Manufacturer | Nextbit (owned by Razer Inc.) |
---|---|
Type | Smartphone |
First released | 16 February 2016 (Kickstarter) |
Discontinued | January 2017 |
Successor | Nextbit Phoenix (unreleased) / Razer Phone (indirect) |
Form factor | Slate |
Dimensions | 149 mm (5.9 in) H 72 mm (2.8 in) W 7 mm (0.28 in) D |
Weight | 150 g (5.3 oz) |
Operating system | Original: Android 5.1.1 "Lollipop" Current: Android 7.1.1 "Nougat" |
System-on-chip | Qualcomm Snapdragon 808 MSM8992 |
CPU | Hexa-core (dual 1.82 GHz + quad 1.44 GHz) 64-bit custom CPU |
GPU | Adreno 418 |
Memory | 3 GB LPDDR3 RAM |
Storage | 32 GB internal and 100 GB cloud storage(Support Ended) |
Battery | 2,680 mAh |
Rear camera | 13 MP with phase detection autofocus, dual-LED dual-tone flash |
Front camera | 5 MP |
Display | 5.2 in (130 mm) 1080p IPS LCD, 424 ppi |
Website | nextbit |
References | [1] |
The Nextbit Robin was an Android smartphone manufactured by Nextbit (bought by Razer Inc.). The phone was marketed as "Cloud-first" where it utilized cloud storage to store data which wouldn't be used for a long period of time, thus saving space in the device's local storage.[2]
The product and crowdfunding campaign was launched on Kickstarter on September 1, 2015.[3] Twelve hours after it was launched, the phone reached its funding goal of US$500,000, much earlier than the expected goal of 30 days,[4] and completed its $1 million goal within two weeks.[5]
It was launched on February 16, 2016, where 1000 units of the GSM variant was shipped to its backers on Kickstarter, and an additional 2,300 units were sold through its official website.[6]
In January 2017, Nextbit was bought by Singaporean-American videogame hardware manufacturer Razer Inc. Sales of the phone were halted almost immediately after the announcement.[7][8] On March 1, 2018, the cloud storage feature was shut down by Nextbit. 10 months after the acquisition, in November 2017, Razer released the Razer Phone, their first game-centric smartphone, with the overall design based on the Robin.[9]