WiFi via adapter (USB dongle – Purchased separately).Power: Internal 1850mAh Lithium Polymer Battery (approx.Embedded Microphone and stereo Loudspeakers.Stereo audio DAC: Wolfson Microelectronics WM1800.Display: 3.5 inch OLED 320×240 pixel (resistive touchscreen).Supports SD / SDHC memory cards (up to 32 Gigabytes).Connection to PC: USB 2.0 High Speed through EXT Port.Flash memory: None (128 Mbytes reserved to the OS).video buffer: about 16 Mbytes of main RAM are reserved for the video/texture information.main RAM: 128 Mbytes DDR SDRAM 133 MHz (peak memory bandwidth: 533 Mbytes/s).3D performance: 133M Texel/s and 1,33M Polygon/s.GPU: 3D hardware engine embedded on SoC ( OpenGL ES 1.1 support).CPU: ARM926EJ 533 MHz embedded on SoC (architecture version ARMv5TEJ).SoC (System on a Chip): MagicEyes Pollux VR3520F.This is the last open-source gaming device by GamePark Holdings, as they ceased production and development of gaming hardware to focus solely on software. Because of that, any software that is compatible can be run without the need of creating custom firmware or other homebrew applications. The Caanoo is not a direct competitor of handheld consoles like Nintendo DS or PlayStation Portable, but rather an alternative open source device. The device's launch price was about US$150, which didn't reach any retail stores in North America. It is the successor to the GP2X Wiz, and was showcased at the Electronic Entertainment Expo 2010. It was released on Augin South Korea and were also sold throughout Europe. yeah it's unfortunate, but there's a niche group of people that are willing to pay the additional money for an robust, open ecosystem full on computer.The GP2X Caanoo, more commonly known as Caanoo, stylized CAANOO, is an open source, Linux-based handheld video game console and portable media player developed by the South Korean company GamePark Holdings. all the money they make from the device is from them selling it and that alone, so that's what it has to cost. the people making the pyra don't have any of that. also they have the benefit of making multiple hundreds of thousands if not millions of devices so they have a much higher economy of scale. it's subsidised by the hardware vendor since they preload a bunch of software that they are being paid to put on there. it's subsidised by google, because they wind up making money off of you buying stuff off of their store and viewing their ads. it's being subsidised by your carrier since you are locking in to a 2 year contract (which you pay off that subsidy over time). when you buy a phone for 200 dollars it's being subsidised by multiple companies along the way. yea it's unfortunate, but that's the reality of what the hardware costs. i can't imagine you would be able to do those things on an nvidia shield.Īs for the price. it's also open source and an open platform by design. i think it also has display out via hdmi, but I'm not sure about that. ![]() ![]() it also has multiple usb ports, multiple sdcard ports, a full keyboard, 6 face buttons for things like sega controls. it can run anything that can be compiled under linux. that's just a high performance android device right? it's probably pretty similar(the shield is actually probably more powerful), but the pyra has the upside of having a full-on linux desktop. it can emulate n64 and it also emulates ps1 better than the psp could.
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