Initial impressions of the T8Pro
Posted: Mon Jan 09, 2023 9:59 pm
Hi everyone! I got the T8Pro last week and have been playing with it, to see what I like and don't. I'll eventually post a review on Amazon based on some of these findings, but I figure this place is best for a discussion.
First, it's small. So very small, even for a mini PC, so we're talking about Raspberry Pi size. The space is used efficiently, although it's limited on what it offers. Three HDMI ports, three USB3-A ports, two network ports, a 3.5mm audio port, and power. There's no room for expansion with a TF/microSD card or internal hard drive, although it is too small for a 2.5" drive anyway. Also, it doesn't take a regular 2280 M.2 drive, as the system board is smaller than that; instead, it needs a 2242 M.2 drive.
However, that 2242 port can handle a NVMe drive. I pulled the original SATA SSD and installed a SK Hynix card that I purchased off Amazon, and it runs well. I haven't done performance testing on it, as I used it to run pfsense to get better use of those two gig NICs.
The NICs are Realtek gigabit (RTL8111/8168/8411, according to "pciconf -lv") and the wifi is also Realtek 802.11ac (RTL8821CE). No complaints about performance in general, and Windows, Ubuntu, and pfsense all seem to recognise them properly.
Included storage was a 256GB SATA FuturePath FD300-series. I've never heard of them, but researching on their website was pretty interesting (https://www.futurepath.com.cn/en/h-pd-4 ... mColId=112).
The BIOS was pretty new, build T8PRO001, released in October 2022. It shows the RAM was Samsung brand, 2400 LPDDR4, 2 channels of 4096 each, so 8GB total. Seeing dual channels was unexpected, but I expect this will be a positive impact on performance. There's some customization available in the BIOS, but I don't see most people tweaking it, and would avoid random changes.
It came with Windows 11 Pro, updated in July 2022, although it came with Edge build 90 from 2021. I'm not sure why that didn't get updated to match the OS. Device Manager didn't have any unknowns, and downloading drivers and updates was painless to get current. I did find it strange that the Windows didn't offer 22H2, and stayed on the original GA of Win11. I'll just update that manually.
I haven't tried any fancy performance testing or benchmark software yet. I did find this website: https://valid.x86.fr/5f5gwc which appears to be a CPUZ benchmark that somebody else ran, so you can see other details there.
Overall, I like this device. I still can't imagine a time when I'll need three screens and two network connections at the same time, but it's nice to have options!
First, it's small. So very small, even for a mini PC, so we're talking about Raspberry Pi size. The space is used efficiently, although it's limited on what it offers. Three HDMI ports, three USB3-A ports, two network ports, a 3.5mm audio port, and power. There's no room for expansion with a TF/microSD card or internal hard drive, although it is too small for a 2.5" drive anyway. Also, it doesn't take a regular 2280 M.2 drive, as the system board is smaller than that; instead, it needs a 2242 M.2 drive.
However, that 2242 port can handle a NVMe drive. I pulled the original SATA SSD and installed a SK Hynix card that I purchased off Amazon, and it runs well. I haven't done performance testing on it, as I used it to run pfsense to get better use of those two gig NICs.
The NICs are Realtek gigabit (RTL8111/8168/8411, according to "pciconf -lv") and the wifi is also Realtek 802.11ac (RTL8821CE). No complaints about performance in general, and Windows, Ubuntu, and pfsense all seem to recognise them properly.
Included storage was a 256GB SATA FuturePath FD300-series. I've never heard of them, but researching on their website was pretty interesting (https://www.futurepath.com.cn/en/h-pd-4 ... mColId=112).
The BIOS was pretty new, build T8PRO001, released in October 2022. It shows the RAM was Samsung brand, 2400 LPDDR4, 2 channels of 4096 each, so 8GB total. Seeing dual channels was unexpected, but I expect this will be a positive impact on performance. There's some customization available in the BIOS, but I don't see most people tweaking it, and would avoid random changes.
It came with Windows 11 Pro, updated in July 2022, although it came with Edge build 90 from 2021. I'm not sure why that didn't get updated to match the OS. Device Manager didn't have any unknowns, and downloading drivers and updates was painless to get current. I did find it strange that the Windows didn't offer 22H2, and stayed on the original GA of Win11. I'll just update that manually.
I haven't tried any fancy performance testing or benchmark software yet. I did find this website: https://valid.x86.fr/5f5gwc which appears to be a CPUZ benchmark that somebody else ran, so you can see other details there.
Overall, I like this device. I still can't imagine a time when I'll need three screens and two network connections at the same time, but it's nice to have options!