DEV Community

p ww
p ww

Posted on

I Thought a Tiny Mini PC Wasn't Enough — Until I Tried a Bigger One

I Thought a Tiny Mini PC Wasn't Enough — Until I Tried a Bigger One

I've been using a small mini PC for a few months now. The kind that fits in your palm, costs next to nothing, and handles email, browsing, and video calls without complaint. It's great for what it is.

But lately I found myself wanting more. More speed when flipping between a dozen tabs. More room for files. More confidence that I could run a heavier tool without waiting.

So I tried a bigger one.


Not Actually Bigger

When I say "bigger," I mean relative to the tiny one I was using before. The Leaderhub LP5C arrived, and I had to laugh — it's still smaller than a hardcover book. It sat next to the old mini PC on my desk, and the difference was noticeable but not dramatic. One was palm-sized. This one was... two palms.

I plugged in my monitors, connected the usual keyboard and mouse, and within minutes I was up and running. Same silent operation. Same clean desk. Same absence of cable chaos.

But something felt different right away.


The Point Where Budget Hits a Wall

Here's the thing about ultra-budget mini PCs: they handle 90% of what most people do. Browsing, documents, video calls, streaming — all fine. That's a genuine win.

But if you're someone who keeps a lot of things open at once — like, a lot — you eventually notice the edges. A hesitation when switching between a heavy spreadsheet and a video call. A second or two of waiting when you unzip a large file. A feeling that the machine is working hard even if it never actually crashes.

That's the gap the LP5C fills. It's not a different kind of machine. It's the same idea — small, quiet, simple — just with more room to breathe.

I noticed it most when I forgot I was using it. The old mini PC made me aware of its limits maybe once or twice a day. The LP5C hasn't done that once. I just work, and the machine stays out of the way.


Why Not Just Build a Desktop?

Fair question. I thought about it. A full tower would cost about the same and offer even more performance.

But here's what I'd lose: the silence, the tiny footprint, the fact that I can tuck this thing behind my monitor and forget it exists. I've gotten used to a desk that's just a keyboard, a screen, and a coffee cup. Going back to a tower feels like going backward.

The LP5C gives me the headroom I needed without asking me to give up what I liked about going small in the first place.


Who This Makes Sense For

If you're like me — you started with a budget mini PC, it worked well, but now you're bumping against its limits — this is the natural next step.

It's also worth considering if you're a developer running local servers or containers, a designer juggling large files, or anyone who works with multiple monitors and doesn't want to think about whether the computer can keep up.

And if you've never tried a mini PC at all? Skip straight to this tier. The price difference is small, and you won't wonder what you're missing.


The Short Version

The LP5C is what happens when you take everything that makes mini PCs great — the silence, the size, the simplicity — and turn up the capability just enough that you stop noticing the computer entirely.

For me, that's exactly what I needed.

Have you hit the limits of your current setup? What made you decide to upgrade — or not?

Top comments (1)

Collapse
 
merbayerp profile image
Mustafa ERBAY

I think “the computer stays out of the way” is actually one of the best definitions of a good upgrade.

Most of us don’t upgrade because the old machine stops working. We upgrade because we get tired of noticing it. 😅

That moment when you stop waiting for tabs to switch, files to open, or containers to start is surprisingly valuable. It’s only a second here and there, but somehow those seconds collect rent all day long.