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Turn Your Android Phone Into a Laptop For $99 With the Superbook (techinsider.io)

An anonymous Slashdot reader writes: A company called Andromium is attempting to harness the processing power of your Android smartphone and turn it into a full fledged computer. The 'Superbook' consists of a 11.6-inch laptop shell, which you connect to your phone via a USB Micro-B or Type-C cable, and run the Andromium OS application (currently in beta, but available in the Play Store)... The leader of the project and Company co-founder Gordon Zheng, previously worked at Google and pitched the idea to them... They refused so he quit his job and founded Andromium Inc.

In December 2014 the company had introduced their first product which was a dock which used the MHL standard to output to external monitor. That campaign failed, however their newest creation, the Superbook smashed their Kickstarter goal in just over 20 minutes.

And within their first 38 hours, they'd crowdfunded $500,000. In an intriguing side note, Andromium "says it'll open its SDK so developers can tailor their apps for Andromium, too, though how much support that gets remains to be seen," reports Tech Insider. But more importantly, "Andromium says its prototypes are finished, and that it hopes to ship the Superbook to backers by February 2017."

24 of 126 comments (clear)

  1. What do you gain from this? by ArtemaOne · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Is there any reason to have highly customized hardware, which inevitably drives up the price in comparison to similarly capable products, rather than just using, say, a Chrombook? The integration seems more like a reliance when all the relevant information can simply be synched anyway.

    1. Re:What do you gain from this? by NotInHere · · Score: 4, Interesting

      The theory I think is that you "upgrade" your phone every 1-2 years, but don't do the same for your laptop. They now want your "laptop" performance to improve with the phone upgrade as well.

      Probably the most interesting part of their plan is the $99 device, its very cheap and includes everything you need. Most likely it also has a processor on board, and that processor needs to be capable enough to send the app data over the cable. It seems the app communicates over the chromecast protocol, so the processor needs to be powerful enough to decode the video codec in real time. If it can be bought independently, its probably very nice as a throw-away laptop, or for schools.

    2. Re:What do you gain from this? by bloodhawk · · Score: 4, Interesting

      The only problem with that is my laptop that is around 7 years old is still massively more powerful than the best modern smartphone, hell even my 10 year old one would be preferrable. why would I want such restrictive performance of a phone without the form factor benefits?

    3. Re: What do you gain from this? by mspohr · · Score: 2

      My 6 year old MacBook is a pig. I got tired of looking at the spinning rainbow and bought a Chromebook. It's fast, responsive and does most everything I need. I can see that a phone with an ARM processor would make a good laptop.

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    4. Re:What do you gain from this? by iCEBaLM · · Score: 2

      Here's the thing about your laptops. They are large, heavy, loud, and hot. While they do have more performance than a Samsung Galaxy S7, it's really not by much, and it won't be noticeable to this products target.

      This product will let people perform productivity tasks using a device they're probably carrying around with them anyways, and a keyboard/display/battery combo that will be light, thin, quiet, and cool. Not only that, they won't have to throw it away when they get a new phone, and the performance/features will just keep upgrading as the phones evolve.

      I think this is a damn good idea. Why buy a smartphone AND a laptop that you will have to end up upgrading both?

    5. Re:What do you gain from this? by bloodhawk · · Score: 2

      The ASUS is not loud heavy and hot and it is 7 YEARS OLD, it was purchased because it is basically silent, extremely light and cool, yet still beats the very top of the line Galaxy s7 performance wise. The whole point is if you are carrying around a laptop shell you may as well carry a lightweight laptop, it will perform a fuck load better than a Galaxy s7, will have far better resolution that the POS screen coming with this shell and you won't be reliant on your phone as your only means of computing power.

    6. Re: What do you gain from this? by Bert64 · · Score: 2

      My 7 year old macbook is fine, but it has an SSD... OSX performs terribly these days if you don't have an SSD.

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  2. A bad feeling by fnj · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I have a feeling at that price the display is going to be a joke. What would be the point of connecting a 2560x1440 phone to a 800x480, or even a 1280x800 display?

    1. Re:A bad feeling by slashcross · · Score: 2

      I have a feeling at that price the display is going to be a joke. What would be the point of connecting a 2560x1440 phone to a 800x480, or even a 1280x800 display?

      The kickstarter site says it's a 768P HD screen, so yes. It will be exactly as you say.

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  3. I will buy it in a heartbeat by 140Mandak262Jamuna · · Score: 2

    No doubt. I am using chromebook. I use my home desktop only for connecting to VPN to work. This will be great. The shell must have enough space inside to store some really long life batteries. Even a small glove box for cables?

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  4. Why? by bloodhawk · · Score: 2

    I mean seriously at this point a laptop with similar levels of performance as your phone is a fraction of the price. If you are going to carry around a laptop shell you may as well make it a real laptop that won't have the shit ton of limitations that this is going to have.

  5. Not bad idea... by future+assassin · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Quick fix for cracked screen phones which seems to happen to me with every phone. Now make it a touch screen too.so the phone can act a a big tablet.

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  6. Atrix by Tailhook · · Score: 3, Informative

    Motorola did this five years ago with ATRIX. Didn't catch on then, but I though it was interesting at the time.

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    1. Re:Atrix by evilviper · · Score: 3, Informative

      I'd like to see this with bluetooth instead of a dock so you can just leave the phone in your pocket. Not sure if the bandwidth would work though.

      One of the big things the Lapdock provided was POWER to the phone... Can't get that if you leave your phone in your pocket.

      And no, bluetooth doesn't provide remotely enough speed for screen updates... WiFi is faster, but still not realistically fast enough, and you'd have to lose your internet connectivity to use it that way. Not to mention your phone would be consuming a lot of power just to refresh the screen, instead of doing any useful work.

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  7. thats a really good idea by FudRucker · · Score: 2

    i will buy one as soon as they make them available

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  8. Re:strange by darkain · · Score: 2

    Actually, not quite. I see this device being better for the corporate space than the consumer space. This is exactly for the people who DONT want to carry a laptop around. Have you ever had a job with a "work from home" option with a company provided laptop that you had to lug back and forth to work every single day? Now imagine if you just had a cheap device at work and a cheap device at home, and only had to port your phone back and forth, and could easily dock into both.

    This thing is essentially an alternative to docking stations for laptops, only now it is a docking station for your phone.

  9. Why? by ricks03 · · Score: 2

    My smartphone IS a full-fledged computer with a tiny screen. If I want to emulate a desktop with a bigger screen, all I need is a bluetooth keyboard and Chromecast/Miracast.

  10. Shelltop that's good enough and Right price point by jwillis84 · · Score: 2

    I think for most people this will be an incredibly good deal.

    The screen resolution is not great, but its good enough and will serve aging using and younger people ourside the Narrow 25-32 agre group quite well.

    The point is your phone is a tether taxed, flash drive and quick access touch device. Its not a laptop.

    The 'Shelltop' is a light weight cell phone "dongle" that is quick to setup, light weight, smaller than a Huge screen Retina Cinerama that weighs in like an MacBook Pro.. and it just more practical.

    Its like 3.5 mm head phones, you don't have to worry about what it does and does not work with.. just plug in the USB-C or the now included USB-A full sized USB port and you instantly have a [wired and reliable] full screen display and multi-touch track pad.

    You also don't have to worry about the App gap, which the MacOS, iOS, Windows and Linux continuum wannabe's try to say are not important. Their Walled gardens with payware and adware supported desktop apps.. simply the model is inverted and contained. If you want that adware supported stuff.. the app has in app purchases.. but its contained within the app.. app-walled.

    Scaling is also something people forget about. Teamviewer and other web session tools will "Scale" a desktop over whatever you have.. same with this.. you can make it larger, or smaller to best ustilize your available pixels.

    This is not for building a Gamers PC with a Wall of LCD monitors.. its for tanking those Hulktops that strain the straps on your undesized Backpack.

    I for one would like to skip Scoliosis of the Spine.

  11. Done, and Done, and yawn. by thesupraman · · Score: 4, Informative

    More to the point, I hope he has called ASUS and told them he is coping an idea they have put out several times over the years, each of which was a sales flop.
    Mind you, after they tried it is 2012, and 2014, perhaps being 2016 makes it 'new' somehow.

    2012, Asus padfone
    2014, Asus transformer book

    http://www.wired.com/2012/02/meet-the-asus-padfone-the-phone-thats-a-tablet-thats-a-notebook/
    https://www.engadget.com/2014/06/02/asus-transformer-book-v-hands-on-video/

    but yeah, go crowdfunding!

    1. Re:Done, and Done, and yawn. by puto · · Score: 2
      I hope you have called ASUS and let them know Motorola did it before they did.

      http://www.phonearena.com/revi...

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    2. Re:Done, and Done, and yawn. by FlaSheridn · · Score: 2
  12. Re:Also by Aighearach · · Score: 2

    Not everybody is stupid enough to use a phone app for banking.

    If a thief steals your card, you're protected from that. If they steal your phone with your 3rd party banking app, you're probably liable for whatever is done with your app. You should only do that with a device that you can maintain physical security. A mobile device can never guarantee physical security.

  13. Re:You are missing the potential benefit: by Aighearach · · Score: 3, Insightful

    That could be a huge win for those of us who no longer trust x86

    What is that supposed to mean? The words look like normal words, but it makes no sense. You stopped trusting a CPU command set? What?

  14. Re:Also by Aighearach · · Score: 2

    I agree with him that a person needs to consider this. It is true for some users; some users don't have a secure home computer, and they probably should not be banking online at all. However, I totally disagree with the idea that because a home computer might be even less safe than a phone, that that means it is safe to bank on the phone. The reality is that it is a minor convenience, it doesn't enable any significant activity or financial process; if you don't have a way to do internet banking safely, you don't really need to do it.