After several failed attempts with existing hw I started looking for something that might fit.
I'd like your opinion on this minipc spec.
Acemagic AM18 8845HS
Processor
AMD Ryzen™ 7 8845HS Processor, 8 Cores/16 Threads (Zen4 architecture, 4nm lithography process, 16M L3 Cache, base frequency 3.8GHz, turbo frequency up to 5.1GHz)
Graphics
AMD Radeon™ 780M (graphics frequency: 2700MHz, RDNA 3 architecture, graphics core number: 12)
NPU
NPU: Embedded with AMD Ryzen™ AI engine, AI engine performance can reach up to 16 TOPS
CPU+GPU+NPU total AI performance can reach up to 38 TOPS
Memory
32GB DDR5 5600MHz Dual Channel (2*16GB)
( DDR5 SO-DIMM Slots×2, up to 64GB)
Storage
M.2 2280 1TB PCIe4.0×4 NVMe SSD or
M.2 2280 512GB PCIe4.0×4 NVMe SSD
M.2 2280 Slot x2 (PCIE NVMe/SATA dual protocol) adaptive
Potential HW purchase
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Re: Potential HW purchase
UPDATE: I have just purchased a Beelink Mini S12 Pro Assembled Mini PC Intel N100 with 16Gb RAM / M.2 500Gb SSD. Bought new locally here in New Zealand. It may be here in a few days. Hopefully this will suffice for the OS3.0. It has no OS installed. (Yet)
Thanks to everyone who responded to my queries.
Cheers,
Enoch ...
Hi,
I recently learnt of Commodore X64 being available soon.
I thought instead of buying the C64X hardware which may be available end of February 2025 I would download the Commodore OS Vision files to my new ASUS laptop. Upon further reading on the installation of C64X I noted that I will need a Virtual-box software. I've never used a Virtual Box software before. My system is around two months old running Win11 64bit with 16Gb RAM and 1Tb SSD. I am a bit iffy installing software I've never used before and read that there are sometimes installation errors. There was also a mention of setting up a partition. I've experienced setting up partitions in the distant past and nothing good came of it. Tha t was like in the 1990's on a 386 machine.
I then had a thought of buying a suitable NUC and had a good look at online sites, eg Ali Express. My closest power adapter for purchase with a NUC is the Australian version plug. I will not be needing a Windows version installed on the NUC, and I already own a 24" LED Screen left over from the use of a tower case, that is still glaring at me off to my right.
Anyone aware of a decent NUC that is not bare-bones? Needs to be under $500 NZD (New Zealand) and new.
Cheers,
Enoch :=)
Thanks to everyone who responded to my queries.
Cheers,
Enoch ...
Hi,
I recently learnt of Commodore X64 being available soon.
I thought instead of buying the C64X hardware which may be available end of February 2025 I would download the Commodore OS Vision files to my new ASUS laptop. Upon further reading on the installation of C64X I noted that I will need a Virtual-box software. I've never used a Virtual Box software before. My system is around two months old running Win11 64bit with 16Gb RAM and 1Tb SSD. I am a bit iffy installing software I've never used before and read that there are sometimes installation errors. There was also a mention of setting up a partition. I've experienced setting up partitions in the distant past and nothing good came of it. Tha t was like in the 1990's on a 386 machine.
I then had a thought of buying a suitable NUC and had a good look at online sites, eg Ali Express. My closest power adapter for purchase with a NUC is the Australian version plug. I will not be needing a Windows version installed on the NUC, and I already own a 24" LED Screen left over from the use of a tower case, that is still glaring at me off to my right.
Anyone aware of a decent NUC that is not bare-bones? Needs to be under $500 NZD (New Zealand) and new.
Cheers,
Enoch :=)
Last edited by Enoch on Wed May 14, 2025 5:26 am, edited 1 time in total.
Re: Potential HW purchase
UPDATE: Vision OS3 works brilliantly on BeeLink S12 Pro.
Hi,
I just came across the following mini PC: Beelink MINI S12 Pro selling for $450 NZD.
Beelink MINI S12 Pro Assembled Mini PC N100 16GB RAM M.2 512GB SSD - 3 Year Warranty.
Manufacturer Code: MINI S12 Pro
No Operating system.
Would this be a suitable unit for running Commodore OS Vision?
Cheers,
Enoch :=)
Hi,
I just came across the following mini PC: Beelink MINI S12 Pro selling for $450 NZD.
Beelink MINI S12 Pro Assembled Mini PC N100 16GB RAM M.2 512GB SSD - 3 Year Warranty.
Manufacturer Code: MINI S12 Pro
No Operating system.
Would this be a suitable unit for running Commodore OS Vision?
Cheers,
Enoch :=)
Last edited by Enoch on Tue May 20, 2025 8:40 am, edited 3 times in total.
Re: Potential HW purchase
Anything with Intel graphics would usually work like a charm, however the newer boards like N100(similar to the hardware you specified) which are typically used in NUCs these days have issues with COS2, that will be resolved with COS3 coming out quite soon.
I know I keep saying that, but I'm even more eager to get it out as you getting it
.
It definitely won't go on forever as it needs to be ready for the next shipment of C64xs, regardless of whether I think its 100% with perhaps some features left for updates. I am testing COS3 on N100 hardware in my VIC-20x and its running great. So I'm fairly confident the aforementioned NUC would be suitable for COS3 when it is released next month(?).
nVidia and AMD graphics are hit and miss, but compatibility could also improve with COS3.
Linux compatible wifi and bluetooth will always need to be a consideration.
Please note, that this is actually a "Commodore 64x Hardware" forum discussing issues and hardware appropriate for a C64x, and not really supposed to be about alternatives.
But carry on.
@Damonh
The hardware sounds cool but without knowing the motherboard manufacturer it is hard to ascertain if it would actually fit.
One little thing in the wrong place (and considering such hardware isn't exactly cheap) and you're going to have a bad time.
I personally would recommend sticking to the C64x hardware options on the MyRetroComputer site as, to my knowledge, they are being fulfilled by mini-ITX.com who have at least a decade of experience with the form factor.
Indeed, perhaps it would be worth purchasing such a board from mini-itx.com, if you already have a C64x case as they can guide you through any issues.
I know I keep saying that, but I'm even more eager to get it out as you getting it

It definitely won't go on forever as it needs to be ready for the next shipment of C64xs, regardless of whether I think its 100% with perhaps some features left for updates. I am testing COS3 on N100 hardware in my VIC-20x and its running great. So I'm fairly confident the aforementioned NUC would be suitable for COS3 when it is released next month(?).
nVidia and AMD graphics are hit and miss, but compatibility could also improve with COS3.
Linux compatible wifi and bluetooth will always need to be a consideration.
Please note, that this is actually a "Commodore 64x Hardware" forum discussing issues and hardware appropriate for a C64x, and not really supposed to be about alternatives.

But carry on.

@Damonh
The hardware sounds cool but without knowing the motherboard manufacturer it is hard to ascertain if it would actually fit.
One little thing in the wrong place (and considering such hardware isn't exactly cheap) and you're going to have a bad time.
I personally would recommend sticking to the C64x hardware options on the MyRetroComputer site as, to my knowledge, they are being fulfilled by mini-ITX.com who have at least a decade of experience with the form factor.
Indeed, perhaps it would be worth purchasing such a board from mini-itx.com, if you already have a C64x case as they can guide you through any issues.

Owns: C64, C128D(Sidekick64), A500, A1000(piStorm),
C64x(i7 16Gb), C64x(Atom 4Gb), VIC-20x(N100 32Gb), C16x(Ryzen9 64gb), VIC-Slim(Atom 2Gb), VIC-Pro(Core Duo 4Gb)
Re: Potential HW purchase
UPDATE: No issues at all with low (?) CPU speed.
Thanks Leo, for the info. I just reread the specs for the NUC and the CPU speed is a bit on the low side at 800MHz. If this spec is too low I will look for alternatives, including the C64X. I do not have a C64X case as I only recently found out about the new updated Commodore system.
Any idea of the price point of the new C64X? Taking into note that I am in New Zealand and NZ Customs will take a chunk of money for anything above $1000 NZD?
I could consider putting a bare-bones system together as long as it is fairly straight forward.
Cheers,
Enoch :=)
Thanks Leo, for the info. I just reread the specs for the NUC and the CPU speed is a bit on the low side at 800MHz. If this spec is too low I will look for alternatives, including the C64X. I do not have a C64X case as I only recently found out about the new updated Commodore system.
Any idea of the price point of the new C64X? Taking into note that I am in New Zealand and NZ Customs will take a chunk of money for anything above $1000 NZD?
I could consider putting a bare-bones system together as long as it is fairly straight forward.
Cheers,
Enoch :=)
Last edited by Enoch on Tue May 20, 2025 8:45 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Potential HW purchase
Just a personal view here, with "thanks" to all previous posts. Like Leo, I also create Linux installers / versions for some Commodore OS. Doing so, is a huge task and is compounded by every event of new hardware and software.
COS2 was built for the existing hardware "at that time", however many things have changed in both HW and SW.
Leo is just one person creating this in his free-time, as are many other creators. Most, like me, have limited access to every HW option for testing.
And here is the crux. If you have access to other hardware, and are able to test COS2 (and later COS3) on it, that will benefit Leo greatly. If you have extra knowledge to help rebuild COS (2/3) to work with other hardware, I am sure that he will take that on board too.
I am expecting great changes on COS3, and I think Leo will not let me down. Creating the new installer in an N100 machine, should provide compatability among many new processors. Good luck to him and all that sail the COS ship.
COS2 was built for the existing hardware "at that time", however many things have changed in both HW and SW.
Leo is just one person creating this in his free-time, as are many other creators. Most, like me, have limited access to every HW option for testing.
And here is the crux. If you have access to other hardware, and are able to test COS2 (and later COS3) on it, that will benefit Leo greatly. If you have extra knowledge to help rebuild COS (2/3) to work with other hardware, I am sure that he will take that on board too.
I am expecting great changes on COS3, and I think Leo will not let me down. Creating the new installer in an N100 machine, should provide compatability among many new processors. Good luck to him and all that sail the COS ship.

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