HTPC Credentials

Despite being actively cooled, I was pleasantly surprised by the noise profile of the system. The fans have variable rotational speeds, and in general, for most media related activities, the fan noise is minimal. I would go as far to say that the noise is probably the lowest amongst all the gaming mini-PCs that we have evaluated.

Refresh Rate Accurancy

Starting with Haswell, Intel, AMD and NVIDIA have been on par with respect to display refresh rate accuracy. The most important refresh rate for videophiles is obviously 23.976 Hz (the 23 Hz setting). The Zotac ZBOX MAGNUS EN970 does not have the same out-of-the-box accuracy possessed by Intel and AMD. However, NVIDIA also allows for setting custom resolutions and refresh rates.

The gallery below presents some of the other refresh rates that we tested out. The first statistic in madVR's OSD indicates the display refresh rate.

Network Streaming Efficiency

Evaluation of OTT playback efficiency was done by playing back our standard YouTube test stream and five minutes from our standard Netflix test title. Using HTML5, the YouTube stream plays back a 720p encoding. Since YouTube now defaults to HTML5 for video playback, we have stopped evaluating Adobe Flash acceleration. Note that only NVIDIA exposes GPU and VPU loads separately. Both Intel and AMD bundle the decoder load along with the GPU load. The following two graphs show the power consumption at the wall for playback of the HTML5 stream in Mozilla Firefox (v 41.0).

YouTube Streaming - HTML5: Power Consumption

GPU load and VPU load were around 16.01% and 21.42% for the YouTube HTML5 stream.GPU load in the steady state for the Netflix streaming case was 5.88% and the VPU load was 4.36%.

Netflix streaming evaluation was done using the Windows 8.1 Netflix app. Manual stream selection is available (Ctrl-Alt-Shift-S) and debug information / statistics can also be viewed (Ctrl-Alt-Shift-D). Statistics collected for the YouTube streaming experiment were also collected here.

Netflix Streaming - Windows 8.1 Metro App: Power Consumption

Decoding and Rendering Benchmarks

In order to evaluate local file playback, we concentrate on EVR-CP and madVR. We already know that EVR works quite well even with the Intel IGP for our test streams.

In our earlier reviews, we focused on presenting the GPU loading and power consumption at the wall in a table (with problematic streams in bold). Starting with the Broadwell NUC review, we decided to represent the GPU load and power consumption in a graph with dual Y-axes. Nine different test streams of 90 seconds each were played back with a gap of 30 seconds between each of them. The characteristics of each stream are annotated at the bottom of the graph. Note that the GPU usage is graphed in red and needs to be considered against the left axis, while the at-wall power consumption is graphed in green and needs to be considered against the right axis.

Frame drops are evident whenever the GPU load consistently stays above the 85 - 90% mark. An important aspect to note here for NVIDIA GPUs is that the load reported doesn't take into account the GPU clock. For example, the 4Kp30 clip in the EVR-CP mode: Initially, the GPU and VPU operate at higher clocks, resulting in the reported load being 7 - 8% and the power consumption being around 34W. However, later on towards the end of the stream, the load jumps up to around 12%, but the power consumption is now only around 25 W. Essentially, the power consumption at the wall is the real metric of efficiency for decode and playback. As long as the GPU load stays below the 85 - 90% mark, frame drops don't occur.

EVR-CP and madVR Defaults don't present any challenges to the GTX 960

Since the GTX 960 is a powerful GPU, we evaluated madVR with both default and stress settings. The 'madVR stress settings' was configured with the upscaling algorithms set to Jinc 3-tap with anti-ringing activated and the downscaling algorithm set to Lanczos 3-tap, again with anti-ringing activated.

The ZBOX MAGNUS EN970 was able to handle the madVR stress configuration without any issues.

Moving on to codec support, the GTX 970M / GM204 is a known quantity with regards to the scope of supported hardware accelerated codecs.

There is no HEVC_VLD_Main10 support. This is a bit disappointing since the real desktop GTX 960 supports Main10 decoding in hardware. Other than that aspect, the ZBOX MAGNUS EN970 actually makes for a reasonably power-efficient madVR-capable HTPC.

Networking and Storage Performance Power Consumption and Thermal Performance
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  • aj654987 - Friday, October 2, 2015 - link

    It would perform better with a 35 or 45 watt haswell desktop processor but they probably went U series because it also takes up less space being soldered on the motherboard and significantly less heat at 15 watt. So its all a trade off.
  • Rick540 - Sunday, October 4, 2015 - link

    Why not just buy a decent laptop for that price and connect it to your TV? Then you'd have a laptop to carry around when you need it. Looks like all that is anyway is a laptop in a computer case.
  • Teknobug - Monday, October 5, 2015 - link

    Exactly, for nearly $1000 you can get a good laptop that can be used anywhere and still be hooked to the TV or monitor with keyboard/mouse as your main PC if you want, and most laptops around that pricetag has an i7 or high end i5 processor rather than the moderate performing U variant.
  • CknSalad - Monday, October 5, 2015 - link

    Hopefully zotac releases a 35/45w skylake cpu. I really don't like the i5-5200U cpu that comes with it. If it had a 35/45w skylake cpu, this would be a really good portable PC.
  • Wolfpup - Tuesday, October 6, 2015 - link

    Huh. HUH. So really this is sort of like Alienware's Alpha? But with a better GPU and worse CPU? And similarly has a user replaceable hard drive slot and RAM?

    This thing looks very very interesting as a possible notebook replacement for me in the future. Cheaper than the equivalent power in a notebook, I think. Hmm...
  • Wolfpup - Tuesday, October 6, 2015 - link

    I'd like a quad CPU though...stick a 45 watt CPU in something like this and we'd be in business...I mean make it bigger if need be, I don't care...
  • Haravikk - Thursday, October 15, 2015 - link

    What's the idea behind the 4x HDMI ports on this? The article and specs don't mention any as being inputs (which would be handy for passthrough) so why so many outputs? I could understand two as it would give the option of having one for video and one for audio, or for two screens, but are there many people planning to run four screens off of a box like this?

    It seems decent enough, but still far too expensive for what you get IMO, even accounting for the small size.
  • mikato - Wednesday, October 28, 2015 - link

    This isn't quite what I'm going for but I do like seeing more of these mini PCs. Keeping them coming!

    Here's what I want:
    -Mini PC that normally sits by my TV for HTPC purposes, but is dead simple to bring to a friend's house
    -HDMI, DisplayPort
    -Integrated graphics on CPU - no discrete wanted since this will not be used for heavy gaming, only light gaming. AMD APUs fit the bill with stronger CPU than this for faster multipurpose usage and plenty strong graphics for any kind of video playing, streaming, light gaming. Also price is decent.
    -Big hard disk (I like SSDs better too, but I want to chuck all my media on this thing so I can bring it anywhere, and play it on anybody's TV. I probably won't bother trying to use a small SSD for OS like I do in my other machines.)
    -quiet (duh)
    -power efficient (duh)
    -midrange laptop price? I'm willing to build my own if there is a nice mini PC case around.
    -Not required- Bluray/DVD - Like this Zotac box, I decided to not require this since support on computers is bad. Windows removed it (I think). OS X didn't have it. You can't make HD Blurays of your own videos that actually play (basically). So I'll just stick with media files and streaming... and I do have a Bluray player anyway. It would be sweet to include it and consolidate one more living room item, but no biggie.

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