Mini PCs too small for a dedicated GPU are never going to be gaming powerhouses. But there's still huge appeal in cramming full PC functionality into a tiny box. Add a flip-up touchscreen, CNC-alloy construction and a retro vibe into the mix and, well, you may as well just take my money.
Give it up, therefore, for the the latest condensed hunk of want from Ayaneo, all built into a [[link]] very compact 1L case. It follows on from the Retro Mini PC AM01 sans 'S' suffix with an extreme familiar look, save for one critical detail. Where the original had a black panel, the new Retro Mini PC AM01S sports a flip-up screen.
Anywho, APU aside, the new AM01S has additional ports on the front, now hidden behind a magnetic cover for maximum sleekness when not in use. On the rear, there are two USB4 ports, a pair of ethernet sockets, two HMDI outputs, plus a pair of USB-A connectors.
But what of that dinky pop-up screen? Well, it's a 4-inch touch panel built into a CNC-machined aluminium [[link]] frame. Ayaneo doesn't quote resolution or refresh rates, or even panel type.
So, it's unclear if we're talking LCD or OLED. But Ayaneo also describes it as, "a native Windows extended display, supporting system-level display modes. It can be used independently without an external monitor, greatly expanding its functionality and usability." So, there's that.
Whatever, this is a very neat and thoroughly nostalgic little PC. We're I in the market for a little desktop box for daily driving duties, I'd find it very hard to say no. The fact that our own Al Bickham was so smitten by the , itself a pint-sized homage to the original Nintendo Entertainment System, certainly gives me confidence this Mac-inspired model will be an equally solid effort, even if Ayaneo's website is a bit of a mess.