Probably the most famous mini-PC at the moment is the Raspberry Pi. In addition, there is a version from VIA, the news about this miniature computer was also published on Habré. But now other manufacturers are thinking about releasing their own mini-PC. Probably, in half a year there will be quite a lot of them - the story with netbooks is repeated, after the release of the EEE PC. At this time, AMD introduced its version of a miniature PC, calling it LiveBox.
Of course, this system is not based on a chip from Intel, here we have a Fusion platform from AMD. The system itself looks very interesting, plus everything, it is quite productive. AMD decided to create its own version of the charger, which is quite unusual. But if laptops, netbooks and mobile devices have their own chargers, why not LiveBox also have their own charger? ')
As mentioned above, this mini PC is based on a gigahertz C-60 chip, a Fusion APU. The developers have provided 1 GB of RAM, and the graphics subsystem HD 6200. The system does not have a hard disk, but a Samsung SSD, 64 GB in size. In principle, it is quite enough for such a system. There are USB ports, though, 2.0, not 3.0. Gigabit Ethernet is also provided, plus an HDMI connector.
Plus, there is also a slot for memory cards, there is also a place for a SIM card (to support 3G mode). AMD installed a Bluetooth 4.0 wireless module, which is pretty good. Unfortunately, the price of the device is unknown. Soon all this will become known, but I would like to know the price now, and not sometime later.