CPU Model Number: J4125. RAM Memory Maximum Size: 8 GB. Graphics Coprocessor: Intel HD Graphics 600. Year: 2020. CPU Manufacturer: Intel. Brand: Beelink. CPU Model: Celeron. Operating System: Windows 10 Pro. Ram Memory Installed Size: 8 GB. Personal computer design type: Mini PC. Date First Available: September 24, 2020. Best Sellers Rank: #5,907 in Computers & Accessories. Customer Reviews: 4.3 out of 5 stars 154 ratings 4.3 out of 5 stars. ASIN: B08DFL2BM2. Batteries: 1 CR2 batteries required. Hard Drive Interface: Serial ATA-600. Computer Memory Type: DDR DRAM. Processor Count: 4. Processor Brand: Intel. Item Dimensions LxWxH: 4.69 x 4.69 x 0.7 inches. Product Dimensions: 4.69 x 4.69 x 0.7 inches. Item Weight: 12 ounces. Operating System: Windows 10 Pro. Hardware Platform: PC. Item model number: GK55. Brand: Beelink. Number of USB 3.0 Ports: 2. Number of USB 2.0 Ports: 2. Wireless Type: 802.11abg. Card Description: Integrated. Chipset Brand: Intel. Graphics Coprocessor: Intel HD Graphics 600. Hard Drive: 128 GB. Memory Speed: 750 MHz. RAM: 8 GB DDR4. Processor: 2.7 GHz celeron. Screen Resolution: 3840 x 2160.
Sale!
Beelink Mini Pc GK55 Windows 10 Pro 8GB DDR4 128GB SSD Intel J4125(4C/4T 4MB Cache Up to 2.7GHz), Mini Computer Supports 4K Dual HDMI Output /2.4G+5G WiFi/2.5″ HDD Extension/Dual Gigabit Ethernet J4125 8GB/128GB
$247.02
〔CPU〕J4125 (4 Cores/4 Threads 4M Cache, up to 2.7Ghz ). 8GB DDR4/128GB M.2 SSD,,Intel HD Graphics 600 ,2.4G/5G WIFI ,BT-4.0,
〔Input& Output〕2*HDMI([email protected]),2*USB3.0 , 2*USB2.0,1*USB C,2*LAN,1*DC(24W)
〔system〕Support WIN 10 POR/ubuntu16.04, 17.04, 18.04 version
〔Design & Energy saving〕Only 0.65 lb,4.9*4.4*1.6(inch),24W Power consumption, It supports S5 RTC Wake Settings, Auto Power On, Wake On Lan, PXE Boot etc.
〔Technical Support〕Free return and exchange within one month. If there is a quality problem within one year, we will replace it for free , 24-hour technical support
Out of stock
Gabe –
This is a great mini PC. The onboard storage is fast due to being an m.2 SATA SSD rather than the eMMC storage that many other brands use. That storage, the 8GB of RAM and the Celeron J4125 processor make this unit very responsive. It boots quickly and it multitasks quite well. The WiFi is also very solid. It also stays very cool for a mini pc. It tends to idle at around 31C and the highest I’ve seen it climb to is 42C, and this was for only a few seconds while watching a 1080P video. The system fan is also very quiet, and so quiet that I had to turn both my room fan and TV off and get very close to the unit to hear it running. All in all this is a fantastic mini PC. And though for my purposes it will be used both as a fun alternative to and a backup for my main desktop computer, it is most definitely a unit that is viable as a desktop replacement. It won’t be playing the latest video games of course, but as a home or even light office PC it is perfect. The unit came with Windows 10 Pro version 1909. On startup it went through the typical W10 setup. This went surprisingly quickly. After it finished and opened to the desktop, I made a few basic settings changes to the way I like it. I then both saved a system image to a USB external HDD, and then the Driver File Repository to a USB flash drive so I would have them for what came next. I then performed a clean install of W10 Pro version 20H2. When the installation finished it restarted and went through the typical W10 setup. When it finished and opened to the desktop I changed a few of the basic settings to what I like, and then went into the Group Policy Editor to change the Windows Update settings to notify me of updates, but let me choose to download and install them. I have limited internet so this is important to me. I then connected to the internet, and within seconds the new Windows installation activated. I then installed the needed drivers from the Driver File Store I had saved earlier, and then updated everything and uninstalled the apps/programs that I don’t use and don’t need on the system. I also installed the programs I like and set up the browser the way I like. After all of this I saved system image of the new setup. After I performed all of this I started using the unit like I normally would, and it’s been working perfectly. I could not be happier. If you’re looking for a good, basic Windows 10 Pro PC, you can’t go wrong with this unit.
Kelly –
The GK55 seems like a nice little box, runs cool etc, but there’s two issues given below. BTW, neither issue occurred on the Larkbox Pro I bought at the same time, uses the same CPU. Issue #1 (big?) : after the Cumulative updates for Win10 1909, the system is unbootable and you wind up at the UEFI prompt. My suspicion from reading online is that the internal SSD is not natively understood by Windows drivers, and after the UEFI update, the drive isn’t readable until the driver is manually reloaded. I returned my first GK55 for this issue thinking the internal SSD had died, but when it happened again on the replacement, I suspected I might be able to install Linux Mint 20 and the dual boot would get me past the issue. That does in fact work, so rather than returning your GK55, just make it dual boot with Linux Mint and all is good… kinda. Issue #2 (smaller) : after all updates are done, and drivers are updated with the Intel Driver tool, one core thread is still locked at a high usage (85% to 95% in CoreTemp, 27% in Systernals Process Explorer). Culprit is system interrupts. Usual fix is new drivers, but I’m on latest of everything. Still on stock BIOS firmware for GK55. BTW, under Mint, there were 199 threads after install, no cores running wild. Win 10 has 120+ processes and 1250+ threads used. The box might still be usable for me, as I only intended to use it as a source for HDMI output into my Ninja Flame recorder. As long as it can run the couple of apps I use smoothly, that’s all I need. I think if I need additional units like this, I’ll go with the Larkbox pro, which was cheaper anyway — but has less I/O ports and no USB-C. Update 11/29/2021 : The later updates of the drivers did eventually fix the one core running wild. The Intel tool stays in the tray and watches for updates, and they come frequently fwiw. On two occasions now, the SSD has become invisible (wound up at BIOS screen on every boot). I opened the unit, reseated all the connectors including the little flexible ribbon, and reset the BIOS to defaults, and all was good again.Read more
wizworks –
Bought this and installed Xubuntu Linux on it. Runs very fast and boots to desktop in seconds from the push of the power button! I got this for my daughter for school work. Installed chrome browser within and she gets all her google classroom stuff. loading applications is snappy and we’re very happy. If you want to install Linux, you will need to enable UEFI and Legacy support within the BIOS and then boot from your USB installer. Box runs very cool and does not get warm at all! Love this! UPDATE: when I bought this the price was $196. There is another J4125 box on amazon – same specs and $196. Taking a star away not because of the product but because of seller greed. An increase of over $50 is not justifiable!!!Read more
Gabe –
This is a great mini PC. The onboard storage is fast due to being an m.2 SATA SSD rather than the eMMC storage that many other brands use. That storage, the 8GB of RAM and the Celeron J4125 processor make this unit very responsive. It boots quickly and it multitasks quite well. The WiFi is also very solid. It also stays very cool for a mini pc. It tends to idle at around 31C and the highest I’ve seen it climb to is 42C, and this was for only a few seconds while watching a 1080P video. The system fan is also very quiet, and so quiet that I had to turn both my room fan and TV off and get very close to the unit to hear it running. All in all this is a fantastic mini PC. And though for my purposes it will be used both as a fun alternative to and a backup for my main desktop computer, it is most definitely a unit that is viable as a desktop replacement. It won’t be playing the latest video games of course, but as a home or even light office PC it is perfect. The unit came with Windows 10 Pro version 1909. On startup it went through the typical W10 setup. This went surprisingly quickly. After it finished and opened to the desktop, I made a few basic settings changes to the way I like it. I then both saved a system image to a USB external HDD, and then the Driver File Repository to a USB flash drive so I would have them for what came next. I then performed a clean install of W10 Pro version 20H2. When the installation finished it restarted and went through the typical W10 setup. When it finished and opened to the desktop I changed a few of the basic settings to what I like, and then went into the Group Policy Editor to change the Windows Update settings to notify me of updates, but let me choose to download and install them. I have limited internet so this is important to me. I then connected to the internet, and within seconds the new Windows installation activated. I then installed the needed drivers from the Driver File Store I had saved earlier, and then updated everything and uninstalled the apps/programs that I don’t use and don’t need on the system. I also installed the programs I like and set up the browser the way I like. After all of this I saved system image of the new setup. After I performed all of this I started using the unit like I normally would, and it’s been working perfectly. I could not be happier. If you’re looking for a good, basic Windows 10 Pro PC, you can’t go wrong with this unit.
Kelly –
The GK55 seems like a nice little box, runs cool etc, but there’s two issues given below. BTW, neither issue occurred on the Larkbox Pro I bought at the same time, uses the same CPU. Issue #1 (big?) : after the Cumulative updates for Win10 1909, the system is unbootable and you wind up at the UEFI prompt. My suspicion from reading online is that the internal SSD is not natively understood by Windows drivers, and after the UEFI update, the drive isn’t readable until the driver is manually reloaded. I returned my first GK55 for this issue thinking the internal SSD had died, but when it happened again on the replacement, I suspected I might be able to install Linux Mint 20 and the dual boot would get me past the issue. That does in fact work, so rather than returning your GK55, just make it dual boot with Linux Mint and all is good… kinda. Issue #2 (smaller) : after all updates are done, and drivers are updated with the Intel Driver tool, one core thread is still locked at a high usage (85% to 95% in CoreTemp, 27% in Systernals Process Explorer). Culprit is system interrupts. Usual fix is new drivers, but I’m on latest of everything. Still on stock BIOS firmware for GK55. BTW, under Mint, there were 199 threads after install, no cores running wild. Win 10 has 120+ processes and 1250+ threads used. The box might still be usable for me, as I only intended to use it as a source for HDMI output into my Ninja Flame recorder. As long as it can run the couple of apps I use smoothly, that’s all I need. I think if I need additional units like this, I’ll go with the Larkbox pro, which was cheaper anyway — but has less I/O ports and no USB-C. Update 11/29/2021 : The later updates of the drivers did eventually fix the one core running wild. The Intel tool stays in the tray and watches for updates, and they come frequently fwiw. On two occasions now, the SSD has become invisible (wound up at BIOS screen on every boot). I opened the unit, reseated all the connectors including the little flexible ribbon, and reset the BIOS to defaults, and all was good again.Read more
wizworks –
Bought this and installed Xubuntu Linux on it. Runs very fast and boots to desktop in seconds from the push of the power button! I got this for my daughter for school work. Installed chrome browser within and she gets all her google classroom stuff. loading applications is snappy and we’re very happy. If you want to install Linux, you will need to enable UEFI and Legacy support within the BIOS and then boot from your USB installer. Box runs very cool and does not get warm at all! Love this! UPDATE: when I bought this the price was $196. There is another J4125 box on amazon – same specs and $196. Taking a star away not because of the product but because of seller greed. An increase of over $50 is not justifiable!!!Read more
Gabe –
This is a great mini PC. The onboard storage is fast due to being an m.2 SATA SSD rather than the eMMC storage that many other brands use. That storage, the 8GB of RAM and the Celeron J4125 processor make this unit very responsive. It boots quickly and it multitasks quite well. The WiFi is also very solid. It also stays very cool for a mini pc. It tends to idle at around 31C and the highest I’ve seen it climb to is 42C, and this was for only a few seconds while watching a 1080P video. The system fan is also very quiet, and so quiet that I had to turn both my room fan and TV off and get very close to the unit to hear it running. All in all this is a fantastic mini PC. And though for my purposes it will be used both as a fun alternative to and a backup for my main desktop computer, it is most definitely a unit that is viable as a desktop replacement. It won’t be playing the latest video games of course, but as a home or even light office PC it is perfect. The unit came with Windows 10 Pro version 1909. On startup it went through the typical W10 setup. This went surprisingly quickly. After it finished and opened to the desktop, I made a few basic settings changes to the way I like it. I then both saved a system image to a USB external HDD, and then the Driver File Repository to a USB flash drive so I would have them for what came next. I then performed a clean install of W10 Pro version 20H2. When the installation finished it restarted and went through the typical W10 setup. When it finished and opened to the desktop I changed a few of the basic settings to what I like, and then went into the Group Policy Editor to change the Windows Update settings to notify me of updates, but let me choose to download and install them. I have limited internet so this is important to me. I then connected to the internet, and within seconds the new Windows installation activated. I then installed the needed drivers from the Driver File Store I had saved earlier, and then updated everything and uninstalled the apps/programs that I don’t use and don’t need on the system. I also installed the programs I like and set up the browser the way I like. After all of this I saved system image of the new setup. After I performed all of this I started using the unit like I normally would, and it’s been working perfectly. I could not be happier. If you’re looking for a good, basic Windows 10 Pro PC, you can’t go wrong with this unit.
Kelly –
The GK55 seems like a nice little box, runs cool etc, but there’s two issues given below. BTW, neither issue occurred on the Larkbox Pro I bought at the same time, uses the same CPU. Issue #1 (big?) : after the Cumulative updates for Win10 1909, the system is unbootable and you wind up at the UEFI prompt. My suspicion from reading online is that the internal SSD is not natively understood by Windows drivers, and after the UEFI update, the drive isn’t readable until the driver is manually reloaded. I returned my first GK55 for this issue thinking the internal SSD had died, but when it happened again on the replacement, I suspected I might be able to install Linux Mint 20 and the dual boot would get me past the issue. That does in fact work, so rather than returning your GK55, just make it dual boot with Linux Mint and all is good… kinda. Issue #2 (smaller) : after all updates are done, and drivers are updated with the Intel Driver tool, one core thread is still locked at a high usage (85% to 95% in CoreTemp, 27% in Systernals Process Explorer). Culprit is system interrupts. Usual fix is new drivers, but I’m on latest of everything. Still on stock BIOS firmware for GK55. BTW, under Mint, there were 199 threads after install, no cores running wild. Win 10 has 120+ processes and 1250+ threads used. The box might still be usable for me, as I only intended to use it as a source for HDMI output into my Ninja Flame recorder. As long as it can run the couple of apps I use smoothly, that’s all I need. I think if I need additional units like this, I’ll go with the Larkbox pro, which was cheaper anyway — but has less I/O ports and no USB-C. Update 11/29/2021 : The later updates of the drivers did eventually fix the one core running wild. The Intel tool stays in the tray and watches for updates, and they come frequently fwiw. On two occasions now, the SSD has become invisible (wound up at BIOS screen on every boot). I opened the unit, reseated all the connectors including the little flexible ribbon, and reset the BIOS to defaults, and all was good again.Read more
wizworks –
Bought this and installed Xubuntu Linux on it. Runs very fast and boots to desktop in seconds from the push of the power button! I got this for my daughter for school work. Installed chrome browser within and she gets all her google classroom stuff. loading applications is snappy and we’re very happy. If you want to install Linux, you will need to enable UEFI and Legacy support within the BIOS and then boot from your USB installer. Box runs very cool and does not get warm at all! Love this! UPDATE: when I bought this the price was $196. There is another J4125 box on amazon – same specs and $196. Taking a star away not because of the product but because of seller greed. An increase of over $50 is not justifiable!!!Read more