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According to Logic, the PT-1ZB0 (above) uses the processor that launched (at least) a thousand devices, the Atom N270, along with the inevitable 945GSE northbridge and ICH7M southbridge. Along with 1GB of wide-temperature DDR2 RAM (expandability not cited), the system includes a bay for a 2.5-inch hard disk drive, plus a front-accessible Type II CompactFlash slot, the company says.
As can be seen from the pictures, the PT-1ZB0 is no "box" PC, instead employing longer-lower-wider styling reminiscent of the 1964 Oldsmobile 98 once owned by this author. Instead of a hood ornament, though, its front panel includes two USB 2.0 ports, audio I/O (mic and line in), and the CompactFlash door.

The PT-1ZB0's rear panel has DVI-I and VGA video outputs supporting resolutions up to 2048 x 1536 pixels, a line audio output, four additional USB 2.0 ports, and two gigabit Ethernet ports. There are also three serial ports, all employing RJ45 connectors, the company says.
According to Logic, the PT-1ZB0 has an internal PCI Express Mini Card slot. This is intended primarily for an optional wireless LAN card, and two different antennas (four-inch or eight-inch) are offered as options.
Logic says the PT-1ZB0 is operable on DC power ranging from 10 to 28 Volts, supplied by an external, 65-Watt AC adapter. The device runs Windows 7, Windows XP, or Ubuntu Linux 10.04, the company adds.
Features and specifications listed by Logic Supply for the PT-1ZB0 include:
According to Logic Supply, the PT-1ZB0 will be available at the end of this month for prices starting at approximately $750. More information may be found on the company's product page, here.