
- #REALTEK PCIE FE FAMILY CONTROLLER WINDOWS 7 DRIVER PRO#
- #REALTEK PCIE FE FAMILY CONTROLLER WINDOWS 7 DRIVER PC#
- #REALTEK PCIE FE FAMILY CONTROLLER WINDOWS 7 DRIVER WINDOWS#
I also capture some basic details of the device for each OS. Prior to benchmarking, I perform all necessary installations and updates to run the latest versions of both OSes. On Ubuntu, I also compile the v5.4 Linux kernel using the default config as a test of performance using a real-world scenario.
#REALTEK PCIE FE FAMILY CONTROLLER WINDOWS 7 DRIVER WINDOWS#
I also use ‘Phoronix Test Suite’ and benchmark with the same set of tests on both Windows and Ubuntu for comparison purposes. Where possible I review using Windows 11 version 21H2 and Ubuntu 20.04.3 LTS and test with a selection of commonly used Windows benchmarks and/or equivalents for Linux together with Thomas Kaiser’s ‘sbc-bench’ which is a small set of different CPU performance tests focusing on server performance when run on Ubuntu. When reviewing mini PCs, I typically look at their performance under both Windows and Linux (Ubuntu) and compare them against some of the more recently released mini PCs. Also included is a multilingual user manual: In the box you get a 90 W power adapter with cord, both a short and a longer HDMI cable, a VESA mounting bracket together with a couple of small packets of miscellaneous screws.
#REALTEK PCIE FE FAMILY CONTROLLER WINDOWS 7 DRIVER PRO#
There are also two SODIMM memory slots supporting up to 64 GB of memory and the review model included two sticks of Crucial 16 GB DDR4 3200 MHz memory for a total of 32 GB noting that this particular memory is single-rank:Īnd lists three of the USB ports as 3.0 so I tested them together with the Type-C USB port using a Samsung 980 PRO PCle 4.0 NVMe M.2 SSD housed in a ‘USB to M.2 NVMe adapter’ ( ORICO M2PAC3-G20 M.2 NVMe SSD Enclosure) which showed that the USB ports were actually 3.1 (USB 3.2 Gen 2×1 i.e. Internally there is an M.2 2230 WiFi 6E (or 802.11ax) Mediatek MT7921K card which supports the new 6 GHz band, an M.2 2280 NVMe PCIe Gen 3.0 SSD drive (the review model included a 500 GB Kingston drive complete with Windows 11 Pro installed) and the ability to add an additional M.2 2280 SATA SSD drive as well as a 2.5” SATA drive to the lid which is connected to the motherboard via a short ZIF cable: On the top of the device is a fingerprint sensor. The rear panel includes the power jack, dual 2.5 Gbps Ethernet ports, an HDMI (2.0) port, a DisplayPort (1.4), dual USB 3.1 ports, and dual USB 2.0 ports. The front panel has an illuminated power button, a ‘CLR CMOS’ button, a USB 3.1 port, a Type-C USB 3.1 port, and a 3.5mm headphone jack.

As an actively cooled mini PC, it uses AMD’s ‘Zen 3’ Ryzen 9 5900HX processor which is an eight-core 16-thread 3.3 GHz mobile processor boosting up to 4.6 GHz together with Radeon Graphics. The Beelink GTR5 physically consists of a 168 x 120 x 39mm (6.61 x 4.72 x 1.54 inches) rectangular metal case. Featuring an AMD Ryzen 9 mobile processor with Radeon Graphics, Beelink kindly sent one for review and I’ve looked at performance running both Windows and Ubuntu.

#REALTEK PCIE FE FAMILY CONTROLLER WINDOWS 7 DRIVER PC#
Beelink’s GTR5 is their most powerful mini PC to date and has been released as part of their ‘GT’ series of slightly larger mini PCs that are notable for expandable storage configurations together with multiple ports and characterized by the inclusion of a fingerprint scanner.
