PC screens are appearing everywhere these days. You can find them on CPU coolers, graphics cards, and computer cases. They display system data and other information. Mini-PCs usually have very basic screens that just show clocks or system stats.
Aoostar decided to change all that by adding a complete screen to their mini-PC. They created something called the G-Flip 370. This computer flips open like a laptop. It runs on the latest AMD Ryzen AI 9 HX 370 chip with twelve Zen 5 cores and Radeon 890M graphics built right in.
The company claims this mini-PC can handle video editing and 3D modeling tasks. That seems pretty unlikely since the screen measures only 5 inches across. The display offers full HD resolution at 1920×1080 pixels. At that tiny size, you'd need major window scaling to see anything clearly without hurting your eyes.
The small screen might work really well for certain tasks, though. You could run this as a server computer and always see terminal info or monitor system resources. Windows users probably have more software options that look nice on small screens. Aoostar doesn't mention any specific programs made for this little display, but they did add a fingerprint reader to make logging in much easier.
For cooling, the G-Flip 370 uses a large vapor chamber with just one fan on the bottom. Unlike most mini-PCs with this processor, it doesn't come with permanently attached LPDDR5 memory. That gives you the freedom to upgrade later or start with less memory. The trade-off comes with slightly slower speeds. Storage options include two M.2 PCIe 4.0 slots but no space for additional drives.
According to Aoostar, the G-Flip 370 should be on the market by mid-March, but it could appear any day.
Aoostar decided to change all that by adding a complete screen to their mini-PC. They created something called the G-Flip 370. This computer flips open like a laptop. It runs on the latest AMD Ryzen AI 9 HX 370 chip with twelve Zen 5 cores and Radeon 890M graphics built right in.
The company claims this mini-PC can handle video editing and 3D modeling tasks. That seems pretty unlikely since the screen measures only 5 inches across. The display offers full HD resolution at 1920×1080 pixels. At that tiny size, you'd need major window scaling to see anything clearly without hurting your eyes.
The small screen might work really well for certain tasks, though. You could run this as a server computer and always see terminal info or monitor system resources. Windows users probably have more software options that look nice on small screens. Aoostar doesn't mention any specific programs made for this little display, but they did add a fingerprint reader to make logging in much easier.
For cooling, the G-Flip 370 uses a large vapor chamber with just one fan on the bottom. Unlike most mini-PCs with this processor, it doesn't come with permanently attached LPDDR5 memory. That gives you the freedom to upgrade later or start with less memory. The trade-off comes with slightly slower speeds. Storage options include two M.2 PCIe 4.0 slots but no space for additional drives.
According to Aoostar, the G-Flip 370 should be on the market by mid-March, but it could appear any day.