Razer Unveils Project Linda: Android Laptop/Phone Hybrid Concept
Razer today revealed “Project Linda,” a 13.3-inch laptop design powered by the Android-based Razer Phone. The smartphone and laptop hybrid concept harkens a new era for mobile personal computing, blending the familiar Android environment with the ease-of-use of a laptop.
As one of the few companies in the world to straddle user interfaces, laptops and smartphones, Project Linda is a groundbreaking concept that blurs the lines between the smartphone and the laptop. Razer’s Project Linda laptop seamlessly docks the Razer Phone inside its chassis where a touchpad would normally reside, and connects with the press of a button. The phone’s Qualcomm® Snapdragon™ 835 mobile platform and 8 GB of RAM deliver responsive performance, instantly transforming Project Linda into an Android laptop. The Razer Phone 5.7-inch display can be used as a touchpad, or as a second screen for access to apps, tools, and more.
“Android power users and laptop enthusiasts share a need for performance in a mobile form factor, which we provide with our award-winning Razer Phone and Razer laptops,” says Razer co-founder and CEO Min-Liang Tan. “Project Linda combines the best of both worlds, bringing a larger screen and physical keyboard to the Android environment, enhancing the experience for gaming and productivity.”
A full-size, built-in keyboard adds to the capabilities of Project Linda, providing enhanced productivity and differentiated gaming experiences. Users benefit from a responsive and comfortable typing experience, customized for the Android environment with dedicated keys for navigation, search and app selection. The Razer Chroma™ backlighting is ideal for low-light situations and can also be personalized with millions of color options. A user may complete the laptop input experience by using the docked phone as a touchpad, or a mouse may be connected for precision control in games and apps.
Designed for mobility, the unibody CNC aluminum chassis of Razer Project Linda is just 0.59-inch (15 mm) thin and weighs under three pounds (1.25 kg) including the docked phone. Its 13.3-inch Quad HD touchscreen extends the 120 Hz experience available on the Razer Phone to a larger display, providing fluid motion and vibrant visuals. The concept also features a 53.6 Wh internal battery that can rapidly charge the docked phone to full capacity over three times while away from AC power. Inside the laptop is 200 GB of storage, allowing for offline backups and additional local media and app storage. Connectivity afforded via Project Linda includes a built in 3.5-millimeter audio jack, a USB-A port, a USB-C charging port, 720p webcam, and a dual-array microphone, giving a range of options for communication and external devices.
Project Linda bridges the gap between handheld entertainment and laptop convenience. The Razer Phone’s performance, display, and dual front-firing speakers combine seamlessly with Project Linda’s larger screen, keyboard, and battery to provide the ultimate mobile hybrid setup for gaming, creativity, and productivity.
Razer won official “Best of CES” awards an unprecedented seven years in a row, including innovations such as the Razer Switchblade (2012), the Razer Edge tablet (2013), Project Christine (2015), and the Razer Blade Stealth and Core (2016). More than 4,000 companies compete for accolades at CES, the world’s most prestigious tech tradeshow.
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Posts: 15142
Joined: 2006-07-04
Won't catch on. Motorola did it, Asus did it, HP did it, never catches on. It's a cool concept but people just are not interested in having an all in one device like this.
Senior Member
Posts: 11808
Joined: 2012-07-20
Another Dead-weight device.
This time 13.3".
If I wanted big Android device, I would get regular notebook with Multitouch and install Phoenix OS. There is no Android device capable to deliver even 50% of gaming performance which x86 HW delivers due to much higher thermal/cooling design.
And to be honest, Playing most of Android games is already pretty hard on 10" device as controls are hard to reach in center of screen.
For that reason Phoenix OS has very advanced touch emulation function for keyboard and mouse.
Senior Member
Posts: 3660
Joined: 2007-05-31
indeed i agree at 200%...
And if Android is the right choise for gaming on phone, it never convinced me on desktop/laptop device, gaming net device.
Even NVidia shield (wich is the best for this exercice) is not what i expect from a gaming device.
If Razer do it below 500 Euro maybe it get a chance...
Senior Member
Posts: 11808
Joined: 2012-07-20
indeed i agree at 200%...
And if Android is the right choise for gaming on phone, it never convinced me on desktop/laptop device, gaming net device.
Even NVidia shield (wich is the best for this exercice) is not what i expect from a gaming device.
If Razer do it below 500 Euro maybe it get a chance...
I like playing moba games on Android. And Playing on PC in emulator or directly in x86 OS is quite comfortable.
It gives you edge due to larger screen to look at and higher fps + better response times.
My favorite is Mobile Legends. Playing that on keyboard and mouse is like cheating.
But as stated before. Here device rendering is having small thermal envelope of cellphone inserted into dock.
For 500 Euro, you better get half decent x86 chip and do yourself a dualboot. As that gives you device with wider usability.
And in worst case resale value.
Senior Member
Posts: 14645
Joined: 2014-07-21
Looks interesting for people that use devices like these as their ownly ones at home, having a keyboard and bigger screen whenever they need something like a computer.