Still experimenting.....

Having used Remix OS for over a year, it's clear to me that this variant of Android is tailor-made for Microsoft. It's a full version of Android that has been designed to look and work much like Windows, right down to a file manager and familiar taskbar. Throw in the ability to run apps in windows on tablets and it's perfect for the Windows brand.
That's a good fit for the folks in Redmond and would allow them to put a Windows brand on it even though it is Android. Its Android apps already work out of the box on Remix OS and it wouldn't restrict those from OEM partners. It's a win-win for Microsoft.
Snapdragon 650 (618) and 652 (620)
Snapdragon 618 and Snapdragon 620 were announced on 18 February 2015.[155] They have been since renamed as Snapdragon 650 and Snapdragon 652 respectively.[191] Snapdragon 650 is a hexa-core SoC featuring two ARM Cortex-A72 processor cores and four Cortex-A53 cores, while Snapdragon 652 has four ARM Cortex-A72 cores and four Cortex-A53 cores. The specifications of the two chips are otherwise similar. They have a dual-channel LPDDR3 memory interface, support Cat 7 LTE connectivity, and feature a next-generation Adreno 510 GPU.[155]
Android Nougat is around the corner and with it comes split windows. But while Google is still adjusting to having more than one app window on the screen at the same time, Jide is already perfecting its craft. With Remix OS for PC, it has brought desktop-like Android computing to PCs and Macs running on Intel and AMD chips. Now with the latest update, the giving those same computers a taste of Android 6.0 Marshmallow, as well as improvements to its window management features.
http://www.trustedreviews.com/how-tos/h ... -into-a-pcDetailed Specs
11.6" LCD display at 768p
7.6" x 11.3" x 0.7" (19.3 cm x 28.7 cm x 1.8cm)
2.0lb / 0.9kg
Custom Charging Port w/ Standard US Charger
USB Type-C port
Supports Type-C and Micro-B smartphones
8+ hour battery life
Simultaneously charges smartphone
QWERTY keyboard (Android OS layout)
Android-specific navigation keys (Home, Back, Menu, Recent)
Multi-touch trackpad
Smartphone Minimum Requirements
Android 5.0+
Dual Core Processor and above
1.5GB RAM or higher
Type-C or Micro-B phone port
25mb of free storage (100mb+ recommended)
About this project
UPDATE 7/28: We passed 1M - 1080p screen unlocked + new stretch goals!
We just posted an update detailing how to opt for the 1080p upgrade and sharing more about our new stretch goals!
Stretch goals activated:
150K: Major International Language Keyboard Decals
300K: Extra USB Port - Full Size Type A
500K: Bigger Battery - 8hr+ to 10hr+
1M: 1080p Option ($30 added cost upgrade, note: does reduce max battery life by 1hr)
1.5M: Customized Superbook Sleeves w/ Pockets for Smartphone, free to all backers!
2M: Backlit Keyboard Option ($25 added cost upgrade)
Can you do it? Yes. Should you do it? Let's find out.
Could your smartphone be the only computer you need? That's the dream pitched by a new Kickstarter campaign, but it's not a new dream.
Motorola tried it back 2011 with its Webtop software and Lapdock hardware, but it died within 18 months. Microsoft struck on a similar idea with its Continuum feature for Windows 10 Mobile smartphones, but the Microsoft's declining mobile fortunes don't bode well for its future.
You can forget Apple trying something this radical, too, so it’s left to Android to pick up the slack. Enter Andronium OS and its Superbook.
Sage wrote:This https://www.crowdsupply.com/eoma68/micro-desktop/ } is a very interesting development. No doubt ARM is the future. However, in my long (& bitter!) experience it's not the laptop PC that fails, it's the screen!!! [& sometimes the connectors]. Replacement or s/h screens cost more than an entire used, complete working unit. Moreover, if you've got a very old laptop with a working screen, chances are that it's incompatible and/or doesn't have the card slot.
Maybe things are different in the world's primary disposable nation? But, if they're dumping old laptops in dumpsters (you won't find them in skips in Blighty!) you need to find one that has been carefully placed therein, not heaved.
Frankly, I've always found all laptops an expensive waste of time & dosh.