$600 Windows Dev Kit 2023 is powered by Qualcomm Snapdragon 8cx Gen 3 processor

Microsoft has just introduced the Windows Dev Kit 2023, that’s basically a Windows 11 Arm mini PC powered by a Qualcomm Snapdragon 8cx Gen 3 processor designed for developers of Windows programs.

Previously known as “Project Volterra”, the system comes with 32GB RAM, 512GB NVMe storage, mini DP video output, Ethernet, WiFi 6, and Bluetooth 5.1 connectivity, as well as five USB 3.2 Gen 2 ports, and more.

Windows Dev Kit 2023

Windows Dev Kit 2023 specifications:

  • SoC – Qualcomm Snapdragon 8cx Gen 3 compute platform with
    • CPU – 4x 3.0 GHz Prime cores, 4x 2.4 GHz Efficiency Cores
    • GPU – Unnamed Adreno GPU with DirectX 12 (DX12) API support
    • DSP – Qualcomm Hexagon Processor, Qualcomm Sensing Hub
    • AI – Qualcomm Neural Processing Engine SDK support for AI (up to 29+ TOPS)
  • System Memory – 32GB LPDDR4x RAM
  • Storage – 512GB NVMe SSD
  • Video Output – Mini DisplayPort (mini DP) with support for HBR2
  • Connectivity
    • Ethernet RJ45 port
    • WiFi 6 and Bluetooth 5.1
  • USB – 3x USB 3.2 Gen 2  Type-A ports, 2x USB 3.2 Gen 2 Type-C ports
  • Security – sTPM
  • Misc – Power button, boot button, and UEFI button
  • Dimensions – 196 x 152 x 27.6 mm
  • Weight – 960 grams
  • Materials – Shell made with 20% recycled ocean plastic

Qualcomm Snapdragon 8cx Gen 3 mini PC

The Windows Dev Kit 2023 mini PC ships with Windows 11 Pro and the package also includes a power supply. Microsoft provides a native Arm64 toolchain with Visual Studio 2022 17.4, runtimes, libraries, and frameworks, and the system is powerful enough to run Arm64 virtual machines, CI/CD infrastructure, and services to build, test, and release code. It is also suitable for AI applications with the Qualcomm Neural Processing SDK.

As a side note, preliminary support for the Snapdragon 8cx Gen 3 was added to Linux 6.0, and more specifically for the Lenovo Thinkpad X13s laptop. Somebody managed to boot an Arch Linux Arm image on the laptop, so it might work on the Windows devkit as well, bearing in mind that many features of the Snapdragon 8cx Gen3 will not be supported.

Microsoft sells the development kit for $599.99 with a one-year limited hardware warranty. The devkit is only available in Australia, Canada, China, France, Germany, Japan, the United Kingdom, and the United States at this time, and if you try to access the shop from another country you may be greeted with a 404 page. I know since I had to use a VPN to access it… Further details may be found in the announcement.

Share this:
FacebookTwitterHacker NewsSlashdotRedditLinkedInPinterestFlipboardMeWeLineEmailShare

Support CNX Software! Donate via cryptocurrencies, become a Patron on Patreon, or purchase goods on Amazon or Aliexpress

ROCK Pi 4C Plus

18 Replies to “$600 Windows Dev Kit 2023 is powered by Qualcomm Snapdragon 8cx Gen 3 processor”

  1. Finally an affordable ARM developer system with a reasonable single-thread performance. I would have said that the M1 Mac Mini was an affordable developer system, but with a maximum of 16GB of memory, you can’t even compile large projects on it. This machine is about 25% slower than the M1, more on par with a Ryzen 5600U, but at least it has 32GB of RAM.

    1. Its not essential to have 32gb as with zram & swap often you still can.
      For my pocket $599.99 is still steep and the $189 RockPi5 16gb prob would prob be more like but I do have a 4gb & 8gb RockPi5 just to mess around with

      I think its likely we will see an explosion of Arm systems that rival the latest and greatest on all platforms.

    2. The ram of M1 is not really same as other machine. Even with just 16G,I can still browse website when compiling chromium. This is imposible on any other machine with 16G ram.

      1. > Even with just 16G,I can still browse website when compiling chromium.

        Running which OS on the machine?

  2. That’s a nice amount of RAM. I hope it ends up on sale, as any laptop would be. But maybe they’ll just run out, IDK.

    If my info is correct, the “Prime” cores are Cortex-X1 and what you call “Efficiency” cores are Cortex-A78. I would call those “Performance” instead so they aren’t confused as Cortex-A55.

    Also, I’m reminded of the article, Qualcomm 8cx Gen 3: Too dangerous to deploy.

    1. > Qualcomm 8cx Gen 3: Too dangerous to deploy

      Thanks for mentioning this. Yeah, ‘Microsoft Pluton’ seems really like something you want inside your hardware to allow unknown 3rd parties remote and unlimited access to your data stored on such a crappy platform.

    2. that was a really interesting article. i’m quite disappointed as i thought the lenovo x13s had some potential… apparently not. i’ll have to stick with linux on apple m, unfortunately.

    3. > the “Prime” cores are Cortex-X1 and what you call “Efficiency” cores are Cortex-A78

      It’s Cortex-X1C and A78C (no clue what the difference to X1/A78 is but at least they have different core IDs – MIDR_EL1)

  3. It’s amusing how, when a product is designed to run Windows, all its base specs are suddenly inflated by an order of magnitude (RAM, storage, CPU cores etc). If that could allow more powerful product to appear on the market, that would be great. The downside is that raising standards will also mean raising the crappy development standard and will make all of them slow again.

    1. Windows RAM requirements have plateaued in recent years as RAM cost/density stagnated. The industry is still selling Windows laptops with soldered 4 GB today even though most people would recommend going to 8 GB, and I was using 8 GB in 2011. Developers can benefit from going to 32 GB, and that’s who this is for, being a “dev kit”.

      The CPU is just relatively powerful compared to SoCs like the RK3588, but the technology lags behind the latest smartphone SoCs. The Cortex-X1 and A78 are cores from 2020, and are not even ARMv9. Including 4x Cortex-X cores is part of a strategy Qualcomm is employing to increase performance when power requirements are looser, particularly in laptops. It doesn’t matter if it ends up using 15+ Watts (whatever the number is).

      The storage is nothing special, costs about $30. Windows probably needs a minimum of 128 GB to not be a messy experience.

      It’s normal for dev kits to have some inflated specs compared to consumer systems, see the Xbox Series X and PS5 dev kits for example. But nothing has been inflated by an order of magnitude here.

  4. Qualcomm doesn’t officially support linux, does it? We are waiting ARM laptop for soooo long. x13s on 8cx gen 3 is a gift from gods, but… NO LINUX SUPPORT, ARE YOU KIDDING ME?

  5. Ooh I’ll pick one up. I’ve been wanting to try windows on arm for a while but the hardware required has either been very slow (raspi4) or expensive (thinkpad x13s is over £1k). I wonder how WSL and WSA run on it, plus a few low end games.

    That said once linux support matures I’ll remove windows.

    1. I’ve had an hour to play with it and it’s weird. Feels like the TDP is cranked all the way up, I managed about 30-40W peak draw. x86 apps were broadly fine, hwinfo64 reported sse4.2 but not avx. I tried vivaldi, steam, discord then some games: HL2, CSGO, deep rock galactic and persona 5 royal. HL2 and DRG were playable but DRG started crashing in windowed mode. CSGO ran too slowly to be playable and persona 5 crashed on launch.

      Hopefully tomorrow I can get Arch installed under WSL2

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Khadas VIM4 SBC
Khadas VIM4 SBC