Aesthetically, the Superbook is a convincing Apple MacBook Air 11-inch clone. The device offers an 11.6-inch, 1366 x 768 LCD panel, what appears to be a full-size island-style keyboard and a large gesture-capable touchpad. There’s also a built-in battery that Andronium claims will last eight hours. Outside of that, the Superbook is an empty shell, just waiting for you to hook up your Android phone via the USB Type-C or microUSB port. The Superbook is powered by your phone’s processor. That said, there are still some minimum specs your device will have to meet in order to play nice with the shell, including Android 5.0 (Lollipop) and at least 1GB of RAM. It’s a solid assumption that the shell will work better with phones that have more than a GB of RAM to spare and 64-bit processors. MORE: Best 2-in-1s (Laptop/Tablet Hybrids) Once your phone is connected to the Superbook, the shell will launch the company’s proprietary Andronium operating system, which enables multitasking capabilities. In short, it’s like Windows Continuum software for Android, except you can access Google Play’s extensive library of apps. It’s a solid idea, but as someone that is constantly using her knees as a desk in cramped spaces (think press conferences), I wish the Superbook offered somewhere to store the phone. As it stands, it’ll just be dangling from a cable hanging on for dear life. Still, $99 is almost too good to pass up, but until Andronium starts shipping out review units, I’ll hold my final judgement in hopeful optimism.  via Liliputing

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