Habey BIS-6862 & Shuttle XPC Slim DS77U Fanless Kaby Lake Industrial PCs Review
by Ganesh T S on January 5, 2018 8:00 AM ESTNetworking and Storage Performance
Networking and storage are two major aspects which influence our experience with any computing system. This section presents results from our evaluation of these aspects in the Habey BIS-6862-I3 and the Shuttle PC Slim DS77U. On the storage side, one option would be repetition of our strenuous SSD review tests on the drive(s) in the PC. Fortunately, to avoid that overkill, PCMark 8 has a storage bench where certain common workloads such as loading games and document processing are replayed on the target drive. Results are presented in two forms, one being a benchmark number and the other, a bandwidth figure. We ran the PCMark 8 storage bench on selected PCs and the results are presented below.
The WD Green in the Shuttle build is a budget option, and is not going to set any benchmark records, as can be seen above. However, for non-disk intensive workloads, the SSD is a good enough option compared to a HDD.
On the networking side, we restricted ourselves to the evaluation of the WLAN component. Our standard test router is the Netgear R7000 Nighthawk configured with both 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz networks. The router is placed approximately 20 ft. away, separated by a couple of drywalls (as in a typical US building). A wired client is connected to the R7000 and serves as one endpoint for iperf evaluation. The PC under test is made to connect to either the 5 GHz (preferred) or 2.4 GHz SSID and iperf tests are conducted for both TCP and UDP transfers. It is ensured that the PC under test is the only wireless client for the Netgear R7000. We evaluate total throughput for up to 32 simultaneous TCP connections using iperf and present the highest number in the graph below.
In the UDP case, we try to transfer data at the highest rate possible for which we get less than 1% packet loss.
The Shuttle system with its 802.11n 1x1 WLAN card and no external antenna looks quite bad compared to the numbers from all the 802.11ac cards in the other systems. The leading ones in the chart use 2x2 cards, but, the Habey build is equipped with a 1x1 configuration. Users with a need for better WLAN performance can always install their own WLAN modules.
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MrTeal - Friday, January 5, 2018 - link
I'm not sure they will, really. Most of them will tend to be 19V input because they leverage laptop parts, or often 24V (sometimes 12V) as that is incredibly common in industrial setups and control systems.5V works well for things like compute sticks, but you generally don't see much of it in PLC cabinets and the like.
Reflex - Friday, January 5, 2018 - link
Given the market these things go into I am not surprised they are avoiding support for OS's that will be out of support from MS soon. Usually these things run in an environment for 5-10 years so there is little need to support anything that will lose support prior to that end date.mjeffer - Sunday, January 7, 2018 - link
Kaby Lake is only supported on Windows 10 IIRC.