![Image](http://www.legitreviews.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/02/brix-pro-pc-645x467.jpg)
Article Title: Gigabyte Brix Pro Review – GB-BXi7-4770R
Article URL: http://www.legitreviews.com/gigabyte-br ... iew_136711
All in; about €350 or so for the Brix, ram, SSD & wireless keyboard and mouse. I didn't need an OS or monitor. I only wish I got a bigger SSD, but I got a promotion a while back so will sort that out next monthApoptosis wrote:Sounds like you are enjoying the Brix! how much was the total build cost?
The 2x USB 3.0 ports would be a PITA, but there is where this comes in - http://www.legitreviews.com/satechi-10- ... eview_2163
Great questions and I hope I can help. Intel officially supports DDR3L-1333/1600 memory - http://ark.intel.com/products/76642/Int ... o-3_90-GHzoviano wrote:Got a question about the RAM though - I purchased the same G-Skill RAM kit after reading this review but it showed up as running at 1866, not 2133. I had to go into the BIOS to enable manual DRAM frequency and set the frequency to match the RAM, as version F3 of the BIOS now allows. Is this what the reviewer did? Does it matter that it didn't set it to 2133 automatically and that I had to do this? Pardon me if that sounds ignorant but I'm still learning a lot of this, I just wanted to eek out the best possible performance hence buying the new RAM.
It seems stable from what I can tell, and AIDA64 now shows it as running at 2133, so I assume that is ok? If it wasn't capable of running at that RAM speed, then am I right in thinking it simply wouldn't have booted (or given me the option in the BIOS)?
According to the specs on Gigabyte's page it says it supports 1333/1600 RAM, but the review states 2133, why would that be?