Damn that thing is tiny. One thing I don't understand is what is 45 quid in U.S. currency?
vskid wrote:Nerd = likes school, does all their homework, dies if they don't get 100% on every assignment
Geek = likes technology, dies if the power goes out and his UPS dies too
mini-itx.com wrote:The world's smallest snap-in 12V DC-DC ATX power supply unit, measuring just 31x45x20mm, about the size of two AA batteries. Patent Pending HyperWattâ„¢ technologies, fully ATX compliant, 100% silent.
Plugs directly into the motherboard ATX connector. Generates up to 120 Watts of power from a 12V supply, at over 96% efficiency. An attached cable harness provides two HDD and one floppy/slimline optical drive power connector. Cable lengths: from board to 12V DC connector is approx 25cm (9.75"); cable harness is approx 40cm (15.75") long.
The picoPSU-120 can power VIA mini-ITX boards with C3 or C7 processors, P3, P4, Pentium-M, and AMD processors, as well as *some* lower power consumption regular boards. The picoPSU will NOT plug directly into the power connector on an EPIA MS board (due to the size of the heatsink). If you are enquiring about a board not on our site, please email us to check compatibility.
CE / FCC / VCCI Certifications: EN55024, EN55022 Class B (CE certification), Australia/New Zealand (using CISPR 22, EN55022), Japan (VCCI: using CISPR 22, ANSI C63.4), United States (FCC Part 15, Subpart B, Class B), Canada (ICES-003 using CISPR 22, ANSI C63.4).
You'll still need a power brick with the picoPSU. In an Xbox, you could probably just stick the power brick inside if you wanted to.
Harshboy wrote:Ok, can you tell me if this is compatible:
Physically, yes. That is an ATX motherboard power socket, so the picoPSU would fit. However, the compatability issues reign with your system's power demands. The picoPSU will provide as much wattage to the motherboard and components as the power brick provides to it, so if you use a 60W power brick, the picoPSU is a 60W PSU. The average PC has a 240W PSU. The picoPSU will therefore not be suitable for all applications.
As soon as they get a 600Watt, with SATA connectors and SLI support then I'll be interested. Blasted new technology in these new computers is hard to keep up with. I'm and old school PC builder building a gaming PC for my wife, and PSU is a big big big big deal now days. I remember back when a 250 watt would do wonders, but now the mobo I have along with the P4 and Nvidia SLI recommends at minimum a 600 watt power supply. Fun fun stuff!!