Smartphones are generally designed to give you quick access to apps that you may want to use on the go, while desktop and notebook computers have bigger screens, faster processors, and are generally optimized to let you do things like edit documents, surf the web, get work done, or play graphically detailed games.

But Shane Lewis has been working on a device that bridges that divide in an interesting way. When I met Lewis at CES last year he was calling his solution the Nitro Duo — because it’s both an Android smartphone and a Windows PC.

Now he’s updated the platform and he’s getting ready to sell it to the public. The latest version is called the Trinity, and if Lewis can raise enough money through a crowdfunding campaign to fund production, it could begin shipping by the end of the year.

Over the past few years we’ve seen a number of attempts to bring desktop-like features to smartphones. Microsoft’s Continuum for phone software lets you connect a phone like the HP Elite x3 to a monitor, keyboard, and mouse and use it like a computer… that runs Windows 10 Mobile software.

Samsung’s new Galaxy S8 line of smartphones can work with a docking station called DeX that also lets you hook up a keyboard, mouse and display and get a desktop-style user interface. But you still end up running Android apps.

The same can be said of Jide’s Singularity platform, which is designed to allow Android phones to work like desktop computers. Jide founder David Ko has argued that as more people get used to the idea of using Android as a desktop OS, we’ll see more developers offer desktop-class software for the platform. But we’re not exactly there yet.

And Canonical recently gave up on its plans to bring “convergence” to Ubuntu Linux by offering a version that can run across phones, tablets, and PCs.

So here’s what makes Trinity different from all of those: it’s a full-fledged Android phone. And it’s a full-fledged handheld Windows PC. I don’t mean it’s a dual-boot system. I mean there’s hardware for two completely different computers under the hood, but they share ports, a display, and networking features, among other things.

The upshot is that you can use a Trinity device as a phone when you want a phone experience, or as a Windows computer when you want a Windows machine. You can turn off whichever system’s not in use. But you can also keep both running simultaneously and switch the display to show whichever you need at any given moment.

Unlike the prototype I saw at CES 2016, the Trinity also doesn’t require a docking station to work as a desktop. It has full-sized USB and HDMI ports which you can use to plug in a display, keyboard, or other accessories. In fact, you can even plug in two displays at once: one for Android and one for Windows.

The Windows experience is powered by an Intel processor, at least 4GB of RAM, and at least 128GB of mSATA solid state storage.

Android is powered by an ARM-based processor, 2GB of RAM, and a microSD card.

Here are a few things you might want to know before pulling out your wallet though:

  • Prices start at $699 for an entry-level model… and that’s just for early backers.
  • Since there are basically two computers stuffed into one case and full-sized ports, a Trinity is a lot thicker than a typical phone. It measures 19mm (about 0.74 inches) thick.
  • The hardware isn’t particularly state-of-the-art.
  • Battery life kind of stinks at the moment. While there’s still some work being done to improve things, right now the Trinity only gets about 4 hours of continuous use under Android… or an hour of battery life while both Windows and Android are running simultaneously.

Lewis is using components he’s been able to source and work with, but some of those components are a bit on the older side. So while there are some features the Trinity has that you won’t find on most phone-sized devices, it also has a low-resolution display and previous-gen processors.

Here’s what you get with the entry-level Trinity One:

  • 5 inch, 800 x 480 pixel capacitive touchscreen display
  • Intel Atom E8000 processor/4GB DDR3L RAM/128GB storage for Windows
  • Freescale i.MX6 processor/2GBDDR3 RAM/32GB microSD card for Android
  • 802.11b/g/n WiFi and Bluetooth 4.1
  • 13MP rear camera
  • Stereo speakers
  • USB 3.0 port (Windows only)
  • USB 2.0 port (Windows or Android)
  • 2 HDMI ports (one is Windows-only, the other is Windows or Android)
  • 4G LTE (CDMA and GSM support)
  • GPS

There are also higher-priced options with beefier specs. Each model has the same Freescale i.MX6 quad-core ARM Cortex-A9 processor and 2GB of RAM dedicated to Android. But some of the other features are upgraded:

  • Trinity Turbo: Pentium N3710/4GB/128GB (for Windows) for a pledge of $869
  • Trinity Ultimate: Pentium N3710/8GB/256GB (for Windows), 64GB microSD card (for Android) for a pledge of $959

Lewis hopes to begin shipping Trinity devices in December, 2017… but only if he can raise $767,000 through an Indiegogo campaign. That’s a pretty steep goal for a niche product like this.

But the good news is that it’s a fixed funding campaign. That means if you make a pledge and the campaign fails to meet its goal, you won’t have to pay for a device that’s unlikely to ever arrive.

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8 replies on “Trinity is a 5 inch Android smartphone… and a Windows PC (crowdfunding)”

  1. It should be made thinner, with a slider keyboard. This is too bulky, and thus wont replace a phone.

    Ports can be added with a cheap dock/adapter. It will be a much better solution.

    Look at the Fujitsu F-07C. That was a great concept, but poorly executed.

  2. i’d rather a beefy battery in that form factor than the windows-dedicated CPU; use linux on the ARM cpu, with anbox, etc. pipe dream for sure, no less than this thing.

  3. Great design… minus the Android part. 4G and GPS is enough for Windows to connect to cell carriers and get location based data. Unless for some reason Windows is not allowed to access that side of the hardware (which would explain the need for Android).

  4. This has all the red flags of a future failed crowfunding campaign. Please remember, that crowfunding is not a shop and not a preorder. Even if they have honest intentions, even if it’s not a simplr scam the rate of failure is enermous.

    1. Yeah a curiosity at best, an Android phone plus a GPD-Win mini PC would still be cheaper, more powerful and convenient and achieve the same goals.

      1. I here you. But dude. Your carrying around a full fledged PC and Android Phone in your hand. Can’t stress the portability on that. Docks are not all they wonderful. They have never really taken off. Sure they’re neat at first but in our busy lives you don’t generally see people lugging them around in the real world sense. Even for music and expanded listening experiences, they’re used for awhile and discarded. People want portability and tether free.

        The product is sure to ruffle some feathers by competitors. Because they’d rather sell you individual systems at a premium. Those that have tried dumb down the system to run in the newer portable ecosystem. Why settle?

        Like any new product, if and when it ever gets launched and into the hands of the consumers, it will go through upgrades like anything else. Thinner, longer battery life and more power would be expected.

        When you realize your holding a mid grade Laptop notebook in the palm of your hand + Android phone then you understand the value. If you only view it as a phone then this product isn’t for you.

  5. Awesome to innovate like that! My concern is the form factor, just a bit too bulky to want to have in your pocket for very long.

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