There is a bewildering array of mini computers out there.First off I’d like to talk about the Kamru case. It’s very well built. From the fan to the placement of the extra 2.5 inch drive to the ability to quite easily replace the memory for higher speeds, everything is easily accessible. I don’t trust a manufacturer that hides the fact that “maybe” you can add an extra hard drive. There’s no indication of this except a little notice in the specs. These computers say and shows nothing about where it goes..that worries me. How easy is it to add or replace SSD Hardware? You won’t know until you purchase it and try to take it apart. And that’s even if it has the room.The Kamru shows the ability to had a second SSD and upgrade the memory of you wish. It’s in a graphic and I’m very impressed with that. Plus I’ve actually replaced the memory and added a hard drive and it’s so easy you can do it within a minute. So to recap: I’m very satisfied with Kamru as a manufacturer for mini PC’s and you won’t go wrong. I bought the one Gig version and I recommend that. One finale item. There is no virus on these computers. I’ve used NOD32 and scanned it twice and nothing came up. He might have accidentally infected his computer by himself. I doubt any manufacturer would install a virus on a virgin SSD.So on to the two different processors offered. Let’s compare these two. The two CPU’s are similarly priced and both offered by the same vender. I’m hoping to clear up some confusion. The N95 came out first quarter 2023. The N100 came out January first, 2023. The processors are released close to each other and from what I can see the N95 came out after, I have no idea why? The N95 sips energy at a tiny 100 MHZ until it’s required and then boosts up to 3.4 Gigahertz. It’s has four cores and a 6 Mb of L3 Cache. The maximum supported memory is 4800/MTS. I’ve looked at the memory that comes with it and it’s 3200/MTS and there’s no CAS rating. Chinese brand. For about sixty bucks you can max out the speed and lower CAS level to a respectable 18.WARNING, this mother board will not use DDR 5 or LPDDR5. I’ve looked at the pin out and am confident it will not work. It uses PCI Express Gen 3 which is great in a tiny PC. Four cores, four threads, no hyper threads. Graphics is 1,200 MGhz. Comes with either 512 GIG or 1024 GIG SSD. I purchased the larger hard-drive.The drive that comes with is an M.2 SSD and has respectable speed. The N100 sips energy at a tiny 8 watts. 100 Megahertz is the speed at idle until more is required and then boosts up to 3.4 Gigahertz. It’s has four cores and a 6 Mb of 6 MB of L3 Cache. The maximum supported memory is 4800/MTS. I don’t have the unit so don’t know what memory comes with it but I assume it’s the same. I would assume the SSD drive is similar.For about sixty bucks you can max out the speed and lower CAS level to a respectable 18.WARNING, this mother board will not use DDR 5 or LPDDR5. I’ve looked at the pin out and am confident it will not work. It uses PCI Express Gen 3 which is great in a tiny PC. Four cores, four threads, no hyper threads. Graphics is 1,200 MGhz. Comes with either 612 GIG or 1024 GIG. I purchased the larger hard-drive.The drive is an M.2 SSD and has respectable speed. I would assume the hard drives are similar. They are both Alder-Lake N processors. They both have a maximum of 16 Gig They both share identical video memory from the 16 Gig. They both have a ton of codecs built in and even new ones as of 2023. You seeing something here? There damn similar. The real difference is the watts they consume. N95, 15 watts. N100, 8 watts. It would seem the N100 has the edge but I’m not so sure, more watts “sometimes” means better processing. That may not be the case here. Other differences:The graphics on the N95 IS UHD resolution at 1.2 MHZThe graphics on the N95 IS UHD resolution at 750 MHZHowever the N100 has more channels and even though the N95 has a higher frequency the N100 beats it in gaming.I’m not sure but I believe the Higher frequency on the N95 translates to clearer images. Anyone can correct me on that if they know.The test scores are very similar, one does better at one processor, the other does better at all four. One better at graphics, one better at video processing.I’m not going to get into that here, but I’ll give you my opinion. If you want a mini gaming computer that will play some games at lower res go with N100. If you want a video server like I do as well as audio go with the N95.This is by no means set in stone as they are similar, the tests on the web seem to point this out. Your YMMVHope this review helps you in making a decision.Again, the Kamru mini computers because of their expansion capabilities is the clear winner in my opinion. The type of Processor and size of SSD is yours to decide. I’m pretty sure you can’t go wrong either way.