
Korean company GamePark Holdings have finally
released the GP2x Wiz portable games console, the successor to the popular, but abruptly end-of-life'd, GP2x. What makes these portable devices special is that they run Linux, and are more or less aimed at the enthusiast and homebrew markets.
Specification-wise, the GP2x Wiz packs a serious punch. Taken directly from Wikipedia (as that's the most complete list I could find):
Chipset: MagicEyes Pollux System-on-a-Chip
CPU: 533MHz ARM9 3D Accelerator
NAND Flash Memory: 1 GB
RAM: SDRAM 64 MB
Operating System: GNU/Linux-based OS
Storage: SD Card (with SDHC support)
Connection to PC: USB 2.0 High Speed
USB Host: USB 2.0
Power: Internal 2000mAh Lithium Polymer Battery (approx. 7 hours game/video playback)
Display: 320×240 2.8 inch AMOLED Touch Screen
Microphone Input
Physical size: 121 mm wide, 61 mm high, 18 mm deep
Weight: 98 g (without battery), 136 g (with battery)
3D Acceleration and TV Out
Chipset supports OpenGL ES 1.1
133M Texel/sec, 1.33M Polygon/sec.
It comes with lots of audio and video codecs built-in, as well as an implementation of Flash 8. However, the real potential for this device - from my perspective, at least - is its ability to run several emulators. This means you can have lots of amazingly good games, all in your pocket. For me, that would mean SNES games, but the possibilities are endless.