Skip to main content

Former Android chief Andy Rubin reportedly developing flagship Android phone

essentials phone news andy rubin
Intel
Andy Rubin, the co-creator of Android, may have resigned from Google’s mobile division way back in 2013, but that doesn’t mean he’s called it quits on mobile. According to a detailed report in Bloomberg, the software engineer-turned-entrepreneur’s new company, Essential, is preparing to launch a premium mobile that’ll take on the very best Apple, Google, Samsung, and other consumer electronics heavyweights have to offer.

Essential’s forthcoming flagship is described as featuring an “edge-to-edge” screen that lacks a surrounding bezel. At least one prototype boasts a screen “larger than the iPhone 7 Plus’ (5.5 inches),” Bloomberg reports, in addition to metal edges and a back made of ceramic that’s “more difficult to manufacture than typical smartphone materials.” And company engineers are experimenting with a touch-sensitive feature akin to Apple’s 3D Touch, which would enable the phone’s screen to sense different levels of pressure.

Like the LG G5 and Moto Z before it, the phone is rumored to support modular add-ons that’ll extend and enhance its capabilities. A proprietary magnetic connector will reportedly charge the battery and connect to third-party peripherals. And already, Essential’s engineers are reportedly working on a “sphere-shaped camera” that shoots 360-degree photographs viewable in virtual reality.

The phone’s software remains a mystery, but it could incorporate elements of artificial intelligence. “New computing platforms happen every 10-12 years,” Rubin said at Bloomberg’s Technology Conference in June. “What’s the next platform? … It’s about data and people training AI systems to learn.”

Essential’s on a tight time frame. Rubin is reportedly in talks with Apple supplier Hon Hai Precision Industry Co. — better known as Foxconn. — to begin mass production ahead of a mid-2017 launch. And he reportedly talked to smartphone mobile carriers about device at the Consumer Electronics Show in Vegas, including several from Sprint Corp.

The company’s shooting for a price that’ll rival the iPhone 7 and Pixel ($650), but Bloomberg notes that all of the plans are still in flux.

Essentials is a relative market newcomer. It’s the product of Rubin’s startup accelerator, Playground Global, which has raised more than $300 million from investors including Hewlett-Packard Co., Google, and Foxconn. Rubin registered Essential Products Inc. with California regulators in November 2015, and in late 2016, the company was granted a trademark with the United States Patent and Trademark Office.

The company lists smartphones, tablets, accessories, and “computer operating software for mobile phones” among its goods and services, and it employs a veritable cornucopia of software and hardware talent. Rebecca Zavin, a former senior Google software manager, is leading the phone’s software development. Jason Keats and Joe Tate, former Apple and Qualcomm executives, respectively, have been charged with hardware design. Kelly Liang, a former business executive with Google’s experimental X lab, is overseeing the company’s business development. And Brian Wallace, a former Samsung and Magic Leap executive, is heading the company’s marketing.

Time will tell whether Rubin’s brainchild sees the light of day. But all signs point to a serious flagship smartphone contender emerging in the coming months.

Kyle Wiggers
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Kyle Wiggers is a writer, Web designer, and podcaster with an acute interest in all things tech. When not reviewing gadgets…
Nothing founder teases company’s first Android smartphone
Nothing Ear 1 app's gesture control settings.

Carl Pei, founder of Nothing, has teased that the London-based consumer technology startup is working on its very first Android smartphone.

Rumors about a smartphone being developed by Nothing sprang up in October 2021, nine months after the ex-cofounder of OnePlus left the Chinese smartphone maker to launch the very company that reminds Greek mythology buffs of Odysseus calling himself Nobody. On Tuesday, Pei sent out a tweet that seems to corroborate those rumors.

Read more
Samsung Galaxy S21 FE vs. iPhone 13: Affordable flagship takes on the mass-market iPhone
Samsung Galaxy phone on counter.

The Samsung Galaxy S21 FE may have had a delayed launch, but it has made the affordable flagship smartphones' space quite a bit more interesting. Not only does it compete against affordable flagships like the Google Pixel 6 and the OnePlus 9, but the S21 FE's launch price of $699 also inevitably pits it against several phones that are positioned above it -- including its stablemate -- the Samsung Galaxy S21 and not to mention, the Apple iPhone 13. These two handsets will definitely be on the list of people intending to spend around $700 on a new phone.

Does Samsung's affordable flagship really have a chance when pitted against Apple's mid-tier iPhone model, the mightly iPhone 13? That is precisely what we will investigate in this article.
Specs

Read more
Jio’s $26 (actually $78) Android phone aims to improve accessibility in India
jiophone next by reliance jio in black color running pragati os android 11 go

Super-affordable 4G LTE data plans offered by Reliance Jio, India's largest telecom operator, have led to a monumental uptake of affordable smartphones in the last five years, transitioning India into a market with over 700 million 4G users. The telco, which also sells affordable 4G feature phones running on KaiOS, now aims to disrupt the smartphone market by announcing an Android phone called JioPhone Next that will be available for an initial cost of only 1,999 rupees, or roughly $26.

If that sounds too good to be true, that's because it is. While those buying the JioPhone Next will have the option to pay only 1,999 rupees at the time of purchase, they will also have to pay at least 300 rupees ($4) each month for the next 18 or 24 months depending on the plan they choose. These recurring payments will include the monthly subscription cost, as well as the remaining cost of the handset. Notably, these plans are exclusive to the JioPhone Next and will not be valid for other 4G smartphones.

Read more