Monday, January 17th 2022

Intel NUC 11 Essential with Jasper Lake SoC Officially Launched

Although not available in retail quite yet, Intel has officially launched its NUC 11 Essential models built around its Jasper Lake SoCs and thanks to the new processor options, Intel's entry level NUC models are looking quite promising. Not only are we looking at much better GPUs, with a 78 percent increase of execution units at the high-end, but even the low-end CPUs have had a 33 percent increase, when comparing Jasper Lake to Gemini Lake, which some older NUC models were based on. This is quite a jump, but it's hardly surprising, as Gemini Lake was launched at the tail end of 2017.

There's also official support for up to 32 GB of RAM and a boost in memory speed from 2400 MHz to 2933 MHz. Processor speeds have obviously been bumped somewhat as well between the processor generations, alongside with the GPU speeds, but we're mostly looking at a few hundred MHz here, depending on the CPU model. All the new NUC models appear to be using the 10 W TDP Jasper Lake CPU SKUs and all of them should also come with 64 GB of eMMC soldered down, plus an M.2 2280 SATA and NVMe capable slot for SSDs.
Connectivity wise, Intel has gone for one HDMI 2.0b port, one or DP 1.4 port, two rear USB 3.2 10 Gbps ports, plus a further two around the front, plus two USB 2.0 ports around the back, Gigabit Ethernet and a separate headphone and microphone jack around the front. WiFi and Bluetooth 5.0 is provided by an aging Intel Wireless-AC 9462 module, so don't expect WiFi 6 support. Intel supplies an external 65 W power brick that uses a standard barrel plug. No word on pricing at this point, as the new NUC models aren't expected to hit retail until later this quarter, but the previous generation started at under US$200 for a barebone unit with the most basic CPU, so hopefully we'll see something similar this time around. Intel will also offer a fully kitted out mini PC SKU with 4 GB of RAM and Windows 11. All SKUs, including the bare board, come with a three year warranty, which seems quite generous by Intel.
Sources: Intel, via CNX Software
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8 Comments on Intel NUC 11 Essential with Jasper Lake SoC Officially Launched

#1
dj-electric
This has to potentially be one of the largest leaps of compute performance in this price segment.
Waiting to see some Jasper Lake figures.
Posted on Reply
#2
ModEl4
actually it starts way way lower than $200, in Europe you could buy the dual core Gemini lake Celeron from 120€, the quad core from 150€ and the Pentium from €200. With the current supply-demand situation I don't expect the pricing to be so low for the barebones, but still it will effect the refurbished OC business. To get something similar in refurbished you will need at least an i5 haswell regarding CPU and as far iGPU closer to Skylake, so with 3 years warranty (always was 3 years for the NUCs) it will certainly challenge the refurbished options!
Posted on Reply
#3
TheLostSwede
News Editor
ModEl4actually it starts way way lower than $200, in Europe you could buy the dual core Gemini lake Celeron from 120€, the quad core from 150€ and the Pentium from €200. With the current supply-demand situation I don't expect the pricing to be so low for the barebones, but still it will effect the refurbished OC business. To get something similar in refurbished you will need at least an i5 haswell regarding CPU and as far iGPU closer to Skylake, so with 3 years warranty (always was 3 years for the NUCs) it will certainly challenge the refurbished options!
I was going by the Intel ARK pricing and I don't expect we'll see these for less than $200, since as you say, the current situation in the world isn't exactly helping when it comes to the cost of anything.
dj-electricThis has to potentially be one of the largest leaps of compute performance in this price segment.
Waiting to see some Jasper Lake figures.
Indeed, it looks like a very decent entry level SoC with no obvious corners cut.
Posted on Reply
#4
ModEl4
TheLostSwedeI was going by the Intel ARK pricing and I don't expect we'll see these for less than $200, since as you say, the current situation in the world isn't exactly helping when it comes to the cost of anything.


Indeed, it looks like a very decent entry level SoC with no obvious corners cut.
I really don't know what the pricing will be, but historically speaking Intel NUCs was always cheaper than Gigabyte's BRIXs (when availability is normal for both brands) and right now the pricing start at 149€/165€/205€ for the equivalent BRIXs

geizhals.eu/?cat=barepc&xf=9738_Jasper+Lake&sort=p&hloc=at&hloc=de&hloc=pl&hloc=uk&hloc=eu&v=e

Are you going to review them eventually?
Posted on Reply
#5
TheLostSwede
News Editor
ModEl4Are you going to review them eventually?
I don't do reviews here, so I don't really know. Maybe send a request to the bossman?
Posted on Reply
#6
ModEl4
Sure, i meant if you knew.
@W1zzard are you going to review the upcoming Jasper lake based NUCs or the already released Brix models, i think it will be interesting read plus probably good traffic generator for the site.

Thanks!
Posted on Reply
#7
W1zzard
I'm not aware of any plans to review these. Not sure if traffic would be significant in any way, these seem VERY niche
Posted on Reply
#8
bonehead123
W1zzardthese seem VERY niche
"niche" as in bottom-of-the-barrel, minimally-functional net-box toy, yep ........

For about $150 moar, I recently (BF special) got a mini-pc with an i5 coffee lake@2.4ghz, 64GB of 3200 ram, IrisPlus655, W10pro, same # of ports +USB C, wi-fi 6 and a 1TB nvme, so this is a definite no-buy IMHO :D

And yes it runs everything I need it to, except for my CAD/CAM apps, but that's what I have a $5k high-end workstation for, hehehe :)
Posted on Reply
Jul 27th, 2024 10:07 EDT change timezone

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