Miscellaneous Aspects and Concluding Remarks

Networking and storage are aspects that may be of vital importance in specific PC use-cases. The NUC 12 Pro kits come with the Wi-Fi 6E AX211 WLAN cards that also include Bluetooth 5.2 support. On the wired front, the vPro model has the I225-LM Ethernet controller, while the regular model has the I225-V controller with 2.5 Gbps support. Dual LAN options would be nice to have in the vPro SKU in order to enable a dedicated management network interface. Unfortunately, the NUC12WSKv7 has only one wired LAN interface.

On the storage side, the NUC 12 Pro kits do have support for PCIe 4.0 x4 NVMe SSDs. However, cooling those within the space constraints imposed by the form-factor of the mainstream NUCs is very challenging. Even Intel's review sample came only with the Kingston KC2500 PCIe 3.0 x4 NVMe SSD. From a benchmarking perspective, we provide results from the WPCstorage test of SPECworkstation 3.1. This benchmark replays access traces from various programs used in different verticals and compares the score against the one obtained with a 2017 SanDisk 512GB SATA SSD in the SPECworkstation 3.1 reference system.

SPECworkstation 3.1.0 - WPCstorage SPEC Ratio Scores

The graphs above present results for different verticals, as grouped by SPECworkstation 3.1. The storage workload consists of 60 subtests. Access traces from CFD solvers and programs such as Catia, Creo, and Soidworks come under 'Product Development'. Storage access traces from the NAMD and LAMMPS molecular dynamics simulator are under the 'Life Sciences' category. 'General Operations' includes access traces from 7-Zip and Mozilla programs. The 'Energy' category replays traces from the energy-02 SPECviewperf workload. The 'Media and Entertainment' vertical includes Handbrake, Maya, and 3dsmax. It is no surprise to see the SSD score being the same in both the actively-cooled NUC 12 Pro kits. The Bleu Jour Meta 12 suffers from extreme thermal throttling, with the SSD temperature going as high as 80 C. So, it is no surprise to see the score for the SSD getting pulled low in that system.

Closing Thoughts

The introduction of hybrid processors to the UCFF line is a major marker in the history of the Intel NUCs. It is only fitting that the ten-year journey of the mainstream NUCs is punctuated by this event. The ultra-compact form-factor has evolved significantly over that time frame, and we find the systems being put to use in a wide range of deployments.

At the end of our review process for the three NUC 12 Pro Wall Street Canyon kits, we have good insights into the key knobs that control system performance. The PL1 and PL2 values are important for delivering the performance improvements expected when going from one generation to the next. At the same time, these numbers also impact the design of fanless systems. OEMs designing such industrial PCs need to pay extra attention to the tuning of the BIOS parameters to keep the temperatures in check.

Between the NUC12WSKi7 and NUC12WSKv7, it appears that the slightly higher turbo clocks in the latter do not deliver any tangible performance benefits. However, the vPro capabilities of the processor may be a must for specific deployments. Unless AMT is absolutely essential, the NUC12WSKi7 is as good a system as the NUC12WSKv7. Intel's new case design that was previewed in our NUC12WSKv7 sample is eye-catching and subjectively better than the current plain chassis. It might be worthwhile to investigate whether the case design for UCFF systems can also help improve the thermal profile.

I/O options in the NUC 12 Pro kits are excellent, given the form-factor of the system. The presence of two Thunderbolt 4 ports make up for the absence of a SDXC card slot and offers extensive expansion options. At the same time, the Lite SKU that removes the Thunderbolt 4 ports is also an attractive lower-priced option for industrial deployments that don't have a need for such high-speed I/O. The Bleu Jour Meta 12's use of the Lite board manages to convey that point.

Our performance evaluation showed that the NUC 12 Pro kits deliver tangible improvements over their Tiger Lake counterparts. Compared to the ASRock Industrial NUC BOX-1260P, the two actively-cooled kits have a much better power consumption and performance profile. Our doubts regarding the performance per watt metric for Alder Lake-P were laid to rest after our detailed investigation into the Wall Street Canyon NUC kits.

On the fanless front, the Bleu Jour Meta 12 is an interesting product that can only improve with more attention to BIOS tuning. The design itself could also do with some improvements in terms of SSD cooling support (the regular NUC 12 Pro kits have a better passive thermal solution for the storage subsystem compared to the Meta 12). Hopefully, the performance and temperature profile of the Meta 12 can change for the better before the product hits the market.

Supply chain issues have resulted in the Wall Street Canyon NUCs being offered in a wide range of prices. The official suggested price for the NUC12WSKi7 is $970 (inclusive of a 500GB NVMe SSD and 16GB of DDR4-3200 DRAM). However, equivalent configurations are being sold with a premium. End users are better off purchasing a barebones version for $660 and adding their own SSD and RAM. The NUC12WSKv7 has a recommended price of around $750 for the barebones version, but the only listing we could find has it for sale at $827. Fanless Alder Lake-P machines are yet to come to the market, though Akasa has announced a few DIY cases for the Wall Street Canyon NUCs. It remains to be seen whether Bleu Jour can eventually bring the Meta 12 to the market.

Power Consumption and Thermal Characteristics
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  • abufrejoval - Sunday, January 29, 2023 - link

    In the PC market, even "small" niches seem to be big enough to merit a product, otherwise Intel wouldn't keep on doing them.

    My main NUC use case is µ-servers in a 10Gbit cluster using cheap cascaded KVMs in the rare case I need the console. Near silent and low average power 24x7 operation is the goal, with enough peak power to get things done in a hurry.

    Yes, you could build that from laptops, but unfortunately the ones that offer 64GB RAM and 2-8TB of NVMe as well as a TB port for 10GBit Ethernet are designed for gamers and carry quite a hefty premium and extras I don't need.

    In corporate workplaces laptops have pretty much replaced small form factor PCs, even more so with the pandemic. But there are still quite a lot of profesisonal installations in public services, medical care and production, where NUCs mounted to a firmly attached display are quite the ticket.

    Personally, I'd prefer to have Mini-ITX board variants for every NUC Intel builds, but that really seems too niche these days.
  • ottonis - Friday, March 17, 2023 - link

    A NUC can be a tremedously useful device to power up a basic digital audio workstation (DAW), alongside external audio and midi devices. It has enough processing power to run even the most modern DAW (e.g. studio one) alongside a bunch of virtual instruments and effects. Once everything is installed and up and running, it may be useful to deactivate Wifi, Bluetooth and LAN and to purge the autostart menu from all but the most essential scripts and programs, in order to reduce DPC latency.
    It is so compact that it a dream come true for musicians wanting to save precious space in the homerecording studios or who are on the run and on tour and need to travel as light as possible.
    So, if you know how to set this device up, it is an invaluable tool for musicians.
    It's benefit over laptops: it has more I/O. I struggled to connect all my external devices with an otherwise great laptop, but the NUC can handle them all (4x USB-A + 2x USB-C)
  • CyrIng - Saturday, January 28, 2023 - link

    The blue carton box has a better look than the NUC case.

    About Hybrid processors, CoreFreq is now monitoring Pcore and Ecore, including their own Turbo tunable tweaks

    ISO available at www.cyring.fr
  • abufrejoval - Sunday, January 29, 2023 - link

    The GPU-Z data is obviously bollocks: I was first thrown off by the low memory bandwidth of 25GB/s, which is really what DDR3 based GT3 solutions or single channel DDR4 might do (64-bit width may be another hint, because it's 128-bit on dual channel).

    I am seeing more like 40GB/s on my various Xe's, 38.4GB/s on an i7-1165G7 and 42GB/s on an i5-12500H with an 80EU Xe, both using DDR4-3200 SO-DIMMs.

    But it's the pixel and texture fill rates and the GPU boost clocks where things must have been read wrong, nothing clocks 11GHz on CMOS just yet and the fill rates are matching the RTX2060 on my NUC11PHBi7 using GDDR6, 10GPixels and 21 GTexels are more realistic with 1.3GHz boost.

    So please recheck the setup and data.
  • abufrejoval - Sunday, January 29, 2023 - link

    It's too bad how Intel often just manages to get withini >90% of what I want, only to bungle it on the final stretch...

    The "blue day meta" variants (what on Earth did they smoke?) are rather intriguing because they seem to allow screwing say a Noctua fan on top (is there a matching fan connector on the board?): that could fix the major isse with the NUCs, too little volume/mass for cooling 20-30 Watts at acceptable noise levels.

    What's critically missing for me, is the Thunderbolt ports, which I need for 10GBit networking, be it via Ethernet or TCP over TB. I believe those parts may still be in short supply, but I'd always pay €20-30 extra to have those ports.

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