The compact desktop space has belonged to the Mac mini for a while now. If you're a professional who wants real performance without a hulking tower eating up your desk, that little Apple box has been the obvious pick. Affordable, powerful, small. Hard to argue with.
But Acer just walked into that ring with the Veriton RA110 AI Mini Workstation, and it's coming straight for that same desk-bound professional who wants muscle without the bulk. The big differentiator? It runs on AMD's Ryzen AI Max+ 395 processor, and it leans hard into local AI work in a way the typical business PC just doesn't.
What Sets the Veriton RA110 Apart
Here's the headline spec, and it's a good one: the AMD Ryzen AI Max+ 395. This chip packs a neural processing engine pushing more than 50 TOPS, paired with integrated Radeon graphics. Put those together and you get enough horsepower to run local AI models on-device, up to a staggering 200 billion parameters.
Think about that for a second. Two hundred billion parameters, running locally, on a machine this size. That's not a small thing. It nudges the RA110 out of the conventional business PC category and into the newer world of local AI inference desktops, where the whole point is keeping heavy AI workloads on your own hardware instead of shipping them off to the cloud.
Memory and Storage Built for Heavy Lifting
Power needs room to breathe, and Acer didn't skimp here. The mini workstation comes with up to 128GB of LPDDR5X four-channel memory and up to 2TB of M.2 SSD storage. That's the kind of headroom that lets you wrangle large language models, tackle 3D rendering, and handle video production without the machine gasping for air. For a box this small, that's a serious amount of capability packed in.
The Rest of the Feature Set
The RA110 qualifies as a Copilot+ PC, which it earns thanks to that powerful NPU. It also includes a fingerprint reader for Windows Hello biometrics, so logging in stays quick and secure.
On the connectivity front, you're covered with Wi-Fi 7, Bluetooth 5.4, and an RJ45 Ethernet port for wired reliability. There's also a Kensington lock slot built into the chassis, a small but welcome nod to anyone worried about a compact machine walking off a desk.
Software and Performance Modes
Acer bundles its Sense Pro software with the workstation, and it's more than just filler. The tool gives you real-time monitoring of your CPU, GPU, memory, and thermals, so you always know what's going on under the hood. On top of that, it offers three performance modes to match whatever you're doing: Silent, Balanced, and Performance. Quiet when you need calm, full throttle when you don't.
Pricing and Availability
Now for the part everyone wants to know. Acer hasn't confirmed US pricing or a US release date just yet. The product is currently listed on Acer's regional website, though, and a separate announcement covering US availability is expected to follow. So if you're in the States and eyeing this thing, you'll have to sit tight a little longer.

