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Another handheld! Although not a gaming handheld like you may have been thinking. The Mecha Comet is a small handheld modular Linux computer around the size of a phone. For GamingOnLinux readers who love tinkering, it looks like quite a fun little device.

Powered by Mechanix OS (Debian Linux based) it has an interesting modular snap-on front-face that allows you to change the inputs on the device. Extensions for the front include a gamepad, keyboard and GPIO (general-purpose input/output) for you to make your own.

Main tech specs:

Operating System

Mechanix OS (Linux, Debian)

CPU

1.8 GHz Quad-core ARM Cortex-A53 (64-Bit)

Memory

4GB LPDDR4 RAM

Storage

32 GB Flash (eMMC)

Wireless

2.4 GHz/5.0 GHz 802.11ac, Bluetooth 5.0

Display

3.4" IPS LED Display, Capacitive Touch

PCIe

M.2 Slot (PCIe 2.0, 1x lane)

Camera

5 MP (with Auto-focus)

Audio

2x Digital Mic, HD Speaker

Power

3000 mAH Battery, Type-C (5V)

Ports

1x Gigabit Ethernet, 2x USB 2.0

Peripherals

Gyroscope, RTC, ADC

Security

Trust Anchor (CC EAL 6+), Accelerated Crypto

Dimensions (mm/in)

150mm x 73.55mm x 16mm (220g)

I don't have any need at all for it, but it's another device like the Pilet that I just kind-of want to have.

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For the operating system you get full access to Debian packages, and of course people can port it over to whatever distro they like. Their team said their Mechanix Shell is built in rust and supports GPU rendering on Wayland, plus they built an open source UI framework to build on top of their shell. The hardware is designed to be easy to repair and extend too.

See more on their website and upcoming Kickstarter.

Article taken from GamingOnLinux.com.
Tags: Hardware, Misc
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12 comments Subscribe

Drakker 14 hours ago
If this thing could also make phone calls out of the box without an external attachment I'd buy it and ditch my old Android phone in a heartbeat.


Last edited by Drakker on 10 Jan 2025 at 1:53 pm UTC
g000h 14 hours ago
This device reminds me of the Nokia Linux mobile phones - The N900 running Maemo Linux and the N9 running Meego Linux. Those phones came out at approximately the same time as the first Android and Apple phones. They were doing really well and a hit with users, and had capabilities above Android and Apple phones of that era. However Steve Elop (who used to work for Microsoft) was taken on at Nokia as the new CEO, and he pushed Windows phones as the prime directive. This split up the company, ruining Nokia going forward, and the wonderfully-capable Linux phones got abandoned. Windows phones ended up failing and competing poorly against Apple and Android devices. Nokia became a shell of its former self. A splinter-group of ex-Nokia staff put together the Jolla company and have Linux phones running their own SailfishOS (but they are way behind the tech giants Apple and Google).

In recent years I have become better informed about the privacy invasions which Big Tech companies (Apple, Google, Amazon, Tesla, Microsoft, etc) are inflicting on society. Apple and Google's phones are designed to snoop on users and collect loads of information. Each person gets profiled, targeted, and ultimately manipulated. I go out of my way to prevent data collection, to conserve my privacy. (There are lots of ways to do this, e.g. Using Firefox or Brave browser, using Ublock Origin tracker blocking, using privacy search engines/not Google search, using Linux desktop, and using Degoogled Phones.)

Currently I run a selection of custom firmwares on Android phones. Some firmwares are replacing Android with Linux. Some firmwares replace 'stock' Android (as provided by the phone manufacturer) with AOSP firmwares (Android Open Source Project, the base operating system before Google adds their spying proprietary components).

Some Linux firmwares (that can be used on specific Android phones): Droidian, Ubuntu Touch, SailfishOS, PostmarketOS.

Some decent degoogled Android operating systems: GrapheneOS, CalyxOS, LineageOS, e/OS (E Foundation), DivestOS, LMODroid.
Termy 13 hours ago
As with the Pilet - i somehow really want one, but i just can't justify it/imagine enough stuff to do with it to justify the purchase
R Daneel Olivaw 12 hours ago
and it has an ethernet port! Woooo!!!!

but boooo kickstarter yet again

I'll keep an eye on it though and see if it makes it to proper market.
sarmad 9 hours ago
Having ethernet and USB ports makes the device useful for people working in the auto industry as well as those working in networking. Smart idea.
R Daneel Olivaw 9 hours ago
Having ethernet and USB ports makes the device useful for people working in the auto industry as well as those working in networking. Smart idea.

Network architect's dream. I didn't have an ethernet tester when we were building our home, so I was just walking around the house with the electrician to every room with my heavy ass laptop with a usbc->eth adapter dangling off of it, and perching in mid air to connect to the wall socket and test it. This device would be perfect for that!
Doktor-Mandrake 7 hours ago
Both this and pilet look insanely cool

I do like the discussions around how cool it'd be to have a little open source linux phone

Had my midrange phone about 6 years and needing an upgrade, mostly because it's battery is starting to go but honestly would love something more open-source

Same reason I never bought a tablet, not a big fan of how closed down they are, so I'd love a little open source tablet like the pilet as well
R Daneel Olivaw 7 hours ago
I would do unspeakable things for a linux phone that could be used as a daily driver. Unfortunately this does not exist, and it doesn't look like it'll be existing anytime soon either. Sad.
Drakker 6 hours ago
The Pinephone is getting there, but its specs are anemic at best. At least this thing makes up for the low specs with its wonderful connectivity, which makes it more desirable in my opinion.


Last edited by Drakker on 11 Jan 2025 at 12:03 am UTC
scaine 5 hours ago
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I was just walking around the house with the electrician to every room with my heavy ass laptop with a usbc->eth adapter dangling off of it
You and me both, that was exactly my painful experience too. However, I do think the eth, while awesome, is overkill here. A little usb->eth dongle would suit me.

Edit to add, I went back to look at the Pilet again and while both are appealing (particularly the larger Pilet model), I have to say this Mecha is waaaay more stylish. And I love the modular keyboard and gamepad options. Just a shame these are Kickstarter projects. Got a wait on hands, I guess.


Last edited by scaine on 10 Jan 2025 at 11:17 pm UTC
ElectricPrism 2 hours ago
I would do unspeakable things for a linux phone that could be used as a daily driver. Unfortunately this does not exist, and it doesn't look like it'll be existing anytime soon either. Sad.

Fret not, I'm here to get you into big BIG trouble.

I've thought a lot about this lately and there are some solutions.

Option 1. You root any Thin Small Android Cellphone with LineageOS, and literally don't use it -- you can optionally remove the cameras, microphone if you so desire and install literally nothing on it. You build it into the same case as a Linux Phone and tether the Internet connection and tunnel the whole thing over VPN. It'll be slightly larger, but have access to popular cellular network without exposing much data to Android.

Option 2. The return of the car-phone. You add a extra battery to your car trunk and attach it to a Linux Car Server that is attached to a StarLink Mini Roam dish ($50/mo) mounted on your car. You also broadcast Wifi from the car and connect a Linux device such as this. The car computer can have a mod screen in the middle and double as a music, video, game, and entertainment center on the go. You heard a truck carrying hard drives driving down the road has more throughput, don't let your dreams be dreams.

Option 3. You wait for StarLink Direct to Cell and either use a officially supported device, or you hope one of us makes a "Modem Wifi Brick" like in Option 1.

--

With these options in mind -- it really is daft that we are carrying around these non-Linux devices. I wouldn't be surprised if we see some people make this in the modder community in the next year. Using Stock Android is miserable. The sooner we cross this bridge the better.

Edit: Just to comment more on Option 2 -- it's much easier to give a car computer a stronger CPU and GPU too, so if you stream to the phone or screen you could probably achieve some pretty impressive results in terms of speed. Like imagine playing AAA games broadcasted from your car. It's doable. Maybe you have a old LCD Steam Deck laying around too -- might make a pretty decent car computer with a more specialized distro installed. Disconnect the left and right daughterboards, put it in a metal case or whatnot -- 15-30 watts isn't too bad.


Last edited by ElectricPrism on 11 Jan 2025 at 1:44 am UTC
BigRob029 57 minutes ago
I was hoping for a headphone jack cuz it looks like it could be a portable hifi mp3 player with portable DAC potential.

It's giving future palm pilot vibes tho.
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