NexPhone is a 3 OS Phone; Which Operating Systems Are Included?

Every few years someone claims they’ve cracked the “phone that becomes your PC.” Most fade into vaporware. This time, however, the prototype is sitting on a desk, running Android, Ubuntu, and even a custom Windows 11 Mobile-like interface — all on the same device. The NexPhone is real, it’s shipping internationally and early hands-on videos are already circulating online.

At first glance, the device doesn’t win any design awards. It looks like a rugged Android phone from 2018, complete with a waterdrop notch and an oversized chin. But its purpose isn’t aesthetics. The NexPhone is built entirely around functionality: quick OS switching, universal port compatibility, and the ability to replace your laptop if you want it to. Android handles the day-to-day tasks, Ubuntu Touch provides a Linux-first environment, and a modified build of Windows 11 brings back a Lumia-style tile interface optimized for touch — surprisingly close to Windows Phone 8.1 in spirit.

nexphone concept 3 OS phone (2)
nexphone concept 3 OS phone (2)

The hardware is far more modern than the exterior suggests. Inside you get a Snapdragon-class industrial chipset (Qualcomm QCM6490), paired with 12GB of RAM, 256GB of UFS storage, and a microSD slot supporting up to 512GB. The 6.58-inch LCD runs at 1080×2403 with a variable 60–120Hz refresh rate, protected by Gorilla Glass 3. The camera system is unexpectedly capable too: a 64MP Sony IMX787 main shooter, a 13MP ultrawide, and a 10MP selfie sensor, with 4K 30fps recording and slow-motion modes up to 240fps. If you expected compromises, they aren’t here.

What truly defines the NexPhone, however, is I/O. USB-C 3.1 support means you can output video, connect peripherals, and drive a full external monitor without hacks or dongle gymnastics. Plug it into the bundled USB-C/HDMI hub and the phone instantly transforms into a desktop. Windows 11 boots into a full PC view on the monitor, Ubuntu offers a standard desktop session, and Android extends into a DeX-like workspace. In practice, the NexPhone becomes a workstation small enough to fit in your pocket — and rugged enough to survive it. MIL-STD-810H certification, IP68/IP69K water resistance, and a 5000mAh battery with wireless charging round out the package.

International press has already tested the device, posting demos showing the triple-OS workflow, gaming benchmarks on Android, and desktop scenarios on Windows 11. The system isn’t perfect — heavy coding projects and long video renders still push the chipset beyond its thermal comfort zone, and some desktop-grade apps remain better suited to traditional hardware. But for cloud-centric work, communication, writing, light editing, and travel-friendly productivity, the NexPhone covers more ground than expected.

nexphone concept 3 OS phone (3)
nexphone concept 3 OS phone (3)

The idea behind the device is not new, but this may be the closest anyone has come to making it practical. Nex Computer’s founder Emre Kosmaz points to a decade of progress: better performance-per-watt, widespread USB-C standards, cloud-based workflows, and the company’s own experience building NexDock laptop shells. “One device, one set of apps and files — no syncing dance,” Kosmaz says. That continuity is the NexPhone’s main pitch: your phone is your computer.

The NexPhone is priced at 549 USD with a 199 USD reservation fee on nexphone.com. Shipping is expected later this year, and yes — Romania is on the delivery list.

via nexphone

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Passionate about design, especially smartphones, gadgets and tablets. Blogging on this site since 2008 and discovering prototypes and trends before bigshot companies sometimes