It literally has a peak consumption of 15W, though I seldom see it go above 10% CPU usage (which is nice because even the small fan it has almost never goes on) so even when I’m actually using it as a TV box it consumes a lot less than 15W. It consumes even less when idle.
So it’s always ON.
As a side benefit it’s my home NAS and a bittorrent server managed via a web-interface, both things for which it makes even to have a machine always running.
Haven’t actually seen any difference in my power bill.
That’s cool that you’re using it as a nas, and I’m glad it’s working out for you
Myself, I want something easily controllable from a remote, so that when I come back from work I can just relax without seeing a keyboard and having to work with a pc.
I tried Librelec and lineageOS TV into a mini pc, but they all had various quirks, so I’m sticking to my TCL for now.
Absolutelly, if you can’t use it with a remote and have to use a keyboard and mouse it’s not the same thing.
However, my setup is easilly controllable with a remote: I have Kodi running always on top in it and use one of these.
With that the sofa experience is the same as with a dedicated TV Box (except that the remote can’t power it ON, only OFF, but for me it’s fine since I leave it always ON) because that remote just sends the right “keypresses” to control Kodi (apparently the shortcut keys are standard) so from a user point of view one interacts with it the same as with a TV Box or Smart TV.
The PC-ish stuff (such as managing the bittorrent server) I do remotelly from my main PC via SSH and web interfaces.
Mind you, I have a keyboard and mouse connected to it because sometimes I want to use the browser, but if all you’re doing is watching stuff like with a TV Box, that’s not needed.
I use a Mini-PC with an N100 CPU.
It literally has a peak consumption of 15W, though I seldom see it go above 10% CPU usage (which is nice because even the small fan it has almost never goes on) so even when I’m actually using it as a TV box it consumes a lot less than 15W. It consumes even less when idle.
So it’s always ON.
As a side benefit it’s my home NAS and a bittorrent server managed via a web-interface, both things for which it makes even to have a machine always running.
Haven’t actually seen any difference in my power bill.
That’s cool that you’re using it as a nas, and I’m glad it’s working out for you
Myself, I want something easily controllable from a remote, so that when I come back from work I can just relax without seeing a keyboard and having to work with a pc.
I tried Librelec and lineageOS TV into a mini pc, but they all had various quirks, so I’m sticking to my TCL for now.
Absolutelly, if you can’t use it with a remote and have to use a keyboard and mouse it’s not the same thing.
However, my setup is easilly controllable with a remote: I have Kodi running always on top in it and use one of these.
With that the sofa experience is the same as with a dedicated TV Box (except that the remote can’t power it ON, only OFF, but for me it’s fine since I leave it always ON) because that remote just sends the right “keypresses” to control Kodi (apparently the shortcut keys are standard) so from a user point of view one interacts with it the same as with a TV Box or Smart TV.
The PC-ish stuff (such as managing the bittorrent server) I do remotelly from my main PC via SSH and web interfaces.
Mind you, I have a keyboard and mouse connected to it because sometimes I want to use the browser, but if all you’re doing is watching stuff like with a TV Box, that’s not needed.
Whoa, that’s cool. For the power-ing on, I know that its possible to do via bleetooth, my steam deck does it.
It’s USB rather than bluetooth, though maybe there are bluetooth versions.