Mesuit is an iPhone battery case that runs Android and has a second SIM slot
With its vast international popularity and tendency to stick to a
design for two years or so at a time, Apple's iPhone is the perfect
canvas for creative accessory design. The general rule is that if you
can think it, it probably exists in a shape that you can slap on an
iPhone. And amid a seae of silly concepts, like the JoeyBra, Vyne,
Knucklecase ot the ToneFone (all of which we urge you to Google), every
once in a while an interesting idea comes along.
This is exactly the case with Mesuit - a new Chinese-developed case
for the iPhone 6, 6 Plus, 6s and 6s Plus. Upon first inspection, it
seems to be just another battery extender case and it does do that,
adding 1700 mAh on the smaller devices and 2500 mAh on the Plus ones.
However, the real trick is that the case is actually a fully-working
mobile device with its own modem and SIM card and it runs an
Android-based Mesuit OS 1.0 with an Apus Launcher and access to Android
apps. Unlike other similar concepts, like the popSLATE e-ink case, the
Mesuit actually uses the iPhone's screen, rather than a second one. This
is done only through a connection via the Lightning port and an app.
That definitely sounds impressive, even more so when you consider the case also has 32GB, 64GB or 128GB of memory it can share with the main iOS system. The only real question is how well and fluent the integration works. But, even if the whole second device is isolated to the app alone, it is still an impressive feat.
As already mentioned, the Mesuit case comes in a small model,
measuring 160.5 x 70 x 5.5 mm with an asking price of CNY 999 (about
$150) and a 180.5 x 80.8 x 5.55 mm one for CNY 1099 ($165). Jijia, the
company behind it also announced it is working on an iOS case for
Android devices due next year, which sounds even more ambitious.
Source (in Chinese) | Via
That definitely sounds impressive, even more so when you consider the case also has 32GB, 64GB or 128GB of memory it can share with the main iOS system. The only real question is how well and fluent the integration works. But, even if the whole second device is isolated to the app alone, it is still an impressive feat.
Comments
Post a Comment
Kindly Comment Only related to Post