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1 Versions  





2 Notes  





3 References  





4 External links  














Intel Compute Stick: Difference between revisions






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Line 26: Line 26:

| sound = Intel HD Audio (via HDMI and Bluetooth)

| sound = Intel HD Audio (via HDMI and Bluetooth)

| input =

| input =

| connectivity = [[HDMI]], [[Wi-Fi]] ([[IEEE 802.11|802.11]] [[IEEE 802.11b-1999|b]]/[[IEEE 802.11g-2003|g]]/[[IEEE 802.11n-2009|n]], [[IEEE 802.11|802.11]] [[IEEE 802.11b-1999|b]]/[[IEEE 802.11g-2003|g]]/[[IEEE 802.11n-2009|n]]/[[IEEE_802.11ac|ac]]), [[USB 2.0]]/[[USB 2.0]] & [[USB 3.0]], [[Bluetooth 4.0]]/[[Bluetooth 4.2]]

| connectivity = [[HDMI]], [[Wi-Fi]] ([[IEEE 802.11|802.11]] [[IEEE 802.11b-1999|b]]/[[IEEE 802.11g-2003|g]]/[[IEEE 802.11n-2009|n]], [[IEEE 802.11|802.11]] [[IEEE 802.11b-1999|b]]/[[IEEE 802.11g-2003|g]]/[[IEEE 802.11n-2009|n]]/[[IEEE 802.11ac|ac]]), [[USB 2.0]]/[[USB 2.0]] & [[USB 3.0]], [[Bluetooth 4.0]]/[[Bluetooth 4.2]]

| service =

| service =

| dimensions = {{convert|103|x|37|x|12|mm|in|2|abbr=on}}

| dimensions = {{convert|103|x|37|x|12|mm|in|2|abbr=on}}

Line 39: Line 39:

The '''Intel Compute Stick''' is a [[stick PC]] designed by [[Intel]] to be used in [[Home theater PC|media center]] applications. According to Intel, it is designed to be smaller than conventional desktop or other small-form-factor PCs, while offering comparable performance. Its main connector, an [[HDMI]] 1.4 port, along with a compatible monitor (or TV) and [[Bluetooth]]-based keyboards and mice, allows it to be used for general computing tasks.<ref name="intel"/>

The '''Intel Compute Stick''' is a [[stick PC]] designed by [[Intel]] to be used in [[Home theater PC|media center]] applications. According to Intel, it is designed to be smaller than conventional desktop or other small-form-factor PCs, while offering comparable performance. Its main connector, an [[HDMI]] 1.4 port, along with a compatible monitor (or TV) and [[Bluetooth]]-based keyboards and mice, allows it to be used for general computing tasks.<ref name="intel"/>



The small form factor device was launched in early 2015 using the [[Intel Atom (CPU)|Atom]] Z3735F power-efficient processor from Intel's Bay Trail family, a [[System on a chip|SoC]] family that is predominately designed for use with tablets and 2-in-1 devices. The processor offers 1.33 GHz processor base frequency and a maximum RAM of 2&nbsp;GB.<ref>{{cite web|title=Intel® Atom™ Processor Z3735F (2M Cache, up to 1.83 GHz)|url=http://ark.intel.com/products/80274/Intel-Atom-Processor-Z3735F-2M-Cache-up-to-1_83-GHz|website=Intel ARK|publisher=Intel|access-date=5 August 2015}}</ref> This is sufficient for home entertainment usage, light office productivity, thin clients, and digital signage applications.<ref>{{cite web|title=Introducing the Intel Compute Stick|url=http://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/compute-stick/intel-compute-stick.html|website=Intel|publisher=Intel|access-date=5 August 2015}}</ref>

The small form factor device was launched in early 2015 using the [[Intel Atom (CPU)|Atom]] Z3735F power-efficient processor from Intel's Bay Trail family, a [[System on a chip|SoC]] family that is predominately designed for use with tablets and 2-in-1 devices. The processor offers 1.33&nbsp;GHz processor base frequency and a maximum RAM of 2&nbsp;GB.<ref>{{cite web|title=Intel® Atom™ Processor Z3735F (2M Cache, up to 1.83 GHz)|url=http://ark.intel.com/products/80274/Intel-Atom-Processor-Z3735F-2M-Cache-up-to-1_83-GHz|website=Intel ARK|publisher=Intel|access-date=5 August 2015}}</ref> This is sufficient for home entertainment usage, light office productivity, thin clients, and digital signage applications.<ref>{{cite web|title=Introducing the Intel Compute Stick|url=http://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/compute-stick/intel-compute-stick.html|website=Intel|publisher=Intel|access-date=5 August 2015}}</ref>



In mid-2015 it was announced that second generation versions of the Compute Stick would feature advancements on the Bay Trail framework through application of Core M processors in the form factor. The new devices (released Q1 2016) allowed Intel to introduce additional processing power as well as 4&nbsp;GB memory for "more intensive application and content creation" as well as "faster multi-tasking".<ref>{{cite web|title=Roadmap of Intel Compute Sticks in 2015/2016|url=http://www.stickpcstore.com/blog/roadmap-of-intel-compute-sticks-in-2015-2016-1150605/|website=The Stick PC Blog|publisher=The Stick PC Store|access-date=5 August 2015}}</ref>

In mid-2015 it was announced that second generation versions of the Compute Stick would feature advancements on the Bay Trail framework through application of Core M processors in the form factor. The new devices (released Q1 2016) allowed Intel to introduce additional processing power as well as 4&nbsp;GB memory for "more intensive application and content creation" as well as "faster multi-tasking".<ref>{{cite web|title=Roadmap of Intel Compute Sticks in 2015/2016|url=http://www.stickpcstore.com/blog/roadmap-of-intel-compute-sticks-in-2015-2016-1150605/|website=The Stick PC Blog|publisher=The Stick PC Store|access-date=5 August 2015}}</ref>



The Intel Compute stick line was discontinued in June 2020.<ref>https://www.intel.com/content/dam/support/us/en/documents/intel-nuc/PCN117597-00.pdf</ref>

The Intel Compute stick line was discontinued in June 2020.<ref>https://www.intel.com/content/dam/support/us/en/documents/intel-nuc/PCN117597-00.pdf {{Bare URL PDF|date=March 2022}}</ref>



== Versions ==

== Versions ==

Line 50: Line 50:

! Number !! Code Name !! Shipped OS !! System on a chip !! Graphics !! USB !! # USB ports !! RAM !! Storage !! [[Trusted Platform Module|TPM]] !! Connectivity !! First shipped

! Number !! Code Name !! Shipped OS !! System on a chip !! Graphics !! USB !! # USB ports !! RAM !! Storage !! [[Trusted Platform Module|TPM]] !! Connectivity !! First shipped

|-

|-

| STCK1A32WFC{{ref|WFC-Family|a}} || rowspan=4|Falls City || rowspan=2|[[Windows 8.1]] with Bing || rowspan="4" |Intel® Atom™ Z3735F || rowspan=9|Intel® HD Graphics || rowspan=4| 2.0 || rowspan=4|1 || rowspan=3|2&nbsp;GB || rowspan=3|32&nbsp;GB eMMC<br>MicroSDXC&nbsp;slot || rowspan=4|NA || rowspan=4|802.11 b/g/n<br>Bluetooth 4.0 || rowspan=2|2015 Q2

| STCK1A32WFC{{ref|WFC-Family|a}} || rowspan=4|Falls City || rowspan=2|[[Windows 8.1]] with Bing || rowspan="4" |Intel® Atom™ Z3735F || rowspan=9|Intel® HD Graphics || rowspan=4| 2.0 || rowspan=4|1 || rowspan=3|2&nbsp;GB || rowspan=3|32&nbsp;GB eMMC<br />MicroSDXC&nbsp;slot || rowspan=4|NA || rowspan=4|802.11 b/g/n<br />Bluetooth 4.0 || rowspan=2|2015 Q2

|-

|-

| STCK1A32WFCR{{ref|WFC-Family|a}}

| STCK1A32WFCR{{ref|WFC-Family|a}}

Line 56: Line 56:

| STCK1A32WFCL{{ref|WFC-Family|a}} || [[Windows 10]] with Bing || 2015 Q4

| STCK1A32WFCL{{ref|WFC-Family|a}} || [[Windows 10]] with Bing || 2015 Q4

|-

|-

| STCK1A8LFC || [[Ubuntu (operating system)|Ubuntu]] 14.04 || 1&nbsp;GB || 8&nbsp;GB eMMC<br>MicroSDXC slot || 2015 Q2

| STCK1A8LFC || [[Ubuntu (operating system)|Ubuntu]] 14.04 || 1&nbsp;GB || 8&nbsp;GB eMMC<br />MicroSDXC slot || 2015 Q2

|-

|-

| STK2MV64CC (CS525)|| rowspan=3 | Cedar City || rowspan=2|none || Intel® Core™ m5 || rowspan=3 | 3.0 || rowspan=3|3 || rowspan=3|4&nbsp;GB || rowspan=3|64&nbsp;GB eMMC<br>MicroSDXC slot || rowspan=2|2.0 || rowspan=5|802.11 b/g/n/ac<br>Bluetooth 4.2 || rowspan=5|2016 Q1

| STK2MV64CC (CS525)|| rowspan=3 | Cedar City || rowspan=2|none || Intel® Core™ m5 || rowspan=3 | 3.0 || rowspan=3|3 || rowspan=3|4&nbsp;GB || rowspan=3|64&nbsp;GB eMMC<br />MicroSDXC slot || rowspan=2|2.0 || rowspan=5|802.11 b/g/n/ac<br />Bluetooth 4.2 || rowspan=5|2016 Q1

|-

|-

| STK2M364CC || rowspan=2|Intel® Core™ m3

| STK2M364CC || rowspan=2|Intel® Core™ m3

Line 64: Line 64:

| STK2M3W64CC (CS325)|| Windows 10 || NA

| STK2M3W64CC (CS325)|| Windows 10 || NA

|-

|-

| STK1AW32SC (CS125)<ref>{{cite web |url=http://ark.intel.com/products/91065/Intel-Compute-Stick-STK1AW32SC|title=Intel® Computer Stick STK1AW32SC|website=Intel Ark|access-date=13 September 2016}}</ref> || rowspan=2|Sterling City || Windows 10 with Bing || rowspan="2" |Intel® Atom™ x5-Z8300 || rowspan=2|3.0+2.0 || rowspan=2|2 || rowspan=2|2&nbsp;GB || rowspan=2 | 32&nbsp;GB eMMC<br>MicroSDXC slot || 2.0

| STK1AW32SC (CS125)<ref>{{cite web |url=http://ark.intel.com/products/91065/Intel-Compute-Stick-STK1AW32SC|title=Intel® Computer Stick STK1AW32SC|website=Intel Ark|access-date=13 September 2016}}</ref> || rowspan=2|Sterling City || Windows 10 with Bing || rowspan="2" |Intel® Atom™ x5-Z8300 || rowspan=2|3.0+2.0 || rowspan=2|2 || rowspan=2|2&nbsp;GB || rowspan=2 | 32&nbsp;GB eMMC<br />MicroSDXC slot || 2.0

|-

|-

| STK1A32SC<ref>{{cite web |url=http://ark.intel.com/products/91064/Intel-Compute-Stick-STK1A32SC|title=Intel® Compute Stick STK1A32SC|website=Intel Ark|access-date=13 September 2016}}</ref> || none || 2.0

| STK1A32SC<ref>{{cite web |url=http://ark.intel.com/products/91064/Intel-Compute-Stick-STK1A32SC|title=Intel® Compute Stick STK1A32SC|website=Intel Ark|access-date=13 September 2016}}</ref> || none || 2.0

Line 71: Line 71:

==Notes==

==Notes==

:1.{{note|WFC-Family}} Additionally, the three models of the STCK1A32WFC family differ in the list of countries issuing regulatory approval for their sale.<ref>[http://www.intel.com/content/dam/support/us/en/documents/boardsandkits/computestick/Approved-Countries-STCK1xFC.pdf ''Approved Country Lists for Intel® Compute Stick Models'', Intel Corp., April 15, 2016]</ref>

:1.{{note|WFC-Family}} Additionally, the three models of the STCK1A32WFC family differ in the list of countries issuing regulatory approval for their sale.<ref>[http://www.intel.com/content/dam/support/us/en/documents/boardsandkits/computestick/Approved-Countries-STCK1xFC.pdf ''Approved Country Lists for Intel® Compute Stick Models'', Intel Corp., April 15, 2016]</ref>


== References ==

== References ==

{{reflist}}

{{reflist}}



== External links ==

== External links ==

{{commonscat|Intel Compute Stick}}

{{commons category|Intel Compute Stick}}

* [http://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/compute-stick/intel-compute-stick.html Introducing the Intel Compute Stick]

* [http://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/compute-stick/intel-compute-stick.html Introducing the Intel Compute Stick]

{{Intel}}

{{Intel}}


[[Category:Intel]]

[[Category:Intel]]

[[Category:Single-board computers]]

[[Category:Single-board computers]]



{{Compu-stub}}

{{Compu-stub}}


Revision as of 15:11, 14 March 2022

Intel Compute Stick
Intel - Compute Stick (17419054735)
DeveloperIntel
ManufacturerIntel
TypeStick PC
Release dateApril 24, 2015; 9 years ago (2015-04-24) (United States)[1]
Introductory price$66.99 (Linux) to $395.00 (Windows 10)[2]
Operating systemWindows 10, Windows 8.1, Linux
System on a chipIntel Core m5-6Y57, Intel Core m3-6Y30, Atom x5-Z8300, Atom Z3735F[3]
Memory1 GB to 4 GB[3]
Storage32 GB eMMC (Windows), 8 GB eMMC (Ubuntu), microSD (external)[3]
DisplayIntel HD Graphics
SoundIntel HD Audio (via HDMI and Bluetooth)
ConnectivityHDMI, Wi-Fi (802.11 b/g/n, 802.11 b/g/n/ac), USB 2.0/USB 2.0 & USB 3.0, Bluetooth 4.0/Bluetooth 4.2
Powermicro-USB
Dimensions103 mm × 37 mm × 12 mm (4.06 in × 1.46 in × 0.47 in)
WebsiteIntel Compute Stick

The Intel Compute Stick is a stick PC designed by Intel to be used in media center applications. According to Intel, it is designed to be smaller than conventional desktop or other small-form-factor PCs, while offering comparable performance. Its main connector, an HDMI 1.4 port, along with a compatible monitor (or TV) and Bluetooth-based keyboards and mice, allows it to be used for general computing tasks.[3]

The small form factor device was launched in early 2015 using the Atom Z3735F power-efficient processor from Intel's Bay Trail family, a SoC family that is predominately designed for use with tablets and 2-in-1 devices. The processor offers 1.33 GHz processor base frequency and a maximum RAM of 2 GB.[4] This is sufficient for home entertainment usage, light office productivity, thin clients, and digital signage applications.[5]

In mid-2015 it was announced that second generation versions of the Compute Stick would feature advancements on the Bay Trail framework through application of Core M processors in the form factor. The new devices (released Q1 2016) allowed Intel to introduce additional processing power as well as 4 GB memory for "more intensive application and content creation" as well as "faster multi-tasking".[6]

The Intel Compute stick line was discontinued in June 2020.[7]

Versions

Number Code Name Shipped OS System on a chip Graphics USB # USB ports RAM Storage TPM Connectivity First shipped
STCK1A32WFCa Falls City Windows 8.1 with Bing Intel® Atom™ Z3735F Intel® HD Graphics 2.0 1 GB 32 GB eMMC
MicroSDXC slot
NA 802.11 b/g/n
Bluetooth 4.0
2015 Q2
STCK1A32WFCRa
STCK1A32WFCLa Windows 10 with Bing 2015 Q4
STCK1A8LFC Ubuntu 14.04 GB 8 GB eMMC
MicroSDXC slot
2015 Q2
STK2MV64CC (CS525) Cedar City none Intel® Core™ m5 3.0 3 GB 64 GB eMMC
MicroSDXC slot
2.0 802.11 b/g/n/ac
Bluetooth 4.2
2016 Q1
STK2M364CC Intel® Core™ m3
STK2M3W64CC (CS325) Windows 10 NA
STK1AW32SC (CS125)[8] Sterling City Windows 10 with Bing Intel® Atom™ x5-Z8300 3.0+2.0 2 GB 32 GB eMMC
MicroSDXC slot
2.0
STK1A32SC[9] none 2.0

Notes

1.^ Additionally, the three models of the STCK1A32WFC family differ in the list of countries issuing regulatory approval for their sale.[10]

References

  1. ^ Newman, Jared. "Intel Compute Stick, world's smallest PC, will cost $150 with Windows, $110 with Linux". PCWorld. IDG Consumer & SMB. Retrieved 20 May 2015.
  • ^ Compute Sticks | Intel Shop
  • ^ a b c d "Intel Compute Stick STCK1A32WFC, STCK1A8LFC Product Brief" (PDF). Intel. Intel. Retrieved 20 May 2015.
  • ^ "Intel® Atom™ Processor Z3735F (2M Cache, up to 1.83 GHz)". Intel ARK. Intel. Retrieved 5 August 2015.
  • ^ "Introducing the Intel Compute Stick". Intel. Intel. Retrieved 5 August 2015.
  • ^ "Roadmap of Intel Compute Sticks in 2015/2016". The Stick PC Blog. The Stick PC Store. Retrieved 5 August 2015.
  • ^ https://www.intel.com/content/dam/support/us/en/documents/intel-nuc/PCN117597-00.pdf [bare URL PDF]
  • ^ "Intel® Computer Stick STK1AW32SC". Intel Ark. Retrieved 13 September 2016.
  • ^ "Intel® Compute Stick STK1A32SC". Intel Ark. Retrieved 13 September 2016.
  • ^ Approved Country Lists for Intel® Compute Stick Models, Intel Corp., April 15, 2016
  • External links


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    This page was last edited on 14 March 2022, at 15:11 (UTC).

    This version of the page has been revised. Besides normal editing, the reason for revision may have been that this version contains factual inaccuracies, vandalism, or material not compatible with the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License.



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