Intel’s New NUC Laptop Kit: Whitebook Tiger Lake For All
by Dr. Ian Cutress on November 19, 2020 1:21 PM ESTThe Next Unit of Computing branding, known as NUC (pronounced nu-ck), has long been associated with Intel’s small form factor desktop designs featuring mobile-class processors. Last year Intel broke that design philosophy with the introduction of the NUC 9 Pro, known as Quartz Canyon, which allowed for a PCIe graphics card in a unified box. Intel today is announcing the next step on the NUC journey, with a pre-built laptop featuring 10nm Quad-Core Tiger Lake Processors.
The new NUC M15 Laptop Kit (codename Bishop County) is a pre-built notebook/laptop isn’t going to be something that an end-user can purchase outright. Rather than directly compete with its laptop partners, the unit is going to be offered to Intel’s laptop partners and channel customers for them to re-brand, potentially build upon, and then resell. This is why it is called the whitebook market, and why I used whitebook in the title of this article.
The NUC M15 design uses Tiger Lake (Intel Core 11th Gen) with Xe graphics in a platform designed to meet Intel Evo requirements for premium laptop design. This means meeting minimum specifications on wake-up time, charging, Thunderbolt, Wi-Fi, and screen power consumption. Evo still needs to be applied for by each brand that takes the M15 on for itself to modify and re-sell, but Intel states that offering this whitebook model will help a lot of regional retailers offer something a bit beyond the normal range of designs with their own unique modifications.
One of the first channel partners that emailed us about their implementation of the M15 was Schenker, a Germany-based retailer that sells across Europe and other locations. Normally we see the company implement Clevo whitebook designs, and so this is something a bit different – the Schenker Vision 15 is a 15.6-inch implementation in an aluminium unibody design with a touch display, 450 nit brightness, Thunderbolt 4, a PCIe 4.0-enabled SSD, and charging options enabled through Type-C on both sides.
Inside is the quad-core Tiger Lake Core i7-1165G7 with Xe graphics, and with the 73 Wh quick-charging battery the company claims it enables 14 hours of Wi-Fi or 10 hours of H.264 local video playback (measured at 150 nits). Schenker is claiming CBR23 scores of 1537 for ST and 5990 for MT, and will offer performance profiles for regular use or peak performance (the latter peaking at 84ºC and 40.8 dB(A) according to the company). The keyboard is listed as having LED-backlighting, and Schenker will support 25 country-specific keyboard layouts.
On storage and memory, Schenker will offer a variety of PCIe 4.0 storage options, as well as LPDDR4X-4267 memory options. Both Thunderbolt 4 ports will support charging, and an additional USB 3.2 Gen 2 port is available. A Linux version will be offered by Schenker’s sister company, TUXEDO Computers.
Shipping will start in January, with the base model offering a Shadow Grey design with the Core i7-1165G7, 16 GB LPDDR4X-4267, and a 250 GB Samsung 970 EVO Plus storage drive, which will retail in Europe for €1499 ($1531 USD equivalent pre-tax). Users after PCIe 4.0 storage will be able to select various capacities of Samsung 980 Pro. Standard warranty is 36 months. Schenker hasn’t yet applied for Intel Evo certification, but has stated that it meets the standards.
We are expecting other companies to offer similar versions of the NUC M15 design, however one of the issues with the whitebook market is differentiation. With the majority of the hardware in this unit going to be the same from other Intel channel partners, the margins might be very tight. Schenker states that they are a lead partner in this collaborative design.
Source: Intel
Related Reading
- Schenker VIA 14: 14-inch Tiger Lake Magnesium Notebook, with 28W Version Inbound
- A 15-inch Thin Laptop For The Road: No More Dongles With The XMG DJ 15
- Intel Ghost Canyon NUC9i9QNX Review: NUC 9 Extreme Realizes the SFF Dream
- Intel NUC10i7FNH Frost Canyon Review
- Intel Unveils Specifications of NUC Element Modular PCs
- Intel Axes 10nm CPU Based NUC
- Intel's Bean Canyon (NUC8i7BEH) Coffee Lake NUC Review
34 Comments
View All Comments
DigitalFreak - Thursday, November 19, 2020 - link
Meh. Would have been more interested if Intel sold them to end users like the NUCs.Mr Perfect - Friday, November 20, 2020 - link
Yeah, same here. I was thinking this would be a first party reference design sold at retail, like a GeForce Founders Edition or a Google Pixel. Now I suppose we get to wait and see what kind of markup OEMs tag on and which corners are cut on the race to the bottom.Samus - Saturday, November 21, 2020 - link
Exactly. Since this is exclusive to channel partners its basically no different than a design template except Intel is controlling the manufacturing OEM for tier-2 distributors to rebadge. If anything they are competing against Clevo, etc, with this move, not their tier-1 partners.Roy2002 - Monday, November 23, 2020 - link
I think they would. I heard they listed it under EPP without SSD/RAM and will be in stock later.tipoo - Thursday, November 19, 2020 - link
I'm wondering why Intel has any interest in getting into the whitebook space. As mentioned, margins are tight. My guess would be it's a "why bother engineering your own AMD notebook when you can slap a rebrand on this whitebook" kind of thing for the smaller laptop players where it's a substantial cost.A Motile or an Overpowered out of this might be a good value though.
Murloc - Thursday, November 19, 2020 - link
maybe because they feel they can push good designs by having whitebooks on the market which typically has a lot of shit laptops, which might be necessary to compete with vertically integrated companies like apple.gfkBill - Thursday, November 19, 2020 - link
How many "shit" $1500 laptops are there??yankeeDDL - Friday, November 20, 2020 - link
I feel that the laptop situation is not so different from the mobile phone, in the sense that if you want good performance you have to go with a few high end options, while there's a gazillion of phones all "meh" and virtually indistinguishable.For example, I'm an Android fan but I have to recognize Apples iPhone 12 mini as perhaps the only phone for small hands that has good (not decent: good!) specs. I find it incredible.
Same for the laptops: if you want a good screen, you need to go to 1Kusd or higher, but then you also get ultra thin, few ports, non-removable battery and a lot of other "nice to have" that bring the price high. Why can't there be a decent laptop, with decent screen, decent battery, decent SSD with a decent CPU at a reasonable price? Here in Europe is impossible to find laptops with Ryzen 4800U, and the ones with 4700U are scarce, at best. We do have some decent 3700U for 700eur+, with FHD displays, but may come with 256GB SSD and 8GB of Ram, which is garbage.
vladx - Friday, November 20, 2020 - link
"For example, I'm an Android fan but I have to recognize Apples iPhone 12 mini as perhaps the only phone for small hands that has good (not decent: good!) specs. I find it incredible."Uhmm someone obviously didn't do much research, you also have Samsung S20 and Huawei P40 as compact phones with flagship specs on the Android side.
christarp - Friday, November 20, 2020 - link
5.18" x 2.53" x .29" is 3.80 cubic inches for the iphone 12 mini, at 135 grams5.97" x 2.72" x .31" is 5.03 cubic inches for the s20, at 163 grams
5.86" x 2.80" x .33" is 5.41 cubic inches p40, at 175 grams
iphone 12 mini is 75% the size, and 83% the weight of the s20. It's also 70% the size, and 77% the weight of the p40
Thats a huge difference in size.