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MLLSE G1, mini PC con AMD Ryzen 5500U y 16/512 GB en oferta Buen precio para mini PC **MLLSE G1** un pequeño ordenador muy completo por su precio y que nos puede dar mucho juego en todos los ámbitos. Dentro de su compacta caja encontramos un procesador **AMD Ryzen 5 5500U** fabricado en 7 nm. Un chip con seis núcleos CPU Zen 2 y 12 hilos con una velocidad de hasta 4 GHz. En el apartado gráfico contamos con una **GPU Radeon RX Vega 7** que nos permitirá jugar a juegos algo exigentes. Del resto de su configuración, destacar sus dos slots para**RAM con 16 GB DDR4-3200 MHz** , por lo que podemos ponerla en dual channel, y sus 2 conectores de**SSD M.2 MVMe PCIe 3.0** , uno de ellos con un SSD de 512 GB de capacidad. Para conectividad inalámbrica tenemos Wi-Fi 5 y Bluetooth 5.4 y la posibilidad de conectar hasta tres pantallas a la vez, algo que siempre puede resultarnos útil a la hora de trabajar o jugar. En cuanto a conectores, encontramos un jack de audio de 3,5 mm, dos USB 3.0, 2 conectores USB 2.0, un USB-C con salida de vídeo DisplayPort y datos, conector de red RJ45 Gigabit y dos salidas de vídeo 4K **HDMI 2.0**. La pequeña fuente de alimentación es externa y se incluye entre los accesorios un soporte VESA. El sistema operativo instalado es **Windows 11 Pro** , pero es compatible con Linux. ### Precio en oferta: * El mini PC **MLLSE G1** se puede comprar en AliExpress desde unos 215€ con envío desde Europa usando el cupón descuento **ESCD25** * Más cupones de descuento disponibles AQUÍ.

MLLSE G1, mini PC con AMD Ryzen 5500U y 16/512 GB en oferta Buen precio para mini PC MLLSE G1 un pequeño ordenador muy completo por su precio y que nos puede dar mucho juego en todos los ámbitos....

#mini #PC

Origin | Interest | Match

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Selling future classics. @mini #MINIClassic #MINI #showroom

https://www.instagram.com/p/DWl-aczjNaM

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Selling future classics. @mini #MINIClassic #MINI #showroom

https://www.instagram.com/p/DWl-aczjNaM

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Get an early preview of the @paizo.com Pathfinder Adult Mirage Dragon mini and its illusory effects from RPG Senior Producer Magellan Mulligan!

#paizo #pathfinder #mini #miniatures #dragon #ttrpgs

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Hand painted mini heads of a tiamat model

Hand painted mini heads of a tiamat model

Painted the white and black heads for my Tiamat!

Might add a few more details but I'm very pleased with them!

#mini #miniaturepainting #tiamat #dnd #dragon

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#NYTGames - 4/1/26

#Mini in 1:16

#Midi in 3:19

#Wordle 1,747 X/6
⬜🟩⬜⬜⬜
⬜⬜⬜⬜⬜
⬜🟩⬜⬜⬜
⬜🟩⬜⬜⬜
⬜🟩⬜⬜⬜
⬜🟩🟨⬜🟩
#WordleBot
Skill 52/99
Luck 41/99

#Connections
Puzzle #1025
🟪🟪🟪🟪
🟩🟩🟩🟦
🟩🟩🟩🟩
🟨🟨🟨🟨
🟦🟦🟦🟦

#Strands #759
“Don't make a peep”
🟡🔵💡🔵
🔵💡🔵🔵

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Coming in April from Stormborn, one of our favorite designers! "Nightmare Beast" has the incredible detail we expect from Stormborn. Testing the print soon, can't wait to paint one in the studio.
#miniaturepainting #TTRPG #fantasy #mini #dnd #familybusiness

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Painted up some Ptolemaic Adventurers and a converted Wargods of Aegyptus mummy lord. Very happy with them.

#historical #historical_fantasy #skirmish #miniatures #mini #minpainting #egypt #egyptians #fantasy #mummy #painting

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Video thumbnail (480x360)

Video thumbnail (480x360)

Two friends, coastal curves, and absolutely zero plans.
Just the dolce far niente way of life… with a MINI Convertible doing all the heavy lifting 🙌

#MINI #MINIConvertible #DocleFarNiente #Roadtrip #YTShorts

📺 https://www.youtube.com/shorts/ljLnL1S8iLI

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Looks like a place worth staying. Photos by Neill Bruce #MINIClassic #MINI #cabriolet

https://www.instagram.com/p/DWjaTPdFpf3

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Looks like a place worth staying. Photos by Neill Bruce #MINIClassic #MINI #cabriolet

https://www.instagram.com/p/DWjaTPdFpf3

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#NYTGames - 3/31/26

#Mini in 0:38

#Midi in 2:59

#Wordle 1,746 X/6
🟨⬜🟨⬜⬜
🟩⬜🟩⬜⬜
🟩🟨🟩⬜⬜
🟩⬜🟩🟨⬜
🟨⬜⬜⬜⬜
🟩⬜🟩🟩🟩
#WordleBot
Skill 54/99
Luck 31/99

#Connections
Puzzle #1024
🟩🟩🟩🟩
🟨🟦🟪🟦
🟪🟨🟦🟦
🟨🟨🟦🟨
🟨🟨🟨🟨
🟪🟪🟪🟪
🟦🟦🟦🟦

#Strands #758
“While you were sleeping ...”
🔵💡🔵🔵
💡🔵🔵💡
🔵🟡🔵

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A miniature about 2.5 inches tall. It's right humanoid. It has light blue crystals erupting like spikes out of its back, chest, and randomly from its body. The grey-brown skin around these growths is split, red, and inflamed. Its ribs have been wrenched open and its intestines are spilling out. One grey-brown arm is thickly muscled and ends in a long spike of a crystal, the transition hidden by the top half of an animal skull. The other arm is small, half-formed, and ends in a horse hoof. It's crouching low and one leg is long and gangly, also ending in a hoof. The other leg seems to be some amalgamation of crystal growth and an upside down human torso. It's roaring at an enemy in front of it and its face is weirdly stretched in a ghoulish fashion. Its eyes glow the same blue as the crystal. It's shuffling along ground littered with small grey rocks, dirt, and sand, barren of life or color.

A miniature about 2.5 inches tall. It's right humanoid. It has light blue crystals erupting like spikes out of its back, chest, and randomly from its body. The grey-brown skin around these growths is split, red, and inflamed. Its ribs have been wrenched open and its intestines are spilling out. One grey-brown arm is thickly muscled and ends in a long spike of a crystal, the transition hidden by the top half of an animal skull. The other arm is small, half-formed, and ends in a horse hoof. It's crouching low and one leg is long and gangly, also ending in a hoof. The other leg seems to be some amalgamation of crystal growth and an upside down human torso. It's roaring at an enemy in front of it and its face is weirdly stretched in a ghoulish fashion. Its eyes glow the same blue as the crystal. It's shuffling along ground littered with small grey rocks, dirt, and sand, barren of life or color.

Same as in the first picture but from a different angle

Same as in the first picture but from a different angle

Same as in the first picture but from a different angle

Same as in the first picture but from a different angle

Painted another guy!
This is The Thing from the Stars, from #DarkestDungeon
He's creepy and gross and I love him.
#painting #mini #minis #minipainting #crafting #dnd #rpg #ttrpg

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Preview
Forget the Steam Deck, This Custom-Built Handheld Runs a Full Linux Desktop in Your Palms Before the iPhone arrived in 2007 and quietly buried the category, handheld PCs were shaping up to be something genuinely exciting. Devices like the Sony Vaio UX and OQO Model 2 promised a full desktop OS in your jacket pocket, and for a brief window, that felt like the obvious future of personal computing. Smartphones won that argument decisively, and the handheld PC faded into a footnote. A YouTuber who goes by Wisce decided that footnote deserved a second chapter, and built one himself from scratch. The result is a fully custom x86 handheld computer built around the LattePanda Mu single-board computer, running Linux Mint on a 7-inch 1920×1080 120Hz display. It has a full QWERTY ortholinear thumb keyboard with custom-printed keycaps, a Joy-Con thumbstick repurposed as a mouse, a horizontal scroll wheel, four USB ports, a full-size HDMI output, USB-C charging, and a 4,500mAh battery pack with a three-digit readout that tells you exactly how much juice is left. Every single component was designed, sourced, or fabricated by hand. Designer: Wisce The LattePanda Mu is an x86 SBC that outperforms even the Raspberry Pi 5 by a notable margin, and Wisce built a custom carrier board for it rather than using an off-the-shelf solution. That board delivers four full-size USB ports, a full-size HDMI port, M.2 SSD and Wi-Fi slots, and internal USB connectors for the keyboard and audio subsystem. A 1TB SSD and a budget Wi-Fi card complete the internals. The operating system is Linux Mint, chosen partly on merit and partly because Wisce’s previous builds attracted considerable audience displeasure when they shipped with Windows 11. Linux also strips out the background process bloat that Windows tends to accumulate, giving the Mu’s x86 architecture more room to breathe. The display decision alone took multiple iterations to land. Wisce initially planned to use a 1024×600 60Hz panel from DF Robot, the parent company behind the LattePanda line, but rejected it for its low resolution, large bezel, and limited refresh rate. The replacement is a 1920×1080 120Hz eDP panel with a much thinner bezel, connected directly to the Mu’s native eDP output via a custom PCB that reroutes a pin mismatch between the two connectors. That kind of problem-solving shows up everywhere in this build: when a straightforward solution didn’t exist, Wisce designed one. The keyboard runs on a custom PCB with an RP2040 microcontroller integrated directly into the board, bypassing the need for a separate Arduino or Pi Pico. The switches are surface-mount tactile types rated for around two million presses, sized small enough to fit a full QWERTY layout without sacrificing the thumb-typing ergonomics the ortholinear arrangement was chosen to support. Keycaps were modeled in Fusion 360 and printed on an FDM machine using a 0.2mm nozzle and multi-material filament to get legible, sharp legends on each key. The Joy-Con thumbstick on the left handles cursor movement via a QMK profile that maps it as a mouse, and the horizontal rotary encoder scroll wheel on the right is, by Wisce’s own admission, one of his favorite things about the finished device. The enclosure is a two-part construction: a translucent resin rear shell that keeps the internal geometry visible, and an aluminum front plate that was CNC machined, anodized, then repainted by hand after the factory “champagne” finish came out looking closer to a flesh tone than the golden bronze Wisce had rendered. The finished device is 36mm thick at its deepest point and weighs approximately one kilogram, which puts it in a different category from a Game Boy but well within the range of something you’d actually carry. A 3D-printed dock props it upright on a desk with the HDMI port and USB-C charging accessible, turning the handheld into a functional desktop workstation when paired with an external keyboard and mouse. What makes this build genuinely compelling, beyond the craftsmanship, is how clearly it articulates a design philosophy that commercial manufacturers keep fumbling. Devices like the GPD Win 5 chase gaming performance and end up compromising portability or pricing out most buyers. The Steam Deck nails the gaming use case and handles general computing as an afterthought. Wisce’s machine is neither of those things. It’s a full x86 desktop OS in a form factor that fits in two hands, with physical controls that were chosen specifically for the way humans hold objects, a battery system that actually communicates with its user, and a screen bright and sharp enough to make the whole proposition feel current. The handheld PC category failed twenty years ago because the hardware wasn’t ready. This build suggests the hardware has been ready for a while, and we’ve just been waiting for someone stubborn enough to put it together properly. Add as a preferred source on Google ### SHARE * Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook * Share on X (Opens in new window) X * Share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest * Share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit * Share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn * Share on Tumblr (Opens in new window) Tumblr * Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email * Print (Opens in new window) Print * More * * Share on Telegram (Opens in new window) Telegram * Share on Threads (Opens in new window) Threads * Share on WhatsApp (Opens in new window) WhatsApp * Share on Mastodon (Opens in new window) Mastodon * Share on Bluesky (Opens in new window) Bluesky * Share on Nextdoor (Opens in new window) Nextdoor *

Forget the Steam Deck, This Custom-Built Handheld Runs a Full Linux Desktop in Your Palms Forget the Steam Deck, This Custom-Built Handheld Runs a Full Linux Desktop in Your Palms Before the iPhone...

#Gadgets #Laptops #Product #Design #Cyberdeck #Linux #Mini #PC

Origin | Interest | Match

0 0 0 0
Preview
Forget the Steam Deck, This Custom-Built Handheld Runs a Full Linux Desktop in Your Palms Before the iPhone arrived in 2007 and quietly buried the category, handheld PCs were shaping up to be something genuinely exciting. Devices like the Sony Vaio UX and OQO Model 2 promised a full desktop OS in your jacket pocket, and for a brief window, that felt like the obvious future of personal computing. Smartphones won that argument decisively, and the handheld PC faded into a footnote. A YouTuber who goes by Wisce decided that footnote deserved a second chapter, and built one himself from scratch. The result is a fully custom x86 handheld computer built around the LattePanda Mu single-board computer, running Linux Mint on a 7-inch 1920×1080 120Hz display. It has a full QWERTY ortholinear thumb keyboard with custom-printed keycaps, a Joy-Con thumbstick repurposed as a mouse, a horizontal scroll wheel, four USB ports, a full-size HDMI output, USB-C charging, and a 4,500mAh battery pack with a three-digit readout that tells you exactly how much juice is left. Every single component was designed, sourced, or fabricated by hand. Designer: Wisce The LattePanda Mu is an x86 SBC that outperforms even the Raspberry Pi 5 by a notable margin, and Wisce built a custom carrier board for it rather than using an off-the-shelf solution. That board delivers four full-size USB ports, a full-size HDMI port, M.2 SSD and Wi-Fi slots, and internal USB connectors for the keyboard and audio subsystem. A 1TB SSD and a budget Wi-Fi card complete the internals. The operating system is Linux Mint, chosen partly on merit and partly because Wisce’s previous builds attracted considerable audience displeasure when they shipped with Windows 11. Linux also strips out the background process bloat that Windows tends to accumulate, giving the Mu’s x86 architecture more room to breathe. The display decision alone took multiple iterations to land. Wisce initially planned to use a 1024×600 60Hz panel from DF Robot, the parent company behind the LattePanda line, but rejected it for its low resolution, large bezel, and limited refresh rate. The replacement is a 1920×1080 120Hz eDP panel with a much thinner bezel, connected directly to the Mu’s native eDP output via a custom PCB that reroutes a pin mismatch between the two connectors. That kind of problem-solving shows up everywhere in this build: when a straightforward solution didn’t exist, Wisce designed one. The keyboard runs on a custom PCB with an RP2040 microcontroller integrated directly into the board, bypassing the need for a separate Arduino or Pi Pico. The switches are surface-mount tactile types rated for around two million presses, sized small enough to fit a full QWERTY layout without sacrificing the thumb-typing ergonomics the ortholinear arrangement was chosen to support. Keycaps were modeled in Fusion 360 and printed on an FDM machine using a 0.2mm nozzle and multi-material filament to get legible, sharp legends on each key. The Joy-Con thumbstick on the left handles cursor movement via a QMK profile that maps it as a mouse, and the horizontal rotary encoder scroll wheel on the right is, by Wisce’s own admission, one of his favorite things about the finished device. The enclosure is a two-part construction: a translucent resin rear shell that keeps the internal geometry visible, and an aluminum front plate that was CNC machined, anodized, then repainted by hand after the factory “champagne” finish came out looking closer to a flesh tone than the golden bronze Wisce had rendered. The finished device is 36mm thick at its deepest point and weighs approximately one kilogram, which puts it in a different category from a Game Boy but well within the range of something you’d actually carry. A 3D-printed dock props it upright on a desk with the HDMI port and USB-C charging accessible, turning the handheld into a functional desktop workstation when paired with an external keyboard and mouse. What makes this build genuinely compelling, beyond the craftsmanship, is how clearly it articulates a design philosophy that commercial manufacturers keep fumbling. Devices like the GPD Win 5 chase gaming performance and end up compromising portability or pricing out most buyers. The Steam Deck nails the gaming use case and handles general computing as an afterthought. Wisce’s machine is neither of those things. It’s a full x86 desktop OS in a form factor that fits in two hands, with physical controls that were chosen specifically for the way humans hold objects, a battery system that actually communicates with its user, and a screen bright and sharp enough to make the whole proposition feel current. The handheld PC category failed twenty years ago because the hardware wasn’t ready. This build suggests the hardware has been ready for a while, and we’ve just been waiting for someone stubborn enough to put it together properly. Add as a preferred source on Google ### SHARE * Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook * Share on X (Opens in new window) X * Share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest * Share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit * Share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn * Share on Tumblr (Opens in new window) Tumblr * Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email * Print (Opens in new window) Print * More * * Share on Telegram (Opens in new window) Telegram * Share on Threads (Opens in new window) Threads * Share on WhatsApp (Opens in new window) WhatsApp * Share on Mastodon (Opens in new window) Mastodon * Share on Bluesky (Opens in new window) Bluesky * Share on Nextdoor (Opens in new window) Nextdoor *

Forget the Steam Deck, This Custom-Built Handheld Runs a Full Linux Desktop in Your Palms Forget the Steam Deck, This Custom-Built Handheld Runs a Full Linux Desktop in Your Palms Before the iPhone...

#Gadgets #Laptops #Product #Design #Cyberdeck #Linux #Mini #PC

Origin | Interest | Match

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Enter the EVO-T2, a $1900 mini PC Not a year ago, I sold my unused dual 2.5-gigabit ethernet mini PC for $180 on eBay. Now that I need another, for nefarious reasons of my own , it turns out the sa...

#Post #gadgets #mini #pcs #PCs

Origin | Interest | Match

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