Last year, at IFA 2016, I stumbled across the Ockel Sirius project. In its infancy, the device was seemingly straight forward: put a full PC into a smartphone sized chassis. At the time the project was in its early stages, and in my hands was a non-functioning mockup before the idea went to crowd funding. Normally we do not cover crowdfunding projects as a general rule, so I did not write it up at the time. But I did meet the CEO and the Product Manager, and gave a lot of feedback. I somehow bumped into them again this year while randomly walking through the halls, and they showed a working version two months from a full launch. Some of those ideas were implemented, and it looks like an interesting mash of smartphone and PC.

The Sirius A is easily as tall as, if not slightly taller than, my 6-inch smartphones, the Mate 9 and LG V30, and the requirements for PC ports means that it is also wider, particularly on one side which has two USB 3.0 ports, a HDMI 1.4 port, a DisplayPort, Gigabit Ethernet (alongside internal WiFi) and two different ways to charge, via USB Type-C or with the bundled wall adaptor. The new model was a bit heavier than the prototype from last year, namely because this one had a battery inside – an 11Wh / 3500 mAh battery, good for 3-4 hours of video consumption I was told. The weight of the prototype was around 0.73 lbs, or just over 330 grams. This is 2-2.5x a smartphone, but given that I carry two smartphones anyway, it wasn’t so much of a big jump (from my perspective).

Perhaps the reason for such a battery life number comes from the chipset: Ockel is using Intel’s Cherry Trail Atom platform here, in the Atom x7-Z8750. This is a quad-core 1.60-2.60 GHz processor, with a rated TDP of 2W. It uses Intel’s Gen8 graphics, which has native H.264 decode but only hybrid HEVC and VP9, which is likely to draw extra power. The reason for Cherry Trail is one of time and available parts – Intel has not launched a 2W equivalent processor with its new Atom cores, and also Ockel has been designing the system for over a year, meaning that parts would have had to have been locked down. That aside, they see the device more as a tool for professionals that need a full windows device but do not want to carry a laptop. With Windows 10 in play, Ockel says, the separate PC and tablet modes take care of a number of pain points with Windows touch screen interactions.

Implemented since the last discussion with them was a fingerprint sensor, for an easy unlock. Ockel are using a Goodix sensor, similar to the Huawei Matebook X and Huawei smartphones. This feature I requested just for easy access to the OS after picking the device up, rather than continually inserting a password. The power button in this case merely turns off the display, rather than putting the device into a sleep/hibernate state.

The hardware also supports dual display output, from both the HDMI and DisplayPort simultaneously, with the idea that a user can plug the device into desktop hardware when at a desk.

Ockel is set to offer two versions of the Sirius: the Sirius A and the Sirius A Pro. Both systems will have the same SoC, the same 1920x1080 IPS panel, and the same ports, differing in OS version (Win 10 Home vs Win 10 Pro), memory (4GB vs 8GB LPDDR3-1600) and storage (64GB vs 128GB eMMC). There is an additional micro-SD slot, and Ockel will be offering both versions of the device with optional 128GB micro-SD cards.

Ockel Sirius
  Sirius A Sirius A Pro
CPU Intel Atom X7-Z8700, 4C/4T,
1.6 GHz Base, 2.56 GHz Turbo
14nm, Airmont Cores
GPU Intel HD Graphics 405, 12 EUs
200 MHz Base, 600 MHz Turbo
DRAM 4GB LPDDR3-1600 8GB LPDDR3-1600
Storage 64GB Samsung eMMC 5.0
+ microSD
128GB Samsung eMMC 5.0
+ microSD
Display 6.0-inch 1920x1080 IPS
Glossy Multi-Touch
OS Windows 10 Home Windows 10 Pro
USB 2 x USB 3.0
1 x USB Type-C
Networking 1 x Realtek RJ-45
1 x 802.11ac Intel AC3165
Bluetooth 4.2
Display Outputs 1 x HDMI 1.4a
1 x DisplayPort
Audio Realtek Audio Codec
Two Rear Speakers
Embedded Microphone
3.5mm Jack
Sensors Fingerprint (Goodix)
Accelerometer
Gyroscope
Magnetometer
Camera Front Facing, 5MP
Battery Li-Po 3000 mAh (11Wh)
Dimensions 85.5 x 160.0 x 8.6 to 21.4 mm
3.4 x 6.3 x 0.3 to 0.8 inches

334g / 0.736 lb
Price Pre-Order: $549
Retail: $699
Pre-Order: $649
Retail: $799

Pricing will start at $699 for the base Sirius A model (W10 Home, 4GB, 64GB), $799 for the Sirius A Pro model (W10 Pro, 8GB, 128GB), and an additional $50 for the microSD card but $150 cheaper with a pre-order via Ockel's website. This will come across as a lot, for what is an Atom-based Windows 10 PC in such a small form factor, when similar full-sized laptops can be had for $300-$400, depending on specifications, such as the HP Stream or Chuwi Lapbook which are strong contenders. Ultimately Ockel is going after a crowd that wants a smartphone-like sized mobile PC with a mobile like experience. There will be barriers to this, such as the lack of a direct dialling app (could use Skype), no rear facing camera, and potential battery life.

Pre-order sales are still available through Ockel's website, with mass production to start in October and shipments from November 20th. Buying it with a pre-order also provides a set of wireless earbuds. We’ve been offered a review sample – I’m unsure at this point if we should get Ganesh to review it as a mini-PC, Brett to review it as a laptop, or someone else to review it as a smartphone. 

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  • jclynch90 - Monday, December 25, 2017 - link

    I bought the GPD Pocket on Ebay before I saw the Sirius on Indiegogo. I'm totally blind and I bought it for traveling purposes, it's a lot smaller than a regular one. What I liked about the Sirius though was that it had everything, including the mic and camera, nice for skype video calls. Sure I can get a headset mic for the Pocket, but no camera makes video calls a no go, unless they make a camera and mic together. Any thoughts and opinions on this would be great. I'm thinking of looking into the Sirius for the simple fact it has everything and is of a similar build to the Pocket, with added features.
  • IntelUser2000 - Monday, September 4, 2017 - link

    They are NOT pitching it as a Smartphone.

    They are saying its a desktop you can carry in your pocket. In that case the Ethernet jack makes sense. On their Indiegogo page they are also showing that connecting an external screen(with HDMI and Displayport jacks) will turn it into a desktop.
  • Hurr Durr - Monday, September 4, 2017 - link

    If it`s a desktop first, NUC makes more sense. I want my goddamn phone.
  • Samus - Monday, September 4, 2017 - link

    Reminds me of the futurefone campaign people lost hundreds of thousands on...
  • speculatrix - Sunday, September 10, 2017 - link

    If it's meant to be a portable alternative to desktop, then the infocus kangaroo makes more sense, as you'd buy multiple docks, and have the Pro dock at work and the basic dock at home.
  • Wardrop - Monday, September 4, 2017 - link

    Don't you mean you "sirius-ly doubt"?
  • smunter6 - Monday, September 4, 2017 - link

    Why are you refusing to call this a tablet? Isn't this just a surface mini?
  • phoenix_rizzen - Friday, September 8, 2017 - link

    Other than the array of full-sized ports, I'm not seeing how this is different from a generic Windows 10 tablet. It's a portable touchscreen device. Add a dock to any Dell Windows tablet and you get the same result.

    If it looks like a tablet, works like a tablet, is the size of a tablet ... then call it a tablet.

    There's lots of x86-based Windows 8-10 tablets out there. Why wouldn't you call those "pocket PCs" like this one?
  • uhuznaa - Monday, September 4, 2017 - link

    They will sell thousands.
  • HammerStrike - Monday, September 4, 2017 - link

    This has be the worst design I have seen in the mobile space over the last 5 years. Ethernet jack in phone? What were they thinking.

    Perhaps there is some appeal If you use a standard business suite and wanted one device that you could use as your mobile then dock at your desk for productivity purposes, but USB type C is perfect for that - put a couple of those on there, get rid of the rest of the ports and do what yo can to even out the dimensions. Wouldn't be perfect but would be a hell of a lot better then what they got now.

    This is the mobile equivalent of The Homer.

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