"Impressed by a Celeron" <--- not really something you hear every day, eh?
I had a requirement for a small dev server at home. I wanted to leave it running 24/7, but didn't want it to suck down a lot of power nor spend a lot of money. After a bit of research, it came down to either an AMD A-series processor or a modern Intel Celeron. I chose the Celeron over the AMD processor as Intel appears to be pushing this particular series of Celeron as being very Linux-compatible, and I previously had a poor experience under Linux with an AMD board powered by an E-350 processor.
The build:
ECS Elitegroup Motherboard with quad-core Celeron J1900 Mini ITX DDR3 1333 - $73.99
Crucial 8GB Single DDR3 1333 MT/s (PC3-10600) CL9 SODIMM 204-Pin - $74.84
Transcend Information 64GB SATA III 6Gb/s 2.5-Inch Solid State Drive TS64GSSD340 - $53.99
Sentey Mini ITX SS5-2514 Slim Flex Computer Case w/ Power Supply BCP450-OI /USB, Audio / Support SSD / 60MM FAN INCLUDED / INCLUDES VERTICAL STAND / S - $39.99
TOTAL: $242.81
The components:
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The drive sits in this little tray, which then sits over the power supply:
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Motherboard... no fan required, and SO-DIMM slot is horizontal.
----------------------
The case's leads for the front panel buttons and LEDs are extremely long... I really don't know why.
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Fully assembled:
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-----------------
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20.8 watts at idle on 120.9v power:
-------------
25.2 watts on 120.9v power while running stress --cpu 16:
For everything I have asked this system do to thus far, this CPU has been more than adequate. I'm very impressed by how little power this is using and still having a very usable system. It's taken Intel like 15 years, but it looks like they finally made a Celeron that doesn't completely suck.
I had a requirement for a small dev server at home. I wanted to leave it running 24/7, but didn't want it to suck down a lot of power nor spend a lot of money. After a bit of research, it came down to either an AMD A-series processor or a modern Intel Celeron. I chose the Celeron over the AMD processor as Intel appears to be pushing this particular series of Celeron as being very Linux-compatible, and I previously had a poor experience under Linux with an AMD board powered by an E-350 processor.
The build:
ECS Elitegroup Motherboard with quad-core Celeron J1900 Mini ITX DDR3 1333 - $73.99
Crucial 8GB Single DDR3 1333 MT/s (PC3-10600) CL9 SODIMM 204-Pin - $74.84
Transcend Information 64GB SATA III 6Gb/s 2.5-Inch Solid State Drive TS64GSSD340 - $53.99
Sentey Mini ITX SS5-2514 Slim Flex Computer Case w/ Power Supply BCP450-OI /USB, Audio / Support SSD / 60MM FAN INCLUDED / INCLUDES VERTICAL STAND / S - $39.99
TOTAL: $242.81
The components:
----------------------
------------------------
The drive sits in this little tray, which then sits over the power supply:
-------------------
Motherboard... no fan required, and SO-DIMM slot is horizontal.
----------------------
The case's leads for the front panel buttons and LEDs are extremely long... I really don't know why.
------------------
Fully assembled:
-----------------
-----------------
--------------------
20.8 watts at idle on 120.9v power:
-------------
25.2 watts on 120.9v power while running stress --cpu 16:
For everything I have asked this system do to thus far, this CPU has been more than adequate. I'm very impressed by how little power this is using and still having a very usable system. It's taken Intel like 15 years, but it looks like they finally made a Celeron that doesn't completely suck.
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