Today we’ll be taking a look at the ECS LIVA MINI PC KIT with 32GB of eMMC for storage needs. ECS configured the LIVA Min PC kit with an Intel BayTrail-M SoC (Intel Celeron Processor N2807), 2GB 1333MHz DDR3L memory, 32GB of eMMC and a M.2 form factor combo wireless card that supports 802.11b/g/n wireless and Bluetooth 4.0. All the hardware you need to install Windows 8.1 or Linux comes with the kit, so you just need to assemble it and slap on the OS. Read on to see how it goes together and how it performs.
Not a bid little system. I don't get the ability to run off of a battery pack though. You'll still need power to drive a monitor to see what you're working on.
Can you provide either a close up picture of the sticker on the power brick or provide the specifications listed? I'm assuming 5v DC output as it's a USB connector, but how many watts is it rated for?
XstollieX wrote:Not a bid little system. I don't get the ability to run off of a battery pack though. You'll still need power to drive a monitor to see what you're working on.
Maybe true for Windows, but if you're running Linux you could have a service running on there that others can connect to and no need for a monitor. Here's a possible situation:
Plug in the battery pack to your LIVA and let it boot. Walk (or sit) around the mall with your machine configured to act an open Wi-Fi access point, act as a web proxy and capture people's network traffic.
Just an idea, but it's possible, and no keyboard or monitor are required.
Can you provide either a close up picture of the sticker on the power brick or provide the specifications listed? I'm assuming 5v DC output as it's a USB connector, but how many watts is it rated for?
Thanks!
Sure! It is rated for 3Amps, so that would be 15 Watts.
XstollieX wrote:Not a bid little system. I don't get the ability to run off of a battery pack though. You'll still need power to drive a monitor to see what you're working on.
Maybe true for Windows, but if you're running Linux you could have a service running on there that others can connect to and no need for a monitor. Here's a possible situation:
Plug in the battery pack to your LIVA and let it boot. Walk (or sit) around the mall with your machine configured to act an open Wi-Fi access point, act as a web proxy and capture people's network traffic.
Just an idea, but it's possible, and no keyboard or monitor are required.
Have you been able to create an AP mode with the LIVA PC, i installed ubuntu 12.04 on it and am trying to start the hostapd and it keeps erroring out?