- Beelink GTI15 Ultra offers steam cooling in a chassis that is hardly greater than a paperback novel
- A fingerprint reader and double 10GBe ports are rare finds on any mini -pc
- External GPU -Support solves a problem and creates three others in terms of cost and footprint
Beelinks GTI15 Ultra Mini PC is launched with features that are more commonly associated with full -size desktops.
The prominent elements include double 10 GB Ethernet LAN ports, a fingerprint reader and support for external graphics – additions suggesting that it is built for users who require more than casual browsing or media playback, especially those who want to cut down without giving up specific benefits promotion.
Compared to its predecessor, GTI14, the new GTI15 Ultra brings an Intel Core Ultra 9 285H processor, but the raw CPU benefit benefit is modest, approx. 11%, based on internal benchmarks.
Marginal cpu -gains, sharper gpu -contrast
Beelinks GTI15 Ultra does not occur in a vacuum; It is the next step in a mini -pc crimination that has gradually pushed the envelope.
Previous models such as the GTI12 Ultra and GTI14 Ultra were pioneering for the inclusion of a PCIe X8 expansion game for Beelink’s proprietary EX GPU dock that targeted users who would have a compact form factor but still needed the possibility of a desktop GPU.
However, the major change lies in the integrated arc graphics 140T, replacing the ARC 8-Core IGPU from the previous model.
Despite branding, this shift may not result in a meaningful leap for GPU-heavy tasks.
The opportunity to connect to Beelink’s own external GPU -Dock certainly offers more flexibility, but not at no extra cost and space problems.
With up to 64 GB of DDR5 memory and a built-in 145W PSU, the GTI15 Ultra is presented as a serious machine for demanding users.
The double 10GBE ports point to a networking edge that can appeal to niche professional workflows, which potentially makes it viable as a business -PC -but in most working settings exceed such bandwidth by far the actual requirements.
The same goes for steam chamber cooling, which can help thermals, but feels more like a speech point than a necessity in typical office scenarios.
From approx. $ 655 in Barbones form and climbing to nearly $ 880 when configured with 64 GB RAM and 1 TB of storage, this Mini -PC lands in the price area occupied by skilled desktops and laptops.
While the appeal to a slender video editing -PC in such a small footprint is understandable, compromises remain, especially when taking into account the limited internal GPU and dependence on external docks to full graphic performance.
Via notebook check



