![]() It’s intended to be used as a media center or thin client that goes behind an HDMI-display and used with wireless networking and Bluetooth keyboard and mouse. The Lenovo IdeaCentre Stick 300 is a black slab of plastic with a one USB-A and one Micro- USB (for power) port, one Micro-SD card slot, and an HDMI male connector sticking out on one end. Performance and networking worthy of a toaster. ![]() This review will be broken up in the following sections: The ultra-cheap Lenovo IdeaCentre Stick 300 seemed perfect secondary PC that would fit the bill. My use for a Windows computer is thus very limited, and I only need “something cheap that runs Windows.” I’ve been running Windows in a virtual machine, but wanted to move it out onto its own dedicated system. I also want to keep on top of the development of the Windows platform. I’m primarily a Linux user, but occasionally use some Windows-only software. ![]() ![]() ![]() It isn’t super powerful, but it’s fast enough to get most tasks dune except gaming and other computing-intensive tasks. The year-old Lenovo IdeaCentre Stick 300 is a tiny little computer that’s designed to be plugged straight into an HDMI display, wireless networking, and a Bluetooth keyboard and mouse. The only problem is that it isn’t suited for running Windows. Lenovo offers a neat HDMI-dongle/mini-computer with Windows 10 Home edition at half the price of a standalone Windows 10 license. ![]()
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