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本帖最后由 Anderson997 于 2023-2-1 18:39 编辑
啊,原来是说相连使用,不行的吧
Plugging the Compute Element into a PCIe slot on a full desktop system is not entirely intended as supported usage model. However, there shouldn’t be any chance for damage as long as you are not trying to hot plug it in the slot. You will need to use the EPS-8pin power for the NUC Element as it does not pull any power from the PCIe 12V lines in the PCIe slot. The Compute Element should turn on with the host system you plug it in, much like a GPU does. The main issue will be turning the Compute Element off gracefully. This will require you to turn it off manually in Windows first before shutting down the desktop system its plugged into. So you could use something like VNC, RDP, or Teamviewer to manage it. If you turn off the full desktop system, the Compute Element will experience the equivalent of pulling the AC power plug out while it’s running. So there would be a minimal risk of data loss and corruption, but that could be managed. There is no communication across the PCIe lanes from system to system, as host PCIe controllers don't talk to each other like that. Managed over LAN or WiFi, or potentially Thunderbolt 3. |
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