Mecha Comet – Open Modular Linux Handheld Computer
Posted by Realman78 3 days ago
Comments
Comment by yjftsjthsd-h 14 hours ago
Comment by shoaibmerchant 6 hours ago
We are currently following the NXP IMX downstream kernel, that is why you can check the 'imx-' prefix on our branch, their releases follow 6 months after the LTS release. NXP IMX 6.18 will release roughly by end of March, when it does you will see us updating to 6.18 as well. By the time we ship, we mostly likely will be shipping 6.18.
Now we do intend to upstream, we've even got mainline u-boot to start working with the device albeit the display. We were waiting for the hardware configuration to be stabilized before we submit the device trees and start actively working on mainline support. It won't happen overnight but you will see our documentation clearly defining how far we are from the mainline. Also to add here, compared to other SOCs, NXP already has very good mainline support.
Comment by leoedin 3 hours ago
I had a poke around the u-boot and linux repos they share, and it looks like the changes from mainline are pretty minimal - mostly related to device trees and configuration. That's to be expected for any custom board.
Obviously if the company died before this stuff was mainlined, then someone would need to maintain it. But from what I've seen everything you'd need is out there already.
Comment by Fnoord 14 hours ago
It comes with a good, proven BB keyboard. No option for GPIO pins or gamepad module, but I don't need such anyway. Instead, what I have in it is a USB hub which fits nicely in the side.
Unfortunately, the RPi CM I had lying around were CM4 with eMMC or CM5 w/o WiFi/BT. So I bought a new CM5, with 16 GB RAM. That was end of last summer. I'm not sure I'd bother now, given the RAM prices which surely affected CM5 prices. Actually, I should probably sell those for profit, since they're not doing anything.
Comment by anonzzzies 12 hours ago
Comment by backscratches 10 hours ago
Comment by LeonM 6 hours ago
How are they going to fund 7 years of support for a device that sells maybe a few thousand units? How are they going to guarantee they will still be around, and interested in maintaining the device drivers in 2033?
The Linux kernel project will remove the device drivers from the mainline kernel if they are no longer actively maintained and in use. So it is very likely that the support will be dropped from the mainline kernel way before 2033, as there probably won't be any users of this device remaining, and the original developers long gone.
Call me negative, but I expect that this company wil just vanish after some time. The team will just move on, maybe even start again under a different name, but there will be nobody to be held responsible for promises and claims they made in the past.
Comment by shoaibmerchant 5 hours ago
I can completely understand the skepticism, any startup today releasing something and promising to support will be taken with a grain of salt. I cannot guarantee that Mecha will not run out of business in 7 years. But at the very least we have the confidence to commit to 7 years of support, if we are able to keep the show going.
Why we are confident of extending this support -
1. The SOC from NXP is widely used in automotives and industries. Their support is listed till 2036, https://www.nxp.com/products/nxp-product-information/nxp-pro... which means their downstream will keep seeing updates. In above comment I mentioned that they follow 6 months+LTS release dates. To give an example, IMX6 that were released in 2011 are still actively supported in 2026. You can even buy SOMs and are still deployed in production.
2. The WiFi chip we are using is NXP IW612, again has longevity till 2038, which means it will still see its driver being updated and maintained.
3. Our audio codec is from Analog (MAX98090) again widely used and in production.
4. Most of our usb and power controllers are from TI, which can be expected to be around in the kernel for a long time.
5. None of the parts we've used are not recommended for new design or obsolete or come from unknown vendors. A lot of care has been taken in choosing the right parts?
From my point of view our work in supporting is to ensure we pull changes, run our test suites, see if everything works and repeat. What am I missing? There are no device drivers built that are exclusive to the Comet at this stage. You can review our device trees on our repos.
Also, we have a longer roadmap ahead of us - selling few thousand units in 5 days is no indicator of how things will be in the future. We are betting on this hardware and more hardware that we release later.
You can sit on the fence and keep expecting us to fail, that is your prerogative. But that doesn't automatically imply that we are ill-prepared.
(edit: formatting)
Comment by worthless-trash 3 hours ago
Comment by onli 5 hours ago
You might very well be right about the company, it is the likely outcome after all for all companies. But if the kernel support is seeded properly there should be a bit more time than predicted even then.
Also, positively: They did the communication on the website really well (I stumbled over the comet before), extended it nicely and the kickstarter campaign seems to be a big success. They have a good chance to stick around.
Comment by lloydatkinson 8 hours ago
I learned my lesson with this niche market after CHIP: https://www.linux-magazine.com/Online/Features/Exploring-the...
These clowns didn’t even tell anyone they went out of business, it took someone going to their listed address in person who found the office had been completely gutted to get ready for the next tenant.
Comment by bdcravens 1 hour ago
Comment by codybontecou 1 hour ago
Comment by watusername 4 hours ago
Comment by jagged-chisel 3 hours ago
Comment by aeve890 3 hours ago
Comment by fsflover 3 hours ago
Comment by pengaru 27 minutes ago
Have you noticed something similar? do you listen to music on your L5?
Edit: I should also mention it does this regardless of audio out the internal DAC+3.5mm TRS, or over a USB MBox attached to a dock. It seems to be something quite low-level disabling interrupts for too long, something like that.
Comment by solomonb 15 hours ago
I want to want it but I fear it would just sit on my desk. Does anyone have cool ideas for uses?
Comment by Layogtima 10 hours ago
https://mecha.so/comet#use-cases
I'll add pictures/videos of the examples we've internally tested in a bit!
Comment by Fnoord 14 hours ago
Anything with USB-A is neat with this type of device. For example, a LimeSDR USB would work (even a uSDR for M.2, though I'd wait for the successor).
For Kali, I sport a GPD Pocket 2, and that works well, but I'm in the process of switching that to my Hackberry Pi CM5.
Still, I bought that end of last summer. I honestly would not buy any computer right now. The RAM prices are simply insane.
Comment by jibbers 12 hours ago
Comment by bsimpson 11 hours ago
Looks rad, but I have a Legion Go which I can play any game I want and tinker on. This seems like it would be a worse version of that, but also not a useful phone replacement.
Comment by c0wb0yc0d3r 14 hours ago
Comment by mikestorrent 13 hours ago
Comment by solomonb 12 hours ago
There are so many cool vaguely scifi tech projects one could build these days but almost none of them have actual utility. : (
Comment by Fnoord 1 hour ago
If you perform pentests or red teaming, a mobile device with CLI access is very useful (whether a smartphone is suffice I leave up to the reader). If you are using the device non-mobile, you could attach an external screen and keyboard to it (and perhaps pointer device, I like the Apple Magic Trackpad, even on Linux it works well these days). That way, you could for example write your pentest report on the machine while not fscking up your eyes. Also remember: if you got WLAN or 5G you can get access to more horsepower. It is not as if you were going to run hashcat on these devices locally. You can also run SSHd (and even remote desktop, I guess) on the machine and admin it like that from a fully blown computer. You could also use it with SDR, or for example for reverse engineering (which you could do in a VM as well, if you prefer).
Personally, I think this device would be pretty cool for a kid to learn Linux on (better than the Hackberry Pi CM5 which I got). The UI is neat, there's a CLI, and they can game on as well as explore on it. Pretty good deal a ~250 EUR machine to learn Linux on, as well as game. Remember: if it is ARM, it can run all the Android apps via Waydroid. No emulation or x86-64 Android versions necessary. I see it as a successor to Clockwork Pi GameShell [1] in that regard, as even the 2 GB RAM version is more powerful. That device had only 1 GB RAM, and:
> Introducing new Clockwork OS, based on Debian 9 ARMhf and Linux mainline Kernel 4.1x. You can run PICO 8, LOVE2D, PyGame, Phaser.io, Libretro, and many other game engines smoothly.
There's the Clockwork uConsole [2] as well, and you can put a RPi CM 3 or 4 in it. The A-04 variant specifically seems akin to the Mecha Comet i.MX 8 variant.
> A-04 ARM64-bit Quad-core Cortex-A53 1.8GHZ 4 Mali-T720 2GB DDR3
The RISC-V variant only has 1 GB RAM, the other variants got 4 GB DDR4.
Both the uConsole and the Mecha Comet are candybar format. Compared to Clockwork Pi's Devterm and GPD Pocket series which are clamshell. The Mecha Comet however allows you to easily swap the keyboard with a gamepad. The Clockwork devices don't allow this; they're tailored for either keyboard candybar, keyboard clamshell, or gamepad (candybar).
Comment by pkphilip 12 hours ago
Comment by bsimpson 11 hours ago
> LTE or 5G Modems
> Add mobile data and calling support to your Comet. Bring your own modem and antenna or use our standard LTE upgrade kit.
Comment by RockRobotRock 11 hours ago
Comment by shoaibmerchant 5 hours ago
We haven't because it isn't primarily a phone. But we will eventually. But the folks at PlaMo are testing their dialer app and it works fine.
Comment by Layogtima 10 hours ago
https://discord.com/channels/1163379146106359858/13975741030...
Comment by pkphilip 11 hours ago
Comment by metalman 7 hours ago
Comment by Realman78 2 hours ago
I travel a lot and manage servers, so I’ve been wanting a dedicated “SSH machine” that I can always carry with me. With how good AI tooling has gotten, doing real work on a tiny device is suddenly very viable. The other day I SSH’d into a box from my phone while I was at the gym and just told Claude Code to fix a Kubernetes manifest issue. It was fixed and deployed in under two minutes.
I mentioned this idea at work and a few coworkers immediately said they’d buy one if it existed. Curious what others think.
Comment by IgorPartola 2 hours ago
You can also slap a keyboard onto an existing phone. I have tried vibe coding via ssh from my iPhone and honestly it’s not terrible at all. Instead of doom scrolling I can build things.
Comment by tpah8 2 hours ago
Comment by Fnoord 1 hour ago
Second, their BIOS is a beta version of a commerciel BIOS, lol. As such, it doesn't have Intel SGX enabled.
That said, it served me as cyberdeck before cyberdecks were all the rage, and before they were easy and cheap to build. It stems from a time when ARM64 wasn't still as powerful as the current (approx) decade. Of course the machine has some downsides for 2026 standards. 2x USB-A, 1x USB-C, for example. I'd rather have 2x USB-C, since you use one for power. I also modded the device for better thermals, and have replaced the battery. The machine sits behind 8 philips screws.
One cool thing the GPD Pocket 3 and GPD Pocket 4 have, is similar to what Framework has: a modular port, where you can keep the form factor but gain KVM, RS232, etc.
The base variant of the Mecha Comet comes with very little storage and RAM:
> This is the base variant with 2GB RAM and 64GB Storage.
And a relatively slow i.MX8. If you want to go with the quicker i.MX95 you're better off with:
> This is the base variant with 4GB RAM and 64GB Storage.
But that one is 50 EUR more, and still comes with only 64 GB storage and 4 GB RAM. My GPD Pocket 2 in 2018 came with 8 GB RAM and 128 GB storage (which isn't much nowadays).
As for the screen in that machine, compare:
> 6th generation Corning Gorilla Glass, AF anti-fingerprint coating, 10-point touch, 500 nits brightness
with
> 3.92" AMOLED Display (550 nits), Capacitive Touch
The screen of this machine, while small (4") seems quite decent.
And if you want to emulate any Android apps which are ARM (which you could with Waydroid, if you have pref. 8 GB RAM on your machine), then you better run ARM. You can emulate x86-64 on ARM with decent performance (tried recently with Qemu on a RPi 4, and my daily driver is a MBP M1 variant) but the other way around is not feasible.
Comment by RALaBarge 1 hour ago
Comment by Realman78 2 hours ago
Comment by stevefan1999 6 hours ago
Comment by 999900000999 1 hour ago
A phone where I can install applications without asking Google for permission.
Comment by RegW 1 hour ago
> DIY Phone
> Use the Comet and the Linux stack for calling*, messaging and mobile data as an alternate to your walled and closed smartphone. Contribute to the Linux ecosystem for mobiles.
So I guess this means it can, but it's not supported and you need to contribute the software. So perhaps it has the hardware, and perhaps it might work.
Comment by Schlagbohrer 5 hours ago
Comment by bsimpson 11 hours ago
They've got a grab-bag of unrelated Linux etc. org icons - Nix, Debian, postmarketOS, Node, Kubernetes… You could argue that someone _could_ run Nix or Node on it, but Debian is just nerdbait. It's not relevant to the product they're selling, unless you're gonna wipe the disk and support it yourself.
Comment by Layogtima 10 hours ago
Could you tell me which section it was? I'll fix it
Comment by bxparks 1 hour ago
Comment by backscratches 11 hours ago
Comment by matricaria 12 hours ago
Comment by Fnoord 2 hours ago
I have to say though: I like the communication of the Mecha Comet team here (and the UI). I wish them the best.
[1] https://forum.sailfishos.org/t/the-other-half-returns-commun...
Comment by jayd16 11 hours ago
Or Moto Z
Comment by Nursie 11 hours ago
Reminds me also of Motorola's attempt to have a hardware-expansible phone a few years ago, the Moto Z range and Moto Mods.
https://www.team-bhp.com/forum/gadgets-computers-software/25...
Obviously this is much more open than the proprietary moto-z stuff.
Comment by WillAdams 15 hours ago
https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/mecha-systems/mecha-com...
(and the super early bird rewards are all gone)
I might be interested if I weren't still waiting on the Soulcircuit Pilet to ship....
Comment by deadbabe 14 hours ago
Comment by theothertimcook 14 hours ago
You are right though, ive loved tinkering especially some if the cool linux based handhelds but i always come back to mobile/tablet because my limiting resource is time and android/ios kinda just works.
Comment by AdeptusAquinas 12 hours ago
No idea what I'm going to use it for, possibly as a mobile Kali setup or something
Comment by deadbabe 3 hours ago
Comment by rudderdev 10 hours ago
Comment by schromp 2 hours ago
interesting would be if i can put nixos onto it but keep using their launcher...
Comment by losthobbies 7 hours ago
Comment by dmos62 8 hours ago
Comment by d--b 4 hours ago
Comment by tcherasaro 14 hours ago
Comment by andsoitis 14 hours ago
Comment by tcherasaro 9 hours ago
I've been meaning to make a post about this on X for some time, so I went ahead and did it tonight. If you want to head over there and see the renders of what I'm thinking: https://x.com/TroyCherasaro/status/2016767340457980403
Comment by pipeline_peak 13 hours ago
Comment by tcherasaro 9 hours ago
Comment by Layogtima 8 hours ago
My goal is to use it to control this Quad-legged walker, possibly ROS.