Jetway MiniQ 860Twin

Jetway supplies the MiniQ 860Twin SFF in several different colors.



The unit we tested was a very attractive Silver on Silver. All units also come with a trackball remote, which is more sensible than it first appears.



With the second workstation possibly in a second room, either wired or wireless, the remote is handy to make adjustments on the PC that controls both systems.

The front panel LCD is a really nice feature of the 860Twin.



All operational information is supplied as pictographs on the soft blue display.



The LCD supplies quite a lot of useful information, including CPU temperature, Fan Speed, Time, and Messages.

The evaluation system also included a Jetway GeForce FX 5600XT to provide the Dual-Head Video Card for 2-user operation.



The flip-down front door covers the ports, which are an almost ideal arrangement of an optical SPDIF in, mic and headphone mini jacks, 2 firewire ports, and 2 USB.



The rear ports of the 860Twin are just as complete - with the PS2 mouse and keyboard ports, LAN, 3 USB, 3 mini audio jacks, VGA, serial, and a printer port. Yes, a printer port! The Jetway 860Twin is one of the few SFF that we have tested with a standard parallel printer port if you need one. Also, on the back of the case are a 2nd Serial port and a SPDIF optical out socket.

What Do You Need for a Twin PC? 2-User Operation
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  • tyski - Friday, April 16, 2004 - link

    #8

    I was curious about that too. The easiest solution I would imagine is to have an extra external CD drive, since most SFF don't have room for two internal drives. Wesley, your answer was a little off the mark.
  • TheDigitalDiamond - Friday, April 16, 2004 - link

    Oh hell no... someone did not just make a dream come true.. Omg *Starts slapping people* Am I awake? Am I awake? *Pisses himself* Mama bear, lookie, lookie! Lookie god damn it! XD

    I am overexcited obviously :P I'm gonna look hard at JetWay's other products and see what I can do about a massive one case rig. No doubt anything I was gonna build in the first place could power two users... But now two users can actually use it :D I don't spy SATA support though, diskcontroller time :) If anyone has any specific info on this kind of technology, PLEASE, find a way to contact me! Thanks! :D
  • araczynski - Friday, April 16, 2004 - link

    nice little unit, and a (finally) nicely realized concept. definately a great solution for the typical office user and 'lower/mid' level home user. also curious as to how it behaves/performs when one end is used for gaming and the other for say surfing...i would assume cutting half of the cpu's power from a game would be a significant performance hit, unless perhaps you can allocate a smaller percentage of the cpu's time to the 'lower' level surfing?... lot of nice possibilities.
  • Booty - Friday, April 16, 2004 - link

    I agree - it'd be nice if they tested this system with additional applications and games. Are there any networking glitches? I know a small accounting firm with about 10 employees that would be happy to swap out their 10 old machines with 5 small, quiet new ones...
  • bloinkXP - Friday, April 16, 2004 - link

    I wonder if we can get more information on the technology that allows two simulantenous users? Where is it setup? Is it similar to MS terminal server/Citrix technology? All that good stuff.
  • Wesley Fink - Friday, April 16, 2004 - link

    #8 -

    The single CD is not really any different than an instance of Office. The end-user appears to have exclusive use, but they actually switch with another user in time-slicing. Each user only has exlusive use for a time-slice. There is never a real case where 2 users access the same program or CD, it just appears that way.
  • webrussell - Friday, April 16, 2004 - link

    How does the SFF case deal with two people playing different games, each of which requires the CD in the drive?

    My thought is concerning my wife's Kindergarten classroom. This would be a great way to conserve space with once CPU but two workstations. However, many of the educational games require the CD in the drive.

    What's the current work-around for this?
  • RobertJTownley - Thursday, December 15, 2005 - link

    There are a few companies making free virtual cd drives. This software is essentially a special driver that fools the computer into thinking it has more DVD drives than actually exist. You tell the driver to mount an ISO image file and this becomes the virtual drive.

    http://www.daemon-tools.cc/">http://www.daemon-tools.cc/

  • Pumpkinierre - Friday, April 16, 2004 - link

    Great idea. You mentioned multiplexing but does Hyperthreading fit into this anywhere?
  • danishgold - Friday, April 16, 2004 - link

    There also was a thing called "The Virtual PC BUDDY B-210" it made sharing a PC, between up to 5 people, possible, but without sound.

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