crwdns2933423:0crwdne2933423:0

crwdns2933803:07crwdne2933803:0

crwdns2933797:0Rylie Pavlikcrwdnd2933797:0crwdne2933797:0

crwdns2936045:0crwdne2936045:0 crwdns2933505:0crwdne2933505:0 Adam O'Camb

crwdns2933769:0crwdne2933769:0
crwdns2933771:0crwdne2933771:0
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crwdns2933807:0crwdne2933807:0

[* black] Speaking of labels, we found a few goodies for enterprising devs:
- [* red] These empty pads look like they're ready to accept some ZIFs, possibly for extra USB devices.
- [* orange] Unused USB 3.0 connector
- [* yellow] Cute li'l empty 5-pin socket
- [* green] Similarly empty 10-pin header
+ [* red] Empty pads matching the "Belt Box" HDMI and USB-3 socket footprints, possibly for belt-box-free operation?
+ [* orange] Unused USB 3.0 header for expansion
+ [* yellow] Cute li'l empty 5-pin socket (actually a header for another USB 2.0 port)
+ [* green] Similarly empty 10-pin header (actually JTAG port for the XMEGA MCU)
[* light_blue] More empty solder pads!
[* icon_note] Hardware doesn't have the same open source licensing guidelines that software has. In order to follow a framework that promotes development beyond the code, Razer modeled their [https://github.com/OSVR/OSVR-HDK/blob/master/LICENSE.md|Module Development Kit|new_window=true] platform after Google's [https://atap.google.com/ara/|Project Ara|new_window=true].