Sapphire Edge HD Mini PC review

Sapphire's Edge HD Mini PC is as thin as a desktop PC gets

Sapphire Edge HD Mini PC
A tiny box that's ideal for media, but not for games

TechRadar Verdict

Pros

  • +

    Great small form factor

  • +

    Almost silent operation

  • +

    Price

  • +

    Fairly decent media performance

Cons

  • -

    Not great with games

  • -

    No OS preinstalled

  • -

    No keyboard or mouse supplied

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Back in 1965, Intel cofounder Gordon E Moore proposed that the number of chips that could be placed on an integrated circuit would double every two years thanks to shrinking manufacturing processes. This effectively doubles the speed of processors, and Moore's law has held up ever since.

It does need amending, though. As dies become smaller, the residual lower-end chips get cheaper. Intel's ubiquitous Atom chip is an example of this; rather than making a more powerful processor, Intel made one that could run with minimal power, and thus the netbook was born.

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We couldn't get a response from Sapphire when we enquired as to why it had changed allegiances so dramatically, and why it had seemingly given up on the gaming side of things altogether. The Mini Edge HD, then, could undo Sapphire as a brand among gamers, but at the same time it could introduce it to a whole new audience seeking small PCs to stick next to their whopping flatscreens.

In every other respect it performs admirably, capable of 1,080p high definition output without a huge wattage surge. It's tiny enough to sit unnoticed next to – or behind – a television, and it barely makes a sound.

To save costs, it ships without luxuries like an operating system or a mouse and keyboard, but with LinuxMCE being free, and wireless keyboards and mice now costing buttons, it's a fairly cheap and sleek way to get hold of a fully-fledged media centre PC.

The Mini Edge HD's biggest competitors aren't other media centre PCs, though. The Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3 cost about the same, but are also capable of running the latest games in HD. If you're after a replacement home or office PC for browsing the net and watching the odd film, the Mini Edge HD fits the bill perfectly, but its form factor and connections are crying out for proper PC games.

If it could manage that, it would do Sapphire and PC gaming a world of good. If Winchester's law stands, though, machines like this are only going to get smaller, not better.

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