Esto se aplica a las integradas de los NUC también?
Tienes una HD4000 en tu placa, y usa los mismo controladores. Es fácil de probar.

Por otra parte, ese Brix en PCC tiene muy buen precio, yo no lo dejaría pasar.

Esto se aplica a las integradas de los NUC también?
Ok, voy a investigar un poco su rendimiento. Puestos a comparar a lo burro, ese Brix con I3 1.9Ghz es más potente que mi viejuno quadcore Q6600?
Más barato en amazon....
I am going to copy my comment from the post yesterday about my experiences with an Intel NUC computer I am using for steam streaming.
I am using a Gigabyte Brix Ivy Bridge i3 model over gigabit Ethernet. It works great no issues for me. The cpu just needs to be able to handle decoding h.264 video that is encoded at 30Mb/s. A lot of the Celeron NUC's have been able to play 1080p rips and videos fine. People have commonly used them for HTPC. But the Celeron could be a little weak, a safe bet would be an i3, but there is no need for anything higher than that. This is the model I am using in my bedroom and it works great. GB-XM12-3227. Main reason for going for the brix models over the actual intel models. First they come with a power cable, the newer Haswell kits have versions that do come with power but you have to verify based on the model number. The second being it has gigabit Ethernet and USB 3.0 where the other NUC's from intel typically have USB 2.0 and 10/100 for Ethernet. The other isn't going to be used in your case but the brix does come with a mini wlan card installed as well where as the intel just has the antenna installed but no wireless card. Buying one at this time unless you can get a better deal on the Ivy Bridge ones, try to go with a Haswell just due to lower power and higher performance cpu's. They all have HD4000 series integrated graphics. There are a few of the higher end models like the i7 4770r and a few i5's that has the IRIS Pro HD5200 but most of them will be 4000. Needless to say these are barebones kits and you will also need to get an msata ssd to install your OS onto, and RAM. In the other room I am using an old C2Q htpc with a GT430 for the video card. Steam streaming works fine at 1080p 60fps on there as well through a gigabit hardwired connection.
Tuve un portátil con A8 y era bastante castaña, ¿eh? Andaba muy justito de potencia.
Al final se ha impuesto la cordura y he pedido un mando Philips para la Rapsberry por once euros.
Pros: Is able to meet all my requirements for an HTPC. It can run all videos smoothly at 1080 as well as stream. Steam in home streaming is able to play with very little latency if you run at 720. I expect steam to improve the performance and it to eventually run steam streaming at 1080 with low latency. Quiet. Low power. Very little heat.
Steam Streaming works 97% flawlessly. There are a few semi-noticeable, minute reductions in frame rate occasionally, but it was never enough to make a game unplayable. This is definitely the best thing I bought this year.
Intel NUC DN2820FYKH – $128.00
2.5″ Storage Drive – Starting at $39.99 shipped (320GB Hard Drive)
1 – DDR3L SO-DIMM – Starting at $27.99 Shipped (2GB)
Windows 8.1 Pro – $99.99