The Adafruit Fruit Jam is a credit card-sized RP2350-powered mini computer that is designed to run classic Macintosh through the uMac emulator. It supports System 2.0 up to System 7.5.5, 720p video via DVI, audio, and USB keyboard and mouse.
Built around the Raspberry Pi RP2350 MCU, the Fruit Jam board also features an ESP32-C6 wireless module and offers DVI output via the RP2350’s HSTX interface, USB-C for bootloading, a microSD card slot for storage, and an onboard TLV320DAC3100 I2S audio DAC for stereo headphones and a mono speaker. There’s also a 16-pin GPIO header, NeoPixels LEDs, tactile switches, and STEMMA QT and JST connectors for expansion. These features make this board suitable for retro emulation, educational projects, and lightweight standalone computing.
Adafruit Fruit Jam specifications:
Microcontroller – Raspberry Pi RP2350B CPU Dual-core Arm Cortex-M33 @ 150 MHz with Arm Trustzone, Secure boot OR Dual-core RISC-V Hazard3 @ 150 MHz Either two cores can be used. Memory – 520 KB on-chip SRAM Package – QFN-80
Memory – 8MB PSRAM
Storage 16MB SPI Flash MicroSD card slot
Video Output – DVI via HSTX port
Audio On-board TLV320DAC3100 I2S Audio DAC Stereo headphone output Mono speaker output (mini speaker included)
USB 1x USB Type-C port for power, bootloading, USB client Dual USB Type-A host ports (keyboard, mouse, game controllers)
Expansion STEMMA QT I²C connector 3-pin JST STEMMA connector 16-pin GPIO header (10x A/D GPIOs, 5V, 3.3V, GND)
Debug – PicoProbe debug port
Misc 5x NeoPixel RGB LEDs 3x tactile switches ON/OFF switch
Dimensions – 85.725mm x 53.975mm (credit-card size meets ISO/IEC 7810 ID-1)
In terms of software support, this development board supports CircuitPython, Arduino IDE, and the Pico SDK (C/C++). The board can also run emulators such as uMac, CP/M (RunCPM), and MCUME for retro platforms. It also supports games, multimedia projects, and custom applications. More information can be found on Fruit Jam’s primary guide page. You can also check out the Fruit Jam Mac Emulator guide for detailed instructions on setting up and running classic Macintosh systems on the board.
Previously, we have seen Olimex RP2350pc, a similar Raspberry Pi RP2350-based development board design to run and emulate Apple OS, and run Reload emulator to emulate Apple ][, Apple ][e, Oric-Atmos, Pravetz, and Puldin 8-bit computers. It can also run Paul Robson’s RP2350pc user library to allow compilers and OS to be created with a unified, BIOS-like API. The Adafruit Fruit Jam should be able to support similar retro-computing emulators and libraries, but with more features.
The Adafruit Fruit Jam board is sold for $39.95 on the company’s online store. In the package, you will get a protective top plate with nylon screws, a mini speaker, and a bumper kit for stability. At the time of writing, only 23 units are available, and the stock is expected to sell out soon.
Debashis Das is a technical content writer and embedded engineer with over five years of experience in the industry. With expertise in Embedded C, PCB Design, and SEO optimization, he effectively blends difficult technical topics with clear communication
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