Despite struggles and delays with its 10nm processor, Intel has finally released five NUCs (Next Unit of Computing) mini-PC kits that comes with 14nm, 8th Generation Coffee Lake CPU. It also released two NUCs that comes with its 10nm Cannon Lake chips and comes configured with Windows 10 with shipments to begin in October or November. The coffee lake NUC supports any Intel-ready OS including Linux and Windows and they come in barebones kits with RAM and Storage. The windows 10 Home powered crimson Canyon lake NUCs are among the first products that comes with a dual-core, 15W TDP core i3-8121U coffee lake CPU aside from a new version of a Lenovo IdeaPad 330 laptop.
The five new Coffee lake powered Bean Canyon NUCs comes with H-, M- and T- series Intel core chips and share many of the features as the Baby Canyon NUCs released earlier in April. They also have CPUs with 28W TDPs and supports up to 32GB dual channel DDR4-2400 RAM. They feature Intel’s fastest graphic chip- compared to the desktop models- known as the Iris Plus 655 graphics with 128MB eDRAM. The increased eDRAM stands out from previous parts that just supports 64MB eDRAM cache which delivers better graphic performance and can be used as general cache. The various options available for the five NUCs are:
- NUC8i7BEH (Core i7-8559U)
- NUC8i5BEH (Core i5-8259U)
- NUC8i5BEK (Core i5-8259U)
- NUC8i3BEH (Core i3-8109U)
- NUC8i3BEK (Core i3-8109U)
The Bean canyon NUCs comes with an HDMI 2.0a host port with resolution up to 4096 x 2304 and 7.1 surround sound audio. There’s also a Thunderbolt 3 port which supports USB 3.1 Gen 2 (with speed up to 10Gbps) and can be used as a DisplayPort 1.2 connection. It also includes four USB 3.1 host ports (one of the ports supports charging) and two USB 2.0 headers.
Read more: Intel releases seven NUCs with Coffee Lake and 10nm Canyon Lake CPUs