The desktop is being reclaimed. For decades, the “Mini PC” was the go-to solution for minimalist setups, a tiny box hidden behind a monitor. But as of March 2026, the HP EliteBoard G1a has made that box obsolete by turning the entire computer into a single peripheral you can not work without. This is not just a 1980s retro callback; it is an AI-ready Copilot+ PC powerhouse designed for a hybrid workforce that demands high-end silicon without the desk clutter.
The silicon: Ryzen AI 7 350 PRO vs. Apple M4 Pro
The heart of the EliteBoard G1a is the AMD Ryzen AI 7 350 PRO. Built on a refined 4nm process, this “Krackan Point” APU is a hybrid beast specifically tuned for a 28W TDP envelope. While traditional Mini PCs often use 45W or 65W chips that require aggressive, loud cooling, the 350 PRO focuses on Agentic AI throughput to handle 2026-era local workflows without compromising performance.
The 2026 benchmark battle
We have pitted the EliteBoard against the current 12-core Apple M4 Pro Mac Mini. While Apple still holds the crown on single-core performance, the Ryzen chip dominates in local NPU-led tasks.
| Metric | HP EliteBoard G1a (Ryzen AI 7 350 PRO) | Apple Mac Mini (M4 Pro 12-Core) |
| PassMark (CPU Mark) | ~24,074 | ~32,732 |
| Single-Thread Rating | 3,889 | 4,561 |
| NPU Performance | 50 TOPS (XDNA 2) | 38 TOPS (Neural Engine) |
| Graphics (iGPU) | Radeon 860M (RDNA 3.5) | M4 Pro 20-Core GPU |
| Local AI Inference | Superior (Copilot+ Certified) | Competitive (Apple Intelligence) |
The M4 Pro’s lead in raw multi-threading (~26%) is undeniable for heavy video rendering. However, for the “Agentic” workflows of 2026, real-time local translation, autonomous document indexing, and proactive AI agents, the EliteBoard’s 50 TOPS NPU ensures these features run with zero cloud latency. It meets the strict Microsoft Copilot+ baseline that the current Mac Mini technically trails in raw TOPS, making the G1a the more capable AI hub for enterprise automation.
By focusing on sustained NPU performance rather than just bursty CPU clock speeds, AMD has provided HP with a chip that not only talks to AI but also executes it. For users moving away from cloud-dependent tools, this 12W-28W variable TDP part is the most efficient silicon currently on the market.
While the Ryzen AI 7 350 PRO currently leads in local Windows AI tasks, the hardware community is closely watching how it will stack up against the projected Apple M5 performance, which is expected to overhaul the Neural Engine for 2027.

Display and connectivity: The single-cable logic
The EliteBoard G1a is designed to turn any workspace into a multi-monitor command center with zero cable friction. By using a high-bandwidth USB4 (40 Gbps) connection, HP has addressed the primary complaint of Mini PC users: the “spaghetti” of cables required to connect displays and peripherals.
- Dual 4K screens: Powered by the Radeon 860M, the G1a can drive two 4K displays simultaneously at 60Hz via a single connection.
- The “Magic” dongle: HP includes a monitor-side port splitter. You plug your Ethernet (RJ-45), HDMI 2.1, and AC power into the dongle behind the monitor. A single USB-C cable then carries video, data, and 65W of power back to the keyboard.
This “Single-cable” lifestyle is a fundamental shift in desktop ergonomics. It allows a hybrid worker to move their entire OS environment between locations by simply unplugging one tether, effectively treating any 4K monitor as a “dumb terminal” for their EliteBoard.
Thermal management: The “Air-Curtain” engineering
How do you put a 28W CPU under a keyboard without burning the user’s fingertips? This was the primary engineering hurdle for the G1a. HP solved this using a negative-pressure “Air-Curtain” design. Instead of concentrating heat in the center, the G1a utilizes the entire bottom magnesium alloy chassis as a passive heat spreader.
- Intake and exhaust: Dual ultra-thin Liquid Crystal Polymer (LCP) fans pull air from the bottom intake mesh. This air is forced over the VRMs and the Ryzen die before being exhausted through a continuous rear-slit vent located just above the function row.
- The fingertip factor: Because heat is dissipated away from the user, as with laptop cooling, the “touch temperature” of the keys never exceeds 32°C, even under full load.
- Acoustics: The fans use a variable-vane pitch that keeps the noise floor at a whisper-quiet 24.8dB, avoiding the high-pitched whine typical of NUC-style blowers.
By spreading the thermal load across the widest possible surface area, HP has created a high-performance machine that remains thermally invisible to the user. It is a masterclass in chassis-level heat dissipation that makes traditional plastic Mini PC boxes look archaic.

Serviceability: The “anti-apple” manifesto
This is the EliteBoard’s secret weapon. HP has designed this to be the most serviceable PC of the decade, rejecting the “soldered-shut” philosophy that has plagued the industry.
- Modular deck: The keyboard is a standalone module. If you spill coffee on the keys, you do not buy a new $1,000 computer. You pop four captive screws and swap the Top-Mount Modular Deck in under 10 minutes.
- Full component access: Removing the bottom panel gives you direct access to:
- RAM: Two standard DDR5 SODIMM slots (up to 64GB).
- Storage: A full-length M.2 2280 NVMe slot (up to 2TB).
- Battery: The optional 32Wh battery can be replaced with a single latch, no adhesive involved.
- Connectivity: The Wi-Fi 7 card uses a standard M.2 slot and is not soldered to the motherboard.
In a world where Apple sticks even the SSD NAND chips to the board, the EliteBoard G1a is a radical return to ownership. It turns a “disposable” consumer electronic back into a maintainable piece of professional equipment that can survive a decade of use.
Technical comparison table: The definitive breakdown
This is the core engineering delta. While a Mini PC is a “box that requires accessories,” the EliteBoard is an “accessory that is the computer.” We have included the latest Intel Core Ultra 200 Plus (Arrow Lake Refresh) for a complete market view.
| Component | HP EliteBoard G1a (2026) | Apple Mac Mini (M4 Pro) | Intel NUC 15 (Core Ultra 200+) |
| CPU Architecture | AMD Zen 5 (8C / 16T) | Apple M4 Pro (12C / 12T) | Intel Arrow Lake-R (14C / 20T) |
| NPU / AI Power | 50 TOPS (XDNA 2) | 38 TOPS (Neural Engine) | 13 – 48 TOPS (NPU 4) |
| Memory Config | 64GB DDR5 (User-Replaceable) | 64GB (Soldered Unified) | 64GB DDR5 (User-Replaceable) |
| Storage Slots | 1x M.2 2280 NVMe (2TB Max) | 1x Proprietary (Fixed) | 2x M.2 2280 NVMe |
| I/O Connectivity | USB4 40Gbps (DP 2.1) | 3x Thunderbolt 5 | Thunderbolt 4 / HDMI 2.1 |
| Primary Power | 65W USB-C GaN / 32Wh Batt | Internal AC | 120W External Brick |
| Chassis Material | Magnesium Alloy / Recycled Plastic | Recycled Aluminum | Plastic / Aluminum |
| Acoustics (Load) | 24.8 dB (Whisper) | ~45 dB (Active Blower) | ~48 dB (High-RPM Fan) |
| Mobility | 750g (Fits in Laptop Sleeve) | 670g (Box Only) | ~600g (Box Only) |
The engineering takeaway is the Serviceability vs. Integration trade-off. The EliteBoard offers user-replaceable RAM and storage that Apple does not, while maintaining a footprint and acoustic profile that traditional Intel-based NUCs cannot match due to their higher TDP requirements.

Is the HP EliteBoard G1a the king of small form factor PCs?
The Traditional Mini PC remains the tool of choice for those who need desktop-class GPUs (like a 4070 Ti) or who insist on using their own high-end mechanical keyboards. But for the hybrid enterprise professional, the HP EliteBoard G1a is the most logical hardware release in the last decade. It turns the monitor into a “dumb terminal” and makes your entire PC as portable as a laptop, but as functional as a workstation.
