An Israeli startup, Sirin Labs, unveiled on Tuesday its first smartphone, the Solarin, a titanium-clad Android gadget that will let you quickly toggle between a regular Android device and a secure, locked-down communications tool.
World's first bendable smartphone to go on sale this year
But here is a catch, this ultra-secure smartphone would cost you an exorbitant $14,000.
Solarin, dubbed as the Rolls Royce of smartphones, comes with Snapdragon 810 chip and a healthy 4GB of RAM, along with internal storage of 120GB with no option of memory card slot. This 5.5 inch beefy device is loaded with a 23.8-megapixel, Sony-made camera and a quad-LED flash. However, the device just has a single SIM slot.
How does it work?
Solarin functions as a regular high-end smartphone until you flick the tiny toggle on back of the device with an integrated fingerprint sensor. Clicking this toggle, turns the phone into cyber secure mode with a green and white, 8-bit skin. Once in the secure mode, all sensors disabled except the most essential sensors necessary to operate the device are disabled. You can only make/receive calls and send/receive text messages, protected by 256-bit AES encryption, only to be read by trusted devices carrying the Solarin Friend app.
Does it worth it
The processor inside the Solarin is a Snapdragon 810, which according to The Verge, Samsung skipped last because of overheating issues. The software the device is running on is a heavily skinned Android 5.1 and the camera is slow as this phone is fat (it weighs over half a pound to be precise).
Above all, the ultra-secure is just for making calls and text messages, you can’t even email, use any apps or go online.
The article originally appeared on Engadget.
COMMENTS (2)
Comments are moderated and generally will be posted if they are on-topic and not abusive.
For more information, please see our Comments FAQ