Behind the scenes of Thelio Mega engineering
System76 recently unveiled their latest entirely in-house Linux workstation, the Thelio Mega - a quad-GPU Threadripper monster with a custom case and cooling solution. System76's CEO and founder Carl Richell penned a blog post about the design process of the Thelio Mega, including some performance, temperature, and noise comparisons.
Early this year, we set off to engineer our workstation version of a Le Mans Hypercar. It started with a challenge: Engineer a quad-GPU workstation that doesn't thermal throttle any of the GPUs. Three GPUs is pretty easy. Stack the forth one in there and it's a completely different animal. Months of work and thousands of engineering hours later we accomplished our goal. Every detail was scrutinized. Every part is of the highest quality. And new factory capabilities, like milling, enabled us to introduce unique solutions to design challenges. The result is Thelio Mega. A compact, high-performance quad-GPU system that's quiet enough to sit on your desk.
I'm currently wrapping up a review of the Bonobo WS, and if at all possible, I'll see if I can get a Thelio Mega for review, too (desktops like this, which are usually custom-built for each customer, are a bit harder to get for reviews).