aleutia d1

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We’ve already blogged about the D510MO Pine Trail motherboard with lower power consumption and a well thought out heatsink to keep the processor passively cooled. Unfortunately it does not work with Ubuntu out of the box – you have to flash the BIOS at least for 9.10 – but of course Aleutia does that for you before shipping it as part of our free OEM install of 9.10.

We’ve finished the stress testing of the board and will be offering it in our D1 and P1 starting tomorrow (soft launch tonight). Both feature much lower power consumption. With the D1 we’re switching from the Compucase 8K01 case we (and lots of other UK system builders) relied on before to a new, fanless model from Taiwan that is is 2/3 the size. The 8K01 has an internal brick adapter but relies on a cheap 5cm fan to keep it cool, resulting in noise, and meaning there’s just an IEC input not a DC input. Moreover, with two of the units, that noise increased over time which just isn’t acceptable. Now it will be fanless and have a 19V DC input.

The P1 is still aimed at sailboats and marine customers and so has a 6-26V DC Input with a 40GB hdd or 40GB Intel X25-V SSD (nothing larger is needed for sea navigation). It will be in a wall mount case with the option of a extra Gb lan port, making it ideal as a server. We’ve also dropped the price £80 and will now offer Win7 with it as well.

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We’ve already blogged about how great this board is and how much lower the power consumption is but now that we’ve had a chance to test it. we can confirm that power consumption averages 10 Watts less despite the slightly faster clock speed of the CPU (2 x 1.66GHz versus 2 x  1.6GHz). Best of all it’s passively cooled. There’s still a fan in the D1 case though we are working on making it completely fanless. Still comes with 4GB of RAM, a DVD-RW drive, and a Samsung F3 hard drive for £299 ex VAT.

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The latest release is only a few days old but already are all our products are running it. One major change has been to cut down the boot time, though of course the faster the drive, the faster the boot time. After talking with some of the Canonical guys at the Jaunty launch party, it seems boot time is measured from just after grub boot loader until the login screen.

The new Aleutia D1 comes with a dual core Intel Atom CPU, 2GB of RAM, and integrated dvd burner. With a 30GB OCZ solid stated drive we’ve installed for a customer in the Gambia, it boots up in just 19 seconds.

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