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  • (uplifting music)

  • - Hey, it's Chaim with The Verge, and I'm here at CES

  • with Razer's new Project Linda prototype.

  • Every year at CES, Razer always brings

  • a new and interesting prototype to kind of show off

  • some ideas for the future of computing.

  • This year's is Project Linda, which is a laptop dock

  • for the Razer phone.

  • Basically, take your Razer phone,

  • and you put it in the center of the laptop over here,

  • and you hit this docking button.

  • A USBC connector extends into the phone,

  • and it brings it up on the laptop

  • as a full laptop experience.

  • You can see those apps which are running in full desktop

  • or tablet mode.

  • Here's The Verge website.

  • You can still, there are hardware keys

  • to access things like Google Assistant

  • and hardware keys to access core Android functions,

  • like the back button and the app switcher.

  • You can also pop up games or productivity software,

  • like Lightroom, which runs in this tablet mode,

  • but this is, obviously, much more

  • of a usable work environment to get things done

  • than necessarily trying to do it on a phone.

  • Razer is eventually hoping to be able to develop this

  • to the point where you can actually run different content

  • on the two screens.

  • So, you can have, for example, Lightroom open

  • and have a palette picker on here.

  • You can plug in a mouse on the side,

  • but the idea is really to extend the capabilities

  • of what your phone can do into more of a laptop setting.

  • Instead of just mirroring the phone,

  • the Project Linda prototype actually also charges it

  • while it's plugged in.

  • The idea being that when you're using it on the laptop,

  • when you take it out, your phone will have more charge

  • than when you started.

  • The Project Linda prototype also has roughly 200 gigabytes

  • of extra space so you can store more stuff.

  • Ports-wise, you have a USBC port and a headphone jack

  • on one side, a full-sized USB type A port on the other side.

  • So, you can plug in any, basically, any peripheral

  • that's supported by an Android phone.

  • So, flash drives, mice, keyboards, et cetera,

  • and there's a headphone jack, which is always nice.

  • There's no speakers on the device

  • because it takes advantage of the front-facing speakers

  • on the Razer phone itself, which is a clever repurposing,

  • and instead of using the camera though,

  • there is a webcam and mic built into the top

  • so that people aren't looking up your nose

  • while you're having a Skype conversation.

  • It's still unclear whether or not

  • Razer will actually be bringing this to market.

  • Razer has done a lot of prototypes at CES.

  • Some of them make it to market, some of them don't.

  • Some of them end up informing other products

  • that do make it to market.

  • So, it's still in development,

  • and there is no idea of knowing whether or not

  • we'll actually see it make the final cut,

  • but for now, it's a really interesting prototype

  • to extend your phone,

  • especially as phones become more powerful.

  • The inside is a soft-touch coating.

  • So, that doesn't damage the phone,

  • and you can kind of see how it works.

  • Just really, really cool and really fun to play with.

(uplifting music)

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