The creators of the Flipper Zero “portable multi-tool device for geeks” have announced the Flipper One. This new pocketable gadget hugely expands the original's feature set with compute, modularity, and expandability to make what is claimed to be a different category of device. The Flipper One isn’t actually ready yet, though. Instead, the Flipper Devices team is asking for help from the community to help steer and finesse the final stages of Flipper One development to meet their ambitious goals.Image 1 of 5
(Image credit: Flipper Devices)Key to the Flipper One’s expanded abilities are the inclusion of an Arm processor capable of running Linux with about the same performance level as a Raspberry Pi 5, according to the press release, plus the addition of modular M.2 expansion capabilities. These are big additions, and at this stage, the Flipper team openly admits it is still wrangling with getting everything working as intended.Some important foundational work has been done in preparing Arm Linux for the Flipper One. For example, the team has partnered with Collabora “to push full support for the Rockchip RK3576 SoC into the mainline Linux kernel.” This is a work in progress, though, with current effort focused on power management and USB DP Alt-mode support. Moreover, drivers for the SoC’s NPU, hardware video decoding, and other accelerators aren’t fully upstream yet.To move forward with the above and related tasks, the Flipper team has created the Flipper One Developer Portal, a public wiki with all the development documentation for Flipper One. Due to the complexity of this new networking and computing multitool, the Wiki houses sub-projects focused on Hardware, Mechanics, Linux software, MCU Firmware, User Interface, Documentation, and Testing. Anyone can join and is welcome to contribute.It sounds like there’s a lot of work left to do, but there’s a lot of potential in this new computing multitool. Its coprocessor architecture mixes the aforementioned octa-core Rockchip RK3576 SoC, which also packs Mali-G52 graphics, an NPU, and comes with 8GB of RAM. It is partnered by the RP2350 low-power MCU. Importantly, the MCU can work alone, bringing a lot of functionality to Flipper One without even getting into Linux. The CPU and MCU communicate and work together using an interconnect system.Get Tom's Hardware's best news and in-depth reviews, straight to your inbox.










