Search results

  1. S

    PCSPECIALIST Clevo BIOS update for Insyde vulnerability?

    I have just heard that the Insyde H2O BIOS (v1.07.07) on my Lafite Pro (a re-badged Clevo N141ZU) probably has serious vulnerabilities. See https://binarly.io/news/BinarlyDiscoversHighImpactVulnerabilitiesinFirmwareImpactingMillionsofEnterpriseDevices/index.html , or google 'binarly insyde'...
  2. S

    PCSPECIALIST Backlit keyboard / Lafite III 14"

    Hi, Has anyone got the the backlit keyboard working on the 14" Lafite III (Clevo N13_N140ZU) running Linux Mint (or other distro)? Mine is running Mint 19.2 (64-bit Cinnamon) dual-booting with Windows 10 Home. The backlighting (Fn F4) works in Win10. Martin
  3. S

    PCSPECIALIST mini PC supports VirtualBox and dual-booting

    Hi, Just a short post about my new mini PC: Case Inwin Mini-ITX Performance BQ660 Case + 120W PSU Processor (CPU) Intel® Core™i5 Quad Core Processor i5-6600T (2.7GHz) 6MB Cache Motherboard ASUS® H110I-PLUS: Mini-ITX, LG1151, USB 3.0, SATA 6GBs Memory (RAM) 16GB HyperX FURY DDR4 2133MHz (2 x...
  4. S

    PCSPECIALIST Cleaning dust from inside Inwin Mini-ITX BQ660 Case?

    Hi, I've got a Performance Mini PC (bought from PCSpecialist) and it has the Inwin Mini-ITX BQ660 Case - the one with lots of air holes at top and bottom and in the side walls. Every couple of months, I switch it off and take it outside and puff air in through the holes to try to dislodge and...
  5. S

    PCSPECIALIST Easy to upgrade/replace hush hard drive?

    Hello. I thinking about getting a PCS Hush mini PC. If its 2.5" hard drive fails, is it as simple to fit a new one as it is to replace a 3.5" drive on a desktop PC? I am currently using an Asus Revo 3610 as a media server. And, looking on the web, I suspect I would stray out of my comfort...
  6. S

    PCSPECIALIST GibiBytes or GigaBytes?

    Does PCSpecialist quote drive/partition capacities in units of 1 gibibyte (GiB) = 2^30 bytes = 1073741824bytes? (as MS windows does); or units of 1 gigabyte (GB) = 10^9 bytes = 1000000000bytes? I *think* it's the former, but I'm not sure they do so consistently.
Top