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Review: Nextbit Robin

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Comments (4)
  1. Dr. Dameon Davis DVM says:

    It's just a hands on review.

  2. Zion Kuhn DDS says:

    I absolutely adore my Robin. The battery life is not bad, in fact my Robin lasts longer than my wife's iPhone 6s. I really like that the Robin has a USB C, a new must have feature for any future devices, as the USB C Hubs are simply just wow. Mine has 2 USB 3, HDMI, Ethernet and a SD Card. Which means I can connect my Robin to a monitor, keyboard, mouse, external HD, etc. and use it as a desktop computer. I don't use it for anything fancy, but as a light productivity machine it works flawlessly, using such apps as MS Office mobile, OpenOffice, Evernote, a few Adobe Apps, etc. I don't have to buy an actual desktop computer, yes, it works that well, that is if you know how to properly set it up. I'm using the app, Second Display, which means I can modify the desktop DPI, making it look more like a desktop UI and even extend the desktop instead of just mirroring it. Which means I can still use the Robin as a phone and display other apps on the monitor at the same time. In fact, I can even stream a movie to my TV wirelessly using Allcast for my son, while working on CodeEnvy, a fantastic cloud IDE that also has a pretty nice Android app being displayed on my monitor, while compiling an application through a remote terminal (I also have a local LAMP server running) while I'm talking to my Mom with Hangouts using the phones display and camera. The audio for both sources also works as one is being transmitted through the bluetooth signal and the other is local. That's three different displays and apps all running on a phone all at the same time. iOS users can only dream of doing such things. I don't mean to pick on the iPhone but I only paid $400 dollars for the Robin and it's simply incredible the amount of things I can do with it. I'm even now using it as work as I can mount our secure NAS as a local drive and the Citrix client for Android works really well? So my Robin is a very, multi-purpose device. Now, most people will just use theirs as a phone but after I found out, just how powerful Android can be in the right hands, I had to see how far I could push the platform. It turns out, pretty far, especially on a phone or tablet that has an open bootloader. Those thinking of getting the Robin, head over to XDA after buying it to get Root, buy a decent USB C Hub, theremreally quite small and portable, install Second Display, than Linux Deploy, choose Arch Linux or Debian, install a Xterminal, don't use VNC as it's 10x slower than running your Linux desktop applications using the native frame buffer which is what the Xtermina l will do for you. Create custom Linux application launchers with icons for each of you Linux apps so all you have to do is click on them to start, just Google it, tons of examples available and than your off to the races! I mean I'm running apps like Dia, Inkscape, OpenOffice, Gimp, OpenShot, etc. Those who don't want to root their devices, grab a little Intel Compute stick, they just released a Intel M version with 4GB of RAM. Than just plug it into your USB C Hub, use Microsoft Remote Desktop and you'll have access to a pretty good little Intel based computer accessible through your phone or tablet. I use one as a development server and their small enough to carry around with you. I just smile when the guys around me say how much better their iPhones are when they cant even use them in the office as they're not compatible with our network, no fike-system or multi-user. While I'm using my Robin as a full fledged, actually usable desktop computer (meaning I have the same exact same apps that I use on my UNIX Laptop, I'm a Solaris user. By the way, if you start up a Linux Desktop Environment within the Android XTerminal, it will come up as an overlay. So you can use two environments at once, really cool, I recommend Window Maker (OpenStep) it's small, low on resources and just displays a little dock, to access your applications right click your mouse, supper cool.

  3. Mr. Toni Turcotte DDS says:

    Just search for other phones with a Qualcomm 808, I personally find it just fine. I mean it plays all the games without frame drops. I mostly use a N64, DreamCast, SNES, Sega, PlayStation 2 emulators, I also have replica USB game pads for each of them in which I connect through my little USB C Hub. Since the USB C Hub also has an HDMI out, I also play them a lot on my TV. The games available for Android are just mobile games, even titles like Modem Combat 3, 4, 5, AfterPulse, DeadSpace, Nova 3, ShadowGun, GTA series, Max Layne, etc. play without a single frame drop, even when it's connected to a TV.

  4. Mr. Tremayne Cummerata DDS says:

    Why is there no info for gaming performance?

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