Flipper Devices, the maker of the Flipper Zero pentesting tool, is asking the community to help build Flipper One, an open Linux platform for connected devices.
Unlike Flipper Zero, which focuses on offline access control and radio technologies such as NFC, RFID, infrared, and sub-GHz communications, the Flipper One project is designed as a high-performance, Linux-based platform for networking and hardware experimentation, with sufficient processing power to support SDR (software-defined radio) analysis and local LLMs.
The company underlines that One, which is a portable ARM Linux computer, shouldn’t be seen as an upgrade to Flipper Zero, but rather “a completely different project with its own goals.”
Hardware-wise, Flipper One is built around the Rockchip RK3576 ARM SoC with 8 GB RAM, paired with a Raspberry Pi RP2350 microcontroller in a dual-processor architecture.
The main CPU handles Linux workloads while the MCU independently manages the display, power subsystem, buttons, and boot process. This also practically means that the device remains operational even when the OS is powered off.










