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      Looking for a tiny but powerful PC? Check out the Minisforum U820/U850

      Jim Salter · news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Friday, 5 February, 2021 - 19:32

    Hong Kong-based miniature PC specialist Minisforum announced two new models of its signature NUC-like minis available for pre-order this week; the U820 and U850. These sibling models share the same basic form factor and specifications—they're palm sized boxes crammed with input, output, and storage ports as shown below. The U850 offers an Intel i5-10210U CPU, and its less expensive U820 sibling sports an i5-8259U.

    These systems measure 5 by 5 inches, at 2.5 inches tall, and come with VESA mount hardware which can be used to mount them directly to the back of most monitors. They support up to three simultaneous displays (HDMI, DisplayPort, and USB-C), and can make great homebrew routers thanks to their dual Ethernet interfaces.

    We should note that these systems are available for pre- order now, with shipping expected in April—but this is not Minisforum's first rodeo; it has been shipping miniature PCs like these for several years through direct sales and Amazon.

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      How businesses are changing their company network designs to work from home

      Jim Salter · news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Monday, 12 October, 2020 - 13:00 · 1 minute

    Multitudes are working from home. This changes how business

    Enlarge / Multitudes are working from home. This changes how business' networks work. (credit: zf L / Getty Images)

    We're 10 months into 2020, and businesses are still making adjustments to the new realities of large-scale telework (which, if you're not in the IT biz, is just a fancy term for "working from not in the office"). In the Before Times, telework was an interesting idea that tech companies were just starting to seriously flirt with as a normal way of doing business—whereas now, most businesses large or small have a hefty fraction of their workforce staying home to work.

    Unfortunately, making such a sweeping change to office workflow doesn't just disrupt policies and expectations—it requires important changes to the technical infrastructure as well. Six months ago, we talked about the changes the people who work from home frequently need to make to accommodate telework; today, we're going to look at the ongoing changes the businesses themselves need to make.

    We’re going to need a bigger boat pipe

    The most obvious problem that businesses have faced—and are continuing to face—with a greatly multiplied number of remote workers is the size of the company's Internet connection. If you need a quarter—or half, or three quarters—of your workforce to remote in to work every day, you need enough bandwidth to accommodate them.

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