The main chip is an nRF24LE1 from Nordic Semiconductor.
It's a microcontroller with 16 kilobytes of flash, 1 kilobyte of RAM, another 1.5 kilobytes of NVRAM, and it does 2.4 GHz wireless.
AND PUNCH OUT ANOTHER ENTRY ON YOUR CARD, IT'S AN 8051!
@bitfliq @foone I absolutely detest factory-paired keys, and a -lot- of newer wireless devices do this. I hate that if a cheap dongle dies or is lost, there's no way to pair a new one. It's just e-waste. This is why these days I try to go either legit bluetooth, or Logitech's similar "Unifying receiver" product line. At least those you can get cheap new dongles easily enough even now. e.e (Or repurpose ones where the peripheral died!)
That's no excuse for the older security issues though.
@foone What's with all these secretly coded chips that are actually 8051s? Is it something like "The first rule about the 8051 club is you don't talk about the 8051 club" or something?
I mean, what's the rationale?
@foone
SMA looks interesting, you could solder an antenna connector on it so you can add an wifi antenna with more gain for whatever use case one can come up with. R14 probably needs to be soldered to the left and middle pad to send the antenna signal to the SMA port.
I'm curious what the empty IC pad on the lower middle edge is intended, thou.