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June 16, 2016

Solarin Release Date, Price and Specs – CNET

by John_A

A star-studded London launch with actors Leonardo DiCaprio and Tom Hardy. Premium materials like titanium and leather. These are not the reasons anyone would want to buy a $16,500 (or £9,500 or AU$22,700) phone.

But if Sirin Labs, the creator of the ultra-pricey Solarin phone, has its way, a little switch on the back will bring celebrities, government officials and other Very Powerful and Important People flocking. Rich people, who have the cash to spare.

Meet the luxury phone for the super-rich…
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The switch in question turns on an enhanced security mode that encrypts messages and limits much of the Android phone’s hardware and software capabilities. You would use this when sharing extremely sensitive information, the kind of heady stuff that Sirin Labs imagines would make Solarin owners a target for hackers.

To that end, the company joined with two other security firms, Zimperium to guard against threats, and KoolSpan, which boasts military-grade chip-to-chip encryption with 256-bit AES. Security support remains on twenty-four hour standby.

Solarin isn’t meant for the mass market, which is probably the only thing saving it from being a complete farce. Its core customers “are international business travelers that spend much of their lives on the move,” Sirin Labs CEO Tal Cohen told CNN.

If you really wanted to, you could buy the Solarin now online or at a few stores in London.

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Solarin, left, compared to the Apple iPhone 6S.


Andrew Hoyle/CNET

Solarin’s hardware specs

  • 5.5-inch LED display (2,540×1,440 pixel-resolution)
  • 23.8-megapixel camera
  • 8-megapixel front-facing camera with flash
  • Wi-Gig technology (speeds of up to 4.6Gbps)
  • Qualcomm Snapdragon 810 processor
  • 4,000mAh battery
  • 128GB storage, 4GB RAM

Is it worth the cost?

Phone security is a big deal; nothing highlighted that more than the FBI asking Apple to build a backdoor into its iPhones, and there are other security solutions out there.

Samsung already goes beyond Google’s Android security with its Knox software for Galaxy phones and BlackBerry claims boosted security on the Priv phone. The Blackphone promises even greater security, as does Silent Circle’s GranitePhone.

Speciality devices, especially those cloaked in fancy materials, typically use claims of keeping confidential information secure in order to justify a slightly higher cost — but this sticker price shoots into the realm of the absurd. And clearly draws on the very real fears of an extremely narrow segment of the population.

But without seeing the Solarin in hacker-thwarting action, it’s hard to think of it as anything but exploitative — though of course, we’ll reserve our final judgment.

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