PC World - USA (2021-06)

(Maropa) #1
78 PCWorld JUNE 2022

FEATURE DEEP INSIDE INTEL’S NUC


T


here’s a neat symmetry to the 10th
anniversary of Intel’s NUC, which
was first revealed to the world in


  1. In ten years the NUC group
    (which stands for Next Unit of Computing)
    has sold over 10 million of its unique
    miniature PCs.
    If that surprises you, brace yourself: Those
    devices are split across a jaw-dropping 600
    configurations. The scope and selection of
    NUC flies under the radar of even PC
    enthusiasts, who know NUC best for its
    eye-catching but relatively modest line of
    pint-size powerhouses.
    “That’s just the tip of the iceberg,” said
    Brian McCarson, vice president and general
    manager of Intel’s NUC group. “We’re just
    getting warmed up.”


The classic 4×4 is still Intel’s most iconic NUC design.

FROM CONCEPT TO
REVOLUTION
The NUC began with a simple concept. What
if a desktop computer was just...smaller? Like,
really small? Small enough to fit in your hand?
The fact this idea no longer seems strange is
testament to the NUC’s success—but in 2012,
it was a bold concept.
PC makers had dabbled in ultra-compact
design with netbooks and other, more
unusual portable machines, like Sony’s Vaio
P-Series subnotebooks (fave.co/3wrxDRD).
Yet it wasn’t clear how this could apply to
the desktop.
The limitation wasn’t processors, which
packed ever-more power into decreasing
thermal envelopes, but design. The desktop
segment remained focused on boxes built
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