🚀 Elevate Your Workspace with TRIGKEY's Mini Marvel!
The TRIGKEY W10 Mini-PC is a fanless, compact desktop solution powered by an Intel Celeron N3350 processor, featuring 4GB of RAM and 64GB of storage. With dual 4K HDMI outputs and multiple USB 3.0 ports, it’s designed for seamless connectivity and minimalistic aesthetics, making it perfect for office environments and digital signage.
S**S
Great mini computer
Had an older Acer laptop that I replaced. Speed of CPU, 16G of RAM and 512G of SSD was perfect for my needs. Terrific mini-computer for the price.
K**N
As advertised
Does what I need. Some music, work, and web. The only complaint is the fan. Not horrible, but can hear the fan. Fan runs a lot.
B**I
Perfect
Exactly what I needed for my small home office now my whole system is customized
M**O
Very good micro desktop computer
Boots up immediately and shuts down in 2-3 seconds. Not for gamers.Great for home, home/office, office, internet, memory upgreadable to 16GB (it has only 2 mini slots).Saves and retrieves data in milliseconds.Extremely quiet (you know it's on only if the on light is showing, 0 fan noise during use), the computer is very tiny (more tiny than you would expect a mini-PC to be).Nice yet simple initial color boot screen.Supports dual screens.The sound connector is on the front, but the one I have does not work at all and I have to rely on my Alexa device as speaker.
C**C
Great Product!
This product came on-time and worked like a champ.
M**N
Good mini PC, runs Fedora Linux good
Got this Trigkey N4 Mini PC to see if I could turn a portable 15.6in 1080p touchscreen monitor into a giant tablet for a low cost couch computer, with remote control of a HTPC, and while that did work the fragile mini-HDMI & 2x USB-C connectors made couch usage impractical with that monitor, but this mini PC was fine in that role. Then I put Fedora 36 WS (Workstation) on it and now I mainly use it for testing storage devices with badblocks scans and Gnome Disks benchmarks.Next I might use it to replace my HTPC, an old Dell Core i5-3750 running Fedora 36 WS, when I set that up I had notions of running Kodi, with a large local media library, bunch of IPTV channels with local DVR, maybe OTA & FTA DVR too, etc. In practice its only Prime Video, Netflix, Youtube, and various websites, all via Firefox over a regular Gnome desktop, all of which this mini PC can handle fine with a small fraction of the electric usage of the old PC, or better with a lighter weight desktop environment. But before I make that change I need to research and test using it as a security camera NVR (wanted to do that before this review but it's been months...been busy).Design and build quality are good for a low cost mini PC. Functionality is good, Windows 10 runs a little slow, Fedora 36 WS on Live USB runs a little slow with an odd wifi reset issue, MMC image backup and Linux installation are easy, and Fedora 36 WS on MMC runs good (faster than Win10, no wifi issues).For non-tech people looking for a very low cost PC, this mini PC is usable but very slow. This mini PC plus a cheap USB keyboard & mouse and any TV with a HDMI port can serve as a basic desktop PC. This is good for web browsing (keep tabs to a minimum), word processing, spreadsheets, audio player, video player, some casual games, and only old stuff for 3D gaming. Windows 10 will be a bit of a headache, read into performance optimization by disabling stuff you do not need.This mini PC is also good for playing with Linux. I believe most recent distributions should run as-is but it depends on the kernel, Fedora 36 works well. Be sure to test compatibility with a live USB disk, and backup the MMC to a complete disk image before installing onto the MMC. Note, a complete image of a 64GB MMC will be a 64GB file, FAT partitions on most flash disks cannot handle this as-is, a larger disk is needed (e.g. 128GB), empty the backup disk, reformat the backup disk to ext4 (all data is lost), write the 64GB image file to backup disk, and unmount/eject it & put it in a safe place. If doing the MMC backup from Fedora WS live USB disk, in Fedora 3x Gnome Disks, there is a security restriction/bug with writing MMC images to removable disks causing it to fail with a vague error message, bypassing this restriction/bug requires disabling system security, open a terminal and run "sudo setenforce 0", dump the MMC backup image (per above), then run "sudo setenforce 1" (or else your live USB disk will be insecure).Overall, 5 stars, good mini PC, runs Fedora Linux good.
P**.
Minimal Win 10 machine
If you're looking for a barebones, low end Win10 computer that you can easily mount to the back of a monitor, you may have come to the right place. I have successfully gotten the computer to finish Win 10 installation and provide an account. It has all been done off the Web. (This machine will never go onto the Web for security reasons.) All of my experience is with the OS in this initial state. I have not installed any apps. I opened the Win resource monitor and watched CPU, RAM and disk activity. At many times Windows alone is eating this machine. On occasion, with my having done nothing, the CPU usage would jump to over 200%. RAM was about 50% utilized, as was nearly 32GB of the 64GB of backing store. I opened a handful of PDF's, and each time the CPU usage would rocket to over 200% (See attached pic) and then drop back to the 30's and 40's. With four PDF's open at the same time (each one having spiked CPU usage on opening) the RAM was about 60% consumed. These PDFs were scans of 60 page magazines. If you put this computer on the Web you'll probably be able to do email and most Web surfing with acceptable performance. The Celeron should be able to keep up with at least 1080p streaming. But I wouldn't expect much more. I see this computer as a half step up from a tricked out Raspberry Pi 4. The Pis can go up to 8 GB of RAM (this is 4) and at least the 64GB backing store in this computer. The Pis can't stream well, as this computer can. That's the primary place where this one wins. I've used Pis to surf and do email. So there's clearly a significant area of overlap now. Whether you choose a Pi 4 (when you can ever get one again) or this computer depends a lot on the apps you want to use, and how many GPIO pins you need.
S**N
Very good quality mini pc. Very capable of 1080p youtube videos
I bought this PC for development purposes on black Friday and overall I think it very much exceeded my expectations. I would recommend a browser like firefox over chrome since it does have limited memory.This PC is not a gaming PC. You will maybe be able to use tripple A games that are 15-20 years old if you are lucky but you will not be able to run modern 3d games with any sort of quality. What you can do with this is use it for video streaming and and for standard desktop applications like MS office. The power draw was very low when watching a 1080p video at arround 4w and idle was arround 1.4w.This would be a great PC for anyone looking for a cheep low power media center or for applications such as digital signage. If you are just a casual user this system may seem a little bit limiting and I would shell out a little more for one with 8gb of ram and an I5 as the processor is very limited.Would buy again!
C**R
Good, but not fanless and not for Windows 10
This is a great mini computer - feels sturdy and well made, matches the specs. But it is unsuitable to run Windows 10 in an interactive way, unless you are very patient or doing very lightweight stuff. Replacing Windows with Linux Mint (xfce variant) radically changes that: browsing gets super fast and light games become viable. I tried running StepMania/OutFox on both setups, and it went from unplayable to hyper smooth. So if you plan to replace the OS with something more in line with the specs, it’s a good machine.Another detail: the title says fanless, but the photos mention a fan; people answering questions are also unsure. There *is* a fan, and while it is a low noise one, it’s not 100% silent (that killed my other potential application, which was running it as a 24/7 Home Assistant host). Title should be updated.
F**T
Awesome lil' media streamer
I'm using this in my kitchen to stream vids to a monitor. Thing is incredibly small, maybe 4"x4"x0.75". Has all the ports I'd hope for. It's absolutely silent --I don't think there's even a fan in it. I put it through benchmarking software which normally would get a processor hot, but didn't even feel the case warm up much. I don't game, but from benchmarking I would say it might be a terrible option --it doesn't seem to have a dedicated GPU, so that's where it loses compared to other options. If you need an inexpensive media server (or DNS server, or file server) this thing would likely be great: it uses next to no power, so even if it's on all the time it isn't going to cost much.
S**N
Pretty loud
Too loud. Slow. Boo
J**
Could not run anything, horribly slow
Very very very slow, we have good internet but the computer can’t load anything
Trustpilot
2 months ago
2 days ago