The board supports Microsoft's Windows CE .NET 4.2 embedded operating system.
According to InHand CEO Andrew Girson, the new SBC provides a range of power management capabilities, including enhancements to measure and adjust the CPU's core operating voltage on-the-fly and optional support for an ultra-low-power mobile memory architecture. Additionally, the board supports InHand's "BatterySmart" system software suite, which leverages the XScale processor's dynamic performance monitoring capabilities and includes features such as an improved real-time dynamic clock-scaling algorithm, reduced power peripheral software drivers, and additional measurement and analysis tools, Girson said. Combining the BatterySmart software with low-voltage memory, Fingertip3's idle-mode power consumption is 50 percent lower than the previous StrongARM-based Fingertip SBC, he added.

Fingertip3 front (left) and back (right) viewSummary of specifications . . .
- CPU -- Intel XScale, PXA255, up to 400MHz
- Flash Memory -- 16-32 MB, Intel Strata flash with bootloader and on-board programming (JTAG)
- SDRAM -- 32-64 MB with self-refresh
- Display controller -- 1/8 VGA / QVGA / HVGA LCD controller with touchscreen and backlight support
- Serial Ports -- 1 RS232, 1 CMOS (logic level), 1 RS232/CMOS
- USB Slave port
- Other interfaces: synchronous serial interface (SSP and SPI); IC; Network Synchronous Serial Port (NSSP)
- Digital I/O -- 12 general purpose pins, interrupt capable
- Audio -- 20-bit stereo audio codec with direct connection to microphone and speaker, Full AC97 compliant
- Two onboard expansion slots: CompactFlash slot; Secure Digital (SD) slot
- Bluetooth option, via add-on module
- GPS option, via add-on module
- Dimensions -- 2.4 x 3.4 in.
- Power consumption -- as low as 350mW
A Fingertip3 reference platform which includes the SBC along with a development platform, software, and documentation is priced at $2,995. The SBC by itself is available for volume purchase, and the complete Fingertip3 reference platform is also available for licensing, InHand said.