Intel is killing off its NUC mini PCs - so who will pick up the slack?

Third-party manufacturers expected to pick up the slack as Intel NUC calls it quits

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Intelhas announced that it has ceased production of its Next Unit of Computing (NUC) line of small form factor PCs, intended for use as compact servers, home cinemas, or even a games console.

Intel first started promoting themini PCline in 2012, although a spokesperson for the company has, in an e-mail response toPCWorld, confirmed an earlier report fromServe the Homethat Intel, better known for its component manufacturing business, would be retiring from producingmini computers, as well as PCs entirely.

“We have decided to stop direct investment in the Next Unit of Compute (NUC) Business and pivot our strategy to enable our ecosystem partners to continue NUC innovation and growth,” they wrote, signalling an end to Intel’s production of the product line (but not its support for existing units) while leaving others to pick up the baton.

NUC RIP

NUC RIP

We’re spoilt for choice for small-form factor PCs in this day and age. Mini-ITX cases (and motherboards to fit them) are readily available, and capable of being fitted with components to rival systems housed in even the tallest of cases.

Intel’s NUC 13 Extreme is here and we want it

Intel ditches Nvidia for its own Arc GPU in new NUC mini PC

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There are also Raspberry Pis, which, althoughless than availablesince the onset of the Covid-19 pandemic (even if this writer has recently procured one from a UK-based reseller), are quite possibly the smallestworkstationswe’ll have for some time, but it’s arguable that Intel started the craze.

Still, with a 10-year-old boy running the product division (‘Hades Canyon’, ‘Phantom Canyon’ and ‘Raptor Canyon’ are all real product names, the technological equivalent of having to order a ‘Harlem Shake’ in a restaurant, andRGB skulls are etched into some cases), perhaps it’s good that it’s been palmed off to third-parties and consumers have more options.

I’m not just being glib: over the years we’ve covered Intel NUCs, the problems have mounted. The shift fromNvidiaGPUs to Intel’s own Arc ones corresponded with a rise in price, and an increased focus towards tailoring the line for the gaming market meant larger form factors to accommodate full-fat desktop GPUs.

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Intel seemed to have forgotten, by the end, exactly why it started the NUC line. It even lost the gaming battle, with theSteamDeck and ROG Ally offering a fair amount of power in an explicitly-portable form factor. There are worse ways to go than setting those up as a work laptop.

Really, in current year, Is anyone mourning the demise of the Intel-branded NUC?

Luke Hughes holds the role of Staff Writer at TechRadar Pro, producing news, features and deals content across topics ranging from computing to cloud services, cybersecurity, data privacy and business software.

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