The spec are on the Kick-starter page he linked to. It will be using an Allwinner A13 SOC. (They have partnered with Allwinner to develop this so cheaply.) They ship ***next year*** in January. Will it be a fast as a desktop computer? Probably Not, It should be very comparable to the Rasberry Pi B in therms of performance. it has built in wireless, bluetooth and a battery charge controller, which is quite useful. They have neglected to put VGA or HDMI connectors on it in order to save costs - only composite out via what appears to be a headphone jack. Instead, VGA and HDMI signals are available on the (very large) breakout headers. They sell the adapter boards with it for $10-$15 more. At $9 I think it will primarily be suitable for learning and lowish volume "embedded" applications (perhaps, an obvious statement to make). We'll see how many serial ports and GPIOs will be made available for the user. I could actually see doing production PCB test fixtures controlled by one of these things. On Mon, May 11, 2015 at 2:56 PM, Gordon Williams wrote: > Where are the specs? Is that too much to ask? > > Gordon Williams > > On 15-05-11 12:45 PM, Tamas Rudnai wrote: >> In the meanwhile you can buy a "full fledged" computer for $9 -- 1GHz CP= U + 512MB RAM + 4G Flash + Wifi + BT >> >> https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/1598272670/chip-the-worlds-first-9-= computer >> >> Thanks, >> Tamas --=20 Jason White --=20 http://www.piclist.com/techref/piclist PIC/SX FAQ & list archive View/change your membership options at http://mailman.mit.edu/mailman/listinfo/piclist .