ECS Preps LIVA Z: Apollo Lake-Based Nettop with 4K and USB-C Support
by Anton Shilov on November 15, 2016 11:30 AM ESTECS has quietly published brief specifications of its new miniature LIVA Z personal computer, which indicates that the system is set to hit the market in the coming weeks or months. The new small form-factor PC is based on Intel’s Apollo Lake system-on-chip and thus features improved general purpose performance, graphics, and multimedia playback.
The ECS LIVA Z comes in a small 117×128×33 black enclosure, which is a bit larger than the Apple TV STB and about the same size as Intel’s entry-level NUCs. While the LIVA Z has rather advanced media playback capabilities and has both HDMI and mDP outputs (as well as a TRRS connector for analog audio), ECS positions its new SFF system not as a media-centric PC, but rather as an affordable miniature computer. This is a reason why the LIVA Z does not come with a remote control or even an IR receiver, but has two GbE ports in addition to 802.11ac Wi-Fi and Bluetooth 4.0. For peripherals, the system has three USB 3.0 Type-A ports as well as a USB 3.0 Type-C port.
The heart of the ECS LIVA Z is an Apollo Lake SoC, which brand and model numbers the manufacturer does not disclose, but FanlessTech claims that the chip is a desktop part with 10 W TDP. Anyway, we do know that Intel’s Apollo Lake chips feature up to four x86 cores based on the latest low-power Goldmont microarchitecture, a new graphics core that features Intel’s ninth-generation architecture (Gen9) with 12 or 18 EUs as well as a new multimedia playback engine that supports hardware-accelerated playback of 4K video from hardware decoding of HEVC and VP9 codecs. The architectural and multimedia-related enhancements of the Apollo Lake SoCs make the LIVA Z quite good for light multimedia and video playback workloads.
Comparison of Intel's Entry-Level PC Platforms | |||||
Bay Trail-M/D | Braswell | Apollo Lake | |||
CPU Microarchitecture | Silvermont | Airmont | Goldmont | ||
Core Count | Up to 4 | ||||
Graphics Architecture | Gen 7 | Gen8 | Gen9 | ||
EU Count | unknown | 12 or 16 | 12 or 18 | ||
Process Technology | 22 nm | 14 nm | 14 nm | ||
Launch | Q1 2014 | Q1 2015 | Q3 2016 |
So far, ECS has published only brief specs of the LIVA Z on its website, but we understand that the system will exist in different configurations, (possibly different regions will get different variants). The SFF PC will feature up to 8 GB of DDR3L memory (up to two SO-DIMMs), a pre-installed eMMC 32 GB/64 module as well as an M.2-2242 slot for SATA SSDs. There is no place for 2.5” HDDs/SSDs inside the LIVA Z, hence the system supports only solid-state M.2 storage devices. Currently the maximum capacity of available M.2-2242 SATA SSDs is 512 GB (albeit, they are rare), which means that people with vast multimedia libraries will have to use external storage.
Brief Specifications of ECS LIVA Z | |||
LIVA Z 32 GB |
LIVA Z 64 GB |
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CPU | Intel Apollo Lake SoC with 10 W TDP | ||
PCH | integrated | ||
Graphics | Intel HD Graphics 500 (12 EUs) or Intel HD Graphics 505 (18 EUs) (Gen9) | ||
Memory | Two SO-DIMM slots, up to 8 GB of DDR3L | ||
Storage | eMCC | 32 GB | 64 GB |
M.2 | Up to 512 GB in M.2-2242 form-factor | ||
Wi-Fi | Intel 802.11ac + BT 4.0 | ||
Ethernet | Two Gigabit Ethernet with RJ45 connector (Realtek RTL8111H) |
||
Display Outputs | 1 × HDMI 1 × mDP 1.2 |
||
Audio | 3.5 mm audio in and audio out (Realtek ALC283) | ||
USB | 3 × USB 3.0 Type-A (5 Gbps) 1 × USB 3.0 Type-C (5 Gbps) |
||
Dimensions | 117 mm × 128 mm × 33 mm | ||
PSU | External | ||
VESA Mounts | 75 mm/100 mm, one bracket included | ||
OS | Linux-based OS in UEFI mode Microsoft Windows 10 |
At present ECS does not disclose pricing of its LIVA Z nettops and does not reveal when and where the PCs are set to be available. Prices will naturally depend on exact SoC, RAM, eMMC configuration as well as on the version of Windows included (or the lack of any OS). Some of the previous-gen ECS LIVA systems started at $170 and $180, so expect the new versions to be in the same range.
Many thanks to FanlessTech for the original source.
Related Reading:
Source: ECS
21 Comments
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Meteor2 - Tuesday, November 15, 2016 - link
Why might you want two Ethernet ports?nathanddrews - Tuesday, November 15, 2016 - link
pfSense router or other homebrew network appliance.The real question is... HDMI 2.0?
evanrich - Tuesday, November 15, 2016 - link
hdmi 2.0a.There fixed that for you
rm19 - Tuesday, November 15, 2016 - link
I think reviewers should always mention the version of HDMI especially when 4K anything is involved.Meteor2 - Wednesday, November 16, 2016 - link
Yes!Namisecond - Saturday, November 19, 2016 - link
Now if only the OEMs can be convinced to use anything other than the RTL-8111x series of NICs...evanrich - Tuesday, November 15, 2016 - link
VLAN for media only, and dedicated internet port. Why? because I can :)evanrich - Tuesday, November 15, 2016 - link
or port bonding.BrokenCrayons - Tuesday, November 15, 2016 - link
You'd need a lot of rope to go full bondage on everyone and everything at a modern port as they have to be huge in order to handle modern cargo ships. I applaud your enthusiasm in the face of such a challenge.CaedenV - Tuesday, November 15, 2016 - link
*slow clap*