This came in a good pretty box, but there was nothing but board. In my opinion, SATA was one rare thing in this sorta board and at the price I paid, it was quite a deal.
UDOO was like every other ARM board. `dd`'ing image file to micro SD card and UDOO was ready to run. You would have to bring your own 3.5mm jack 12VDC adapter with 2A to make it operate fully functional with all stuffs attached.
GPIO max voltage was 3.3V. It did work like you connected any Arduino board to your computer with USB. If you had ever used Raspberry Pi, UDOO was faster, but it was fast enough like Intel NUC. I honestly didn't know that ARM CPU would be able to achieve the same level as x86 CPU as far as desktop experience was concerned. To compare with more comparable CPU, Odroid-XU which had Samsung Exynos5 1.6GHz Big.Little CPU (4-core A15 + 4-core A7 which couldn't be used at the same time, but throttling back and forth) UDOO was a bit slower. UDOO's wasn't that stable in hot weather at least it rebooted randomly during the day in Thailand, but worked fine at night. I guessed a big black heatsink wasn't enough. Wifi wasn't that reliable either; got crankly after sleep most of the time. I was happier with a Wifi USB, of course.
Honestly, I didn't use UDOO regularly since I found an 5VDC ARM board powered was much easier to operate; smaller adapter or even obiquitous phone adapter would work properly. Also, with all extra stuffs coming with UDOO wasn't useful to me much. I regular had only a sensor attached to gather data which 76 fully GPIO were surely overqualified. Maybe I just wasn't the target.
### Price
$129 for Udoo Quad at Kickstarter and $135 at [UDOO store](http://shop.udoo.org/usa/?___from_store=usa&popup=no)
### Verdict
It was a fine board. It was affordable enough, but I didn't know. This was where it got weirder since UDOO packed with tons of features and to me, that was a drawback. I would be much happier to get couple of Raspberry Pis or Odroid C1s tinkering around connecting together and had fun more. Maybe it was just me.
However, if you had a plan for a tiny computer with SATA and where Wifi was strong, UDOO might be a good choice for you. I could even imagine it was easier to pack things in one board for kids to learn which was a purpose of the board after all.
-----
__Note__ If I ever got around to play with UDOO SATA port, I would test how good it performed and updated here.