Raritan Dominion KX IV-101 vs. TinyPilot Voyager 3

TinyPilot is a lean alternative to the Raritan Dominion KX IV-101—lower cost, easier to deploy, and built for modern IT environments. Learn more about the TinyPilot Voyager 3.


TinyPilot's interface is simple

Raritan users are forced to read almost 50 pages of documentation explaining the differences between the clients in order to understand which KVM client is appropriate in which context.

A screenshot of Raritan's documentation table for the three KVM clients.

Raritan's KVM clients require a comparison table and almost 50 pages of explanation.

Raritan's web interface is a hodgepodge of settings with no clear organization or explanation. Raritan forces users to read the 50-page instruction manual because there's no other way to understand terms like "Enable Manually [sic] Mouse Sync."

A screenshot of Raritan's web interface. The 'port configuration' page is open and displaying confusing settings for the mouse, power association, and custom EDIDs.

The Raritan Dominion KX IV-101 overwhelms users with complex and opaque configuration options.

TinyPilot has a single, unified web client that makes all functionality available through user-friendly menus.

TinyPilot BIOS menu

TinyPilot also gets you up and running in just a few minutes with zero software installation required.

TinyPilot is 50% less expensive

At a starting price of $399, a TinyPilot Voyager 3 is 50% less expensive than the Dominion KX IV-101's MSRP - without compromising on the features you need.

A Raritan retailer lists the MSRP as $789

TinyPilot is extensible and open-source

TinyPilot Voyager 3 ships with a full Debian server operating system and grants root access to the device administrator.

With full access to a Linux shell, you can install new packages, customize anything you like, and even run bespoke automated scripts directly from the TinyPilot web interface.

Feature comparison

TinyPilot Voyager 3 Raritan Dominion KX IV-101
Release year 2026 2019
Software improvements Released 4-5x per year Released 1x per year
Pure HTML5 interface ✔️ ✔️
BIOS-level access ✔️ ✔️
Video capture ✔️ ✔️
HDMI passthrough ✔️ ✔️
Audio capture ✔️ ✔️
Keyboard capture ✔️ ✔️
Mouse capture ✔️ ✔️
Built-in display with system information ✔️
Full-screen mode ✔️ ✔️
Password-based authentication ✔️ ✔️
Mount virtual drives ✔️ ✔️
Only via network share
Serial console interface ✔️

✔️
With a hardware add-on

Virtual power button ✔️
Wi-Fi support ✔️
Power over Ethernet (PoE) option ✔️
Additional Ethernet interface option ✔️
Open-source ✔️
Extensible ✔️
Full SSH access ✔️
Cloud access ✔️
With third-party tools
Maximum video resolution 1920x1200 4096x2160
(Not recommended on HTML5 client)
Supported resolutions 32 14
Published timelines for technical support ✔️
Price $399 $789