 But here we have the Rockchip 3288, and this is the Ratsa. So you got this board. How did you get this board? A fellow colleague, Fu Wei from Red Hat, knew somebody on the team, and they were nice enough to donate this to KernelCI.org, and here I am with the board. So you're going to put it right on KernelCI? Yeah, I think we're going to put it on KernelCI and make sure that it's well supported upstream. So there we have the Ratsa logo, a bunch of RAM around it. That's right, and the base board here is really nice. I like the design so that if they come out with a newer module in the future, you could simply unscrew it here, pull it out of the slot, and then replace the module while your peripherals stay the same. So what are the peripherals here? Well, so you've got some low-speed basic IEO out the side here. This is a battery connector. If you want to run an external battery, obviously a SATA connector, it's your reset. You've got a USB OTG. You've got an infrared port here. You've got your serial port connector here. This is a coin cell battery for probably the real-time clock. You've got Type A USB. You've got an MMC slot here, audio jack. You've got some more pins for IEO, which is really nice. This looks like it might be a header for an LCD panel at some point. Is something like Arduino headers? Yeah, exactly. This would be more for the Arduino headers here. You probably have SPI, I-Squared-C, and GPIOs. There's a little information next to each of them. Yeah, which is really nice to have that laid out on the PCB. You don't have to go to the schematics and second guess on which way the board's oriented and things like that. It just did not, but that's difficult to do. It's just nice to have it printed directly on the PCB like this. So you've got your reset here, and then you've got your WLAN radio antenna, external antenna port here, gigabit ethernet. You've got your standard HDMI connector. And then this is the audio, high-speed audio, the optical audio jack, and again, some more type A USB and your input power. So there's no USB 3? There is no USB 3 that I'm aware of on this platform. In fact, this is still a pre-production unit. They had to make some wire mods, so I'm told that the audio doesn't work, which is a problem for me. Everything else works fine. We don't test audio on lava? We do. You know, it's less of an issue for doing kernel development downstream. How do you test audio? We have an audio loopback system so that we can play a known file out the audio output jack, and then we can play it back into another thing and compare the results. So that's typically how we... Is it automatic compare? It is. It is. Now we can't... Like the sound wave stuff? Yeah, it's fairly basic. You know, does audio work reasonably well? It's not like tuning for very high quality audio. It's just basic enablement type testing. So this is cool. This is a 3288 developing board, Raksa guys, and they're probably going to put it in some kind of a box, set-up box. Can you look in the back? Yeah, sure. So it looks like there's some wire mods on here, but yeah, this is a very, very nice PCB layout. I really like the way they've designed it and they've laid things out. So you have some external connectors here. This is probably maybe for a touch screen at some point. This is clean. Yeah, no. This is a very well-designed board. I'm very happy with it and looking forward to seeing what else they make. It's the Tom QB guy. He's a QB board. That's right. He used to be QB board and now as a Raksa, and how does this work, this kind of cable mod? Well, this is pretty typical of early prototypes. So they put it somewhere and they put it somewhere else? Yeah, and they say, okay, that didn't really work so well on this design, so we need to move these signals over here and then they do that. And so basically when this comes out, it's available for consumers to buy. This will all be redesigned and retested. Nice. So, Raksa, what do you think they will be testing on this? I'm sure. Debian, Ubuntu. We'll make sure Debian runs on it. I'm sure any of the Debian-based variants will run. Are they going to play around with Chromium, ChromOS? I would really like to see that, you know, like a mini Chrome box would be a very neat use case for this. Also, of course, Android. But yeah, no. ChromOS would be... Chromium is open source. People should go and hack on the 3288. Yeah, that's right. And get it perfect. Yeah. I'd like to see... Rocktrip is probably working on that. Oh yeah, I'm sure. And I've heard rumors of Chromebooks and I believe you've even done some videos with the Rocktrip Chromebooks, so looking forward to seeing those. And then people can optimize Ubuntu on a Cortex-A17 quad core. Yeah, that's right. It's exciting to see the ARM ecosystem so broad where you can have these designs here and there's differentiation with these processors, even though they're more or less the same architecture. And Lollipop Android. That's right. Yeah. So everything's there. Yeah. Very nice looking board. Very impressed. And thanks to the team for providing this to me. I'm sure we'll put it to good use. So people should go on Raksa and check it out.