consumption and fan noise are not going to be a major concern.

Networking and Storage Performance Power Consumption and Thermal Performance
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  • Lolimaster - Saturday, June 11, 2016 - link

    I would really love a review of the i7 6700T 35w.

    i7 6700K is only 17% faster on average without that nice tdp. Powerconsumption idle/load/typical use/temps. Would really appreciate it.
  • prisonerX - Tuesday, June 14, 2016 - link

    A reasonably priced case with built-in passive CPU heatsink would be a nice complement in that review. With Skylake about the only real benefit is the practicality of silent PCs.
  • prisonerX - Tuesday, June 14, 2016 - link

    This ticks a lot of boxes:small size, 12V power, Skylake. But $130 for a motherboard, a generic power brick and a simple case? Seriously?
  • 8steve8 - Saturday, July 9, 2016 - link

    I know right? It should be like $300 considering the skull canyon NUC is over $600 and can only handle a 45w CPU... With a terrible (loud) cooler.

    There is nothing that competes with this: Skylake 65 W with this size.

    If only Intel would release a socketed Skylake 65w CPU/iGPU with eDRAM.
  • ES_Revenge - Friday, June 17, 2016 - link

    Really don't understand the point to STX. Has zero slots, okay that makes it even smaller than ITX but is there really a need for it? The NUC/mini-PC type jobbies like the NUC, Cubi, Liva, etc. seem to have their market covered. If you really want there are some very small mini-ITX cases (some that even only hold thin mini-ITX) and don't end up using the slot so the space "wasted" because of it isn't that much.

    For example Antec's ISK 110 is very small, it's a bit bigger than this but it uses mini ITX boards (with no slot usability) which are available all over the place. It just doesn't seem like we need another form factor to be between mini ITX and the NUC-type machines, does it?

    I'd rather mini DTX have taken off that this. I just don't think there's a need for mini-ITX minus like 5cm
  • 8steve8 - Saturday, July 9, 2016 - link

    Most NUCs have a 15W or less CPU meant for laptops... With a laptop style heatsink/fan.

    This takes a 65w CPU and a quieter heatsink/fan.

    Imagine you want a very high performance desktop, but also want it as small as possible. I realize most commenters on this site are obsessed with game performance, but if you don't care about playing the latest game, then this pretty close to the perfect high performance small desktop workstation.
  • 8steve8 - Saturday, July 9, 2016 - link

    This is much smaller than even tiny itx PCs ... Also front ports without internal wires/connectors!
  • jaydee - Thursday, June 30, 2016 - link

    The power draw for the MSI Cubi 2 Plus vPro max load power draw (Prim95 + FurMark) really can't be right. It's a 35W TDP i5-6500T, and according to the chart is measuring 10W higher than the 65W i5-6500 PC in this review?

    The i5-6500T 35W PC almost has to be closer to half of the 102W shown here (which was taken from the MSI Cubi 2 Plus vPro main article).
  • butchooka - Friday, August 12, 2016 - link

    Can please someone confirm tha it is possible to install 15mm high HDDs?
    Would be a nice to put 2*4TB 2,5 drives +m2-SSD in it.

    Found nowhere information about possible high of drives in this case, or pics showing there is enogh space. All tests only use ssd drives with 6/9,5mm height. Asrock only provides that it has space for 2 drives
  • james.shallcross - Tuesday, September 20, 2016 - link

    7mm - no problem
    9.5mm - will JUST fit
    15mm - will not fit

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