The following is a Nintendo DSi Panda unit used in development for the Nintendo 3DS, the unit would be placed in a Gyroscope unit and connect via a KIS card containing a ribbon cable.
This unit is sadly missing the Gyroscope unit but still has the KIS card, oddly this unit is set into Kiosk mode meaning all text comes up in Japanese with no options to toggle English, this can however be changed by changing a fuse on the motherboard, this fuse was added to prevent factory workers turning the unit off by mistake.
Some of the earliest documentation of the Alpha XeDK dates back to October 2003 when Xerox contractor Michael Hanscom shared a picture of a truckload of PowerMac G5s arriving on Microsoft's Redmond campus. Hanscom was later fired for posting the photos to his online blog. The Alpha XeDK was used for development of early Xbox 360 titles including Crackdown, Condemned, Kameo and Full Auto. Development of these titles was later moved to Beta hardware and eventually, final XDK hardware before being released. The Alpha XeDK was used for all demos at E3 2005. Even though the final case design was being shown, all of the locked kiosk cabinets contained the PowerMac G5 Alpha XeDKs and wired controllers due to the lack of RF board. When Microsoft moved all development to the Beta XeDK, the Alpha XeDKs were resold to full time Microsoft employees for $300 USD with a limit of 1 per employee. Although these kits all had the Microsoft Game Studios stickers on them, most were wiped and reinstalled with Mac OS X for personal use.
More information on the Alpha 2 can be found on our dedicated XBOX 360, XenonWiki
An early XBOX ONE Protype dated around 6 months before the final hardware revision, this motherboard is reused from even earlier units that had zebra stripes.
The motherboard still retains debugging functions at this stage.
The following item is an XBOX 360 Slim Dummy model often used in kiosk units, these are complete minus the fact the motherboard is blank with no components.
The following item is a prototype PlayStation 5 motherboard, this version which is EDM-BR10 wasn't released to the public.
EDM-BR10 appears to be the diskless motherboard, another such board named EDM-AR10 exists, which appears to be the disk based version.
Our board appears to be a reject, and was as such disposed off in e-waste, it then suffered from water damage along with damage to the motherboard rendering it unrepairable at this time.
The EDM-BR10 board still retains a PVT (Product Validation Testing) WiFi chip.