Teardowns reveal more than meets the eye
Nintendo’s NES Classic Edition won’t be made widely available until this Friday, but some folks have already gotten one and pulled it apart. The first pictures of the mainboard came fromGameSpot Senior Reviews Editor Peter Brown. Enterprising Redditors analyzed the pictures and have come up with the system’s hardware specifications, which werecollected by PC Magazine.
Since the original Nintendo Entertainment System (NES) ran at just 1.79 Megahertz, the NES Classic Edition is several orders of magnitude more powerful. The Allwinner has four cores, something unimaginable 15 years ago, let alone during the NES’s heyday. PC Magazine theorized that the extra processing power is needed to make the system display in HD and to support the screen filters included on the system.

Although the system has an off-the-shelf board andappears to run Linux, don’t go thinking that you’ll be able to easily add game ROMs to the NES Classic. As Mr. Brown wrote in his tweet, you won’t be able to do so without desoldering the flash memory from the motherboard. At that point, you may as well just stick your own hardware in the shell.
NES Classic is a quad core Linux computer[PCMag.com]








