I keep seeing it stated as an AllWinner R16 - not that it'd drastically change anything.marurun wrote: I have read power only. Also, the chip is a MediaTek SoC.
I don't think the USB port can be used that. The hacking efforts so far (including booting a version of Ubuntu) seem to be wiring a serial port to the board.Exhuminator wrote:I'm just curious to know if that USB connection allows firmware updates... it could be a backdoor.
Also I've read the NES Classic processor is more powerful than the Wii's. I don't know if that's accurate or not, but interesting if true.
Power-wise, hard to say for sure - it'd likely depend on the application. If it's the chip I mentioned, a possibly comparable CPU setup is in the Raspberry Pi 2, which also runs a quad-core Cortex A7 (albeit at 900Mhz instead of the potential 1.2Ghz that one runs at). The SoC in the NES mini has a better GPU as well.
Still, on the Whetstone numbers that the Pi 2 puts up, it's possible that the Cortex A7 is ballpark PII-ish per core, and up to faster P4 performance if they're all working together. At that point, will it beat out a 729Mhz improved-upon G3? Seems likely.
