Why use the jack, queen and king of the operating systems that exist for desktop computers? The Mini Remix is different and affordable.
Today, who more and some less known or not used, the Android operating system. It is a system that was initially made for smartphones and tablets, but a few employees who once worked for Google, decided by Kickstarter, that because they would not get tailor a system made for the above mentioned devices to a desktop computer.
The Remix Mini was an inarguable Kickstarter success. The Jide team went looking for just $50,000 and ended up with more than $1.5 million.
The promise Jide made was a cheap Android device that would serve as “a full PC.”
Beneath the pebble-shaped matte plastic exterior is a 1.2GHz quad-core Allwinner processor, 16GB of storage and 2GB of RAM. Nothing that’s going to blow anyone away, but that’s part of the reason it’s just $70.
On the back, there are two USB 2.0 ports, an ethernet port, a HDMI out and a headphone port.
However, the real charm of the Remix Mini is the forked Android Remix OS, not the hardware bundle. It’s based on Android 5.1, but brings a whole lot more to the table in terms of traditional desktop use.
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