Rabbit R1 is Just an Android App (www.androidauthority.com)
from thequantumcog@lemmy.world to technology@lemmy.world on 01 May 2024 02:40
https://lemmy.world/post/14889506

See, it turns out that the Rabbit R1 seems to run Android under the hood and the entire interface users interact with is powered by a single Android app. A tipster shared the Rabbit R1’s launcher APK with us, and with a bit of tinkering, we managed to install it on an Android phone, specifically a Pixel 6a.

Edit: Someone also got doom and Minecraft running on this thing

#technology

threaded - newest

ar0177417@lemmy.world on 01 May 2024 02:48 next collapse

<img alt="" src="https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/add80c05-7372-4318-885f-41f2b3c0c993.png">

redcalcium@lemmy.institute on 01 May 2024 09:12 collapse

Technically you can’t call it “Android” without paying Google for certification and play store/gapps license. It’s AOSP.

cyrus@sopuli.xyz on 01 May 2024 13:55 collapse

Just so you know, AOSP is short for Android Open Source Project.

redcalcium@lemmy.institute on 01 May 2024 15:03 next collapse

The term “Android” itself is trademarked and can’t be used by hardware manufacturers without passing certification and paying Google.

cyrus@sopuli.xyz on 01 May 2024 15:05 collapse

doesn’t mean it’s not running Android, they just cannot use it for marketing/branding 🥴

[deleted] on 01 May 2024 17:56 collapse

.

GamingChairModel@lemmy.world on 01 May 2024 17:26 collapse

They should just do it recursive like GNU and make it the AOSP stand for the “AOSP Open Source Project.”

Cosmos7349@lemmy.world on 01 May 2024 03:03 next collapse

Haha can’t run R1 on an iPhone. Take that Apple. Absolute gamechanger.

Ghostalmedia@lemmy.world on 01 May 2024 04:09 collapse

Challenge accepted. I’m going to get an IPhone, load up an Android cloud emulator, upload the Rabbit R1 app, then use it to access its orange version of ChatGPT.

Cosmos7349@lemmy.world on 01 May 2024 04:17 collapse

gpt4kids. It has a rabbit!

heavy@sh.itjust.works on 01 May 2024 03:52 next collapse

I heard about this thing but couldn’t really tell what the idea was. I think I want to carry less, not more on me.

dm_me_your_boobs@lemm.ee on 01 May 2024 05:48 collapse

Do you not carry 3 phones already? Just swap one out.

wreckedcarzz@lemmy.world on 01 May 2024 09:05 collapse

Do you guys not have 3 phones?

Ghostalmedia@lemmy.world on 01 May 2024 04:12 next collapse

Wait until people realize that it’s just ChatGPT.

Cosmos7349@lemmy.world on 01 May 2024 04:21 next collapse

It’ll be cool when the concept of “Large Action Model” works well. But def not worth it to tie your money to a single horse this early; a lot of people want that concept to work well, so I’m sure there’s a lot of work being done in that area. Rn I agree that it’s just a worse ChatGPT.

jg1i@lemmy.world on 01 May 2024 07:00 collapse

We know it’s just ChatGPT (and Perplexity). That’s why we bought it. It’s just a fun frontend for a chat bot. That’s like the main point.

mriormro@lemmy.world on 01 May 2024 13:15 collapse

It’s more just a waste of resources. This thing has no reason to exist.

It’s the ‘this could have been an email’ of consumer devices.

jg1i@lemmy.world on 01 May 2024 16:48 collapse

Lol. “Why are you all happy?! Stop having fun!” I bought it and I’m satisfied with it. If you don’t see the appeal, that’s ok. Just don’t buy it.

lobut@lemmy.ca on 01 May 2024 05:42 next collapse

R1s statement in response from the article:

“rabbit r1 is not an Android app. We are aware there are some unofficial rabbit OS app/website emulators out there. We understand the passion that people have to get a taste of our AI and LAM instead of waiting for their r1 to arrive. That being said, to clear any misunderstanding and set the record straight, rabbit OS and LAM run on the cloud with very bespoke AOSP and lower level firmware modifications, therefore a local bootleg APK without the proper OS and Cloud endpoints won’t be able to access our service. rabbit OS is customized for r1 and we do not support third-party clients. Using a bootlegged APK or webclient carries significant risks; malicious actors are known to publish bootlegged apps that steal your data. For this reason, we recommend that users avoid these bootlegged rabbit OS apps.”

So there’s literally no reason for this to have been a device at all.

VeganCheesecake@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 01 May 2024 06:39 next collapse

Was that in question? I thought it was clear from the beginning that it does pretty much everything in the cloud.

FlyingSquid@lemmy.world on 02 May 2024 13:29 collapse

Yeah, if you weren’t convinced this was a waste of money before finding out that it’s like this, you’re not going to be convinced by this.

infeeeee@lemm.ee on 01 May 2024 07:24 next collapse

AOSP and lower level firmware modifications

But it’s android, so linux, so GPL2, so they have to share these modifications (if they really exist). It’s bootleg until soneone sues them.

redcalcium@lemmy.institute on 01 May 2024 09:09 next collapse

You’d be surprised how many companies ignore GPL. Providing broken links to the source code tarballs, telling you to send an email request to get the code then proceed to ignore the requests, etc. Only the most famous case got sued, the rest simply got away with it.

infeeeee@lemm.ee on 01 May 2024 10:06 collapse

Yes, I know, but that shouldn’t be a norm.

There was a case this year, where SFC, a nonprofit organization won against Vizio for LGPL violation. It’s important, because SFC was just a normal consumer, not the owner of the original code. So now just a random user can sue this Rabbit company, and they should win, more details here: blog.lukaspanni.de/…/the-significance-of-the-vizi…

Edit: the case is not settled yet, but ongoing since 2021: sfconservancy.org/copyleft-compliance/vizio.html

And there are other funny solutions, like when a Chinese “tech influencer/diy maker” Naomi Wu aka SexyCyborg just simply walked into the office of a Chinese manufacturer, and requested the source code in person: www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vj04MKykmnQ

PipedLinkBot@feddit.rocks on 01 May 2024 10:07 collapse

Here is an alternative Piped link(s):

https://www.piped.video/watch?v=Vj04MKykmnQ

Piped is a privacy-respecting open-source alternative frontend to YouTube.

I’m open-source; check me out at GitHub.

woodgen@lemm.ee on 01 May 2024 10:05 next collapse

AOSP is not GPL

infeeeee@lemm.ee on 01 May 2024 10:11 collapse

They wrote “lower level firmware modifications”, AOSP runs on Linux kernel, and firmware modifications usually mean they modified the Linux kernel. This device seems like a regular Android phone, and afaik this rules apply to all Android phones, that’s why Android rom cooking can exist.

jj4211@lemmy.world on 01 May 2024 11:10 next collapse

They may be compelled to release any driver code associated, however firmware is not covered by relation to kernel. Linux runs on mostly proprietary firmware. The “linux-firmware” package in many distributions that contains hot plug firmware is mostly proprietary blobs.

That said I doubt they had much significant firmware work, it may just be logo and some tweaked configuration from their SoC vendor. They likely had to modify AOSP a bit more to allow their launcher unfettered access to the device in ways not modeled by standard AOSP, but that’s user space that isn’t GPL.

woodgen@lemm.ee on 01 May 2024 19:43 collapse

This was a marketing post, not a technical one. Unless we see any git branches or ROM teardown we won’t know what they were doing. I highly doubt that they did any kernel patches though.

cyrus@sopuli.xyz on 01 May 2024 13:53 collapse

The Linux Kernel is GPL2, the Android OS is Apache.

theherk@lemmy.world on 01 May 2024 13:30 next collapse

Except that some people may like this form factor for these features. Of course it can be delivered in phones, but it does seem at least possible to me that some may prefer a device like this.

lobut@lemmy.ca on 01 May 2024 13:47 next collapse

They’re possibly complimentary but not mutually exclusive. I think if they sold the form factor of the device over the phone that that would have been more honest marketing.

jkrtn@lemmy.ml on 01 May 2024 14:04 collapse

I love the dumb little form factors those guys do. The only thing stopping me is that I know it is overhyped bullshit which I will be bored of in a week. If it were easy to develop my own software to completely replace what’s on it I might be convinced.

theherk@lemmy.world on 01 May 2024 14:06 collapse

I completely agree. If they take another swing, I hope they’ll make it much more open for development. Or just update these.

bcgm3@lemmy.world on 01 May 2024 19:35 collapse

No rea$on at all, except for that one little rea$on that we alway$ $eem to keep coming back to…

lorkano@lemmy.world on 01 May 2024 06:12 next collapse

Rabbit is paying for processing those Ai requests. If everyone starts to download it to their android devices they will literally go bankrupt

mriormro@lemmy.world on 01 May 2024 13:12 collapse

lol

vext01@lemmy.sdf.org on 01 May 2024 06:36 next collapse

Watched a review of this thing. Don’t see the appeal. Especially don’t see why it needs to be a separate bit of hardware.

jg1i@lemmy.world on 01 May 2024 07:09 collapse

It needs to be separate hardware because Google and Apple have a strangle hold on their respective OSes. No way in hell Apple/Google would give a random app deep integration with AI. Although not currently present, it seems like Rabbit (and Humane) want to give a ton of control over the system, data, and apps to the AI.

MonkderDritte@feddit.de on 01 May 2024 07:24 next collapse

Makes sense, they can do whatever they want with AOSP as long as they don’t want to cert it as ‘Android’ to have access to Play Store.

thehatfox@lemmy.world on 01 May 2024 07:35 next collapse

All of the apps on the rabbit run in the cloud anyway, as well as the AI bits. Nothing is running locally on the device. There’s nothing the rabbit device does that couldn’t be done via an app or web portal to those cloud services instead.

At least with the Humane AI Pin it was an attempt to create a new class of device. The rabbit r1 however is effectively just an oddly shaped Android phone locked to running a single app. The only reason it seems to exist is to allow an existing hardware company to jump on the AI bandwagon.

jg1i@lemmy.world on 01 May 2024 17:24 collapse

there’s nothing the rabbit device does that couldn’t be done via an app

Currently, the Rabbit does 2 things for me that can’t be an app on my phone.

  1. It’s not my phone. I value this enough to pay for it. I spend more time than I would like on my phone. I’m happy when I can use another single purpose device to help me stay focused.

  2. The push to talk hardware button has been more pleasant for me to use than the ChatGPT shortcut on my Pixel phone.

In the end, the ChatGPT + Perplexity in a box fills a space in my life that I can’t find anywhere else—given my criteria.

I understand your criteria is different and you value different things. That’s ok. It just means this device isn’t for you.

jj4211@lemmy.world on 01 May 2024 11:19 next collapse

One amendment, I’d say it’s because existing phones won’t let an app have access to listening for a wake word or phrase, and a phone hard codes that to the phone vendor code. Having passive access to microphone and camera and activating and showing what they want to the screen without contending with a platform lock screen that won’t play ball with them, that sort of thing. “AI” access wasn’t really going to be the challenge.

It’s not that they didn’t run on existing phones, I could see that, I find it more stupid that they stopped short of just making their device a phone capable of traditional interaction. As it stands it’s going to be a subset of capability of phones coming out this year that will likely offer similar “AI” features while also continuing to support traditional hand held usage. If they didn’t want to sign up for all that, they probably could have teamed up with someone like Motorola, who might be hungry enough to let Rabbit do their thing on a Moto G variant or something.

Fisch@discuss.tchncs.de on 01 May 2024 14:56 collapse

Apps can absolutely listen for a wake word tho

dev_null@lemmy.ml on 02 May 2024 13:17 collapse

What would prevent an Android app from having “deep integration with AI”? If the AI is in the cloud then it’s all done through normal web requests, which don’t even require a permission, let alone so special allowance from Google.

jg1i@lemmy.world on 04 May 2024 07:11 collapse

Even now they’re already leveraging their OS-level control. The Android Authority guys said in their report, “the Rabbit R1’s launcher app is intended to be preinstalled in the firmware and be granted several privileged, system-level permissions — only some of which we were able to grant”. I don’t work at Rabbit, so I don’t know exactly what modifications they’ve done to their AOSP fork, but they’re doing something.

If I had to guess, I’d say they’ve messed with the power management of AOSP and probably the process scheduling somehow? I say this because the Rabbit R1 is hands down the fastest way to access an assistant that I’ve used. I have a ChatGPT shortcut on my homescreen of my Pixel 8 phone and the ChatGPT app is constantly killed in the background, so often times I go to access the assistant but I have to wait for an app to load. The R1 is instant.

And that’s without counting the time it takes to face or fingerprint unlock the phone, then tap an icon.

No, I would have not paid $200 if Rabbit was an app. I have ChatGPT and Perplexity on my phone, I don’t like the experience compared to the R1. I paid $200 for the end to end Rabbit experience.

Btw, I get that some people don’t mind unlocking their phone, tapping an icon, waiting for it to load, asking a question, then getting an answer. That’s fine. If you’re happy with that experience, then the Rabbit R1 is not for you.

dev_null@lemmy.ml on 04 May 2024 13:00 collapse

You brought up advantages of it being a device, which I don’t disagree with. Nothing you said explained the “allow deep integration with AI”. That’s the only part I was questioning.

MrScottyTay@sh.itjust.works on 01 May 2024 06:48 next collapse

I thought we always knew that the device was going to be Android.

It’s crazy you can just download and run it on any other android device though. I’d have thought they’d have locked it down somewhat.

MossyFeathers@pawb.social on 01 May 2024 07:14 next collapse

Dude, maybe it was meant to be a joke, but that doom picture is so fake. C’mon.

gears@sh.itjust.works on 01 May 2024 12:00 collapse

twitter.com/i/status/1784224319557730722

ChanchoManco@lemm.ee on 01 May 2024 14:24 next collapse

His point still stands as the image in the thumbnail is as fake as it gets.

Kingofthezyx@lemm.ee on 01 May 2024 16:22 next collapse

Hehe, thumbnail.

ShrimpCurler@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 02 May 2024 10:28 collapse

Ironically the fakeness is covering a thumbnail.

erwan@lemmy.ml on 01 May 2024 19:10 collapse

Well doom can run on a freaking pregnancy test. At that point if it had any kind of processor and a screen, it can run Doom.

xthexder@l.sw0.com on 01 May 2024 20:07 next collapse

I’m pretty sure that story was faked by putting a separate display in the shell of a pregnancy test. They don’t even have real displays usually, let alone a full reprogrammable microcontroller

notthebees@reddthat.com on 02 May 2024 12:19 collapse

it wasn’t faked, but it was very much a ship.of Theseus pregnancy test. They replaced the microcontroller with one they could program (it might have been the reprogrammable version of the same microcontroller. And the screen was replaced.

echodot@feddit.uk on 02 May 2024 19:50 collapse

So it was faked. The ship of Theseus was still a ship with the same capabilities at the end. They didn’t add an engine to it.

[deleted] on 03 May 2024 05:00 collapse

.

erwan@lemmy.ml on 03 May 2024 06:59 collapse

Some pregnancy test have a small LCD screen

nomadjoanne@lemmy.world on 01 May 2024 07:17 next collapse

Yeah in the presentation of it was clearly idiotic. I often wonder how seriously these silicon valley people actually take themselves privately.

grahamja@reddthat.com on 05 May 2024 17:17 collapse

Don’t these people just pitch wild ideas constantly knowing it won’t work in the hopes they can live off of someone’s venture capital until they can end up with better jobs?

djsaskdja@reddthat.com on 11 May 2024 15:27 collapse

Fake it until you make it.

photonic_sorcerer@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 01 May 2024 07:32 next collapse

What’s with the terribly shopped doom pic?

thequantumcog@lemmy.world on 01 May 2024 07:44 collapse

I was lazy to find the real picture. So, I just posted the first one I found.

admin@lemmy.my-box.dev on 01 May 2024 08:39 collapse

You do realize that your statements now seem less credible than if you had left that picture out, right?

wreckedcarzz@lemmy.world on 01 May 2024 09:08 next collapse

It’s the internet. Nobody has any credibility.

foggy@lemmy.world on 01 May 2024 09:56 next collapse

Not true I have tons.

You can all trust me.

Go here for details.

Melt@lemm.ee on 01 May 2024 12:07 collapse

I vouch for @foggy’s credibility. You can trust that guy

pirat@lemmy.world on 01 May 2024 20:33 collapse

Trust me, I’m a credibilianist.

sebinspace@lemmy.world on 02 May 2024 10:18 collapse

It’s not that deep…

arc@lemm.ee on 01 May 2024 07:33 next collapse

I saw the Marquess Brownlee review of this thing last night and I wonder why companies make this crap and who is fool enough to fund it. It’s obviously doomed to fail, as are most “smart” gadgets & devices. The best that can be said for it, is at least there is no subscription to use it and it’s not outrageously expensive but that’s damning it with faint praise.

Diplomjodler3@lemmy.world on 01 May 2024 09:38 next collapse

VCs will just follow the hype of the day and invest in anything that spouts the right buzzwords. But they’re aware of course, that most of those will fail. It takes just one out of ten to make it for it to be worthwhile.

arc@lemm.ee on 01 May 2024 12:37 collapse

If they weeded out some of the shittier ideas they’d be one in nine or eight.

echodot@feddit.uk on 02 May 2024 19:52 collapse

I’ve met them they seriously don’t think like that. They have so much money that they can afford to be completely irresponsible with it. From that standpoint it is easier to just throw money at the wall and see what sticks and go through the effort of actually working it out.

jkrtn@lemmy.ml on 01 May 2024 14:01 next collapse

This is the second time I’ve read about this specific reviewer having a sane perspective on way overhyped gadgets. Sounds worth checking out. I’m used to videos being completely worthless because they are usually trying to get product affiliate money and YouTube ad revenue at the same time.

drislands@lemmy.world on 01 May 2024 16:54 next collapse

He’s my go-to for tech reviews. He’ll happily gush about what he likes, but he isn’t shy about what isn’t good.

RGB3x3@lemmy.world on 01 May 2024 17:43 next collapse

I don’t remember a single occasion where he was sponsored by the company he’s reviewing. He gets sent products all the time, but it seems to always be with the stipulation that if he thinks it sucks, he’ll say so.

jkrtn@lemmy.ml on 01 May 2024 19:12 collapse

I watched this review to check him out after writing that. I think he’s pretty great. YouTube is fucking awful, I’ll have to catch him somewhere else.

yamanii@lemmy.world on 02 May 2024 13:46 collapse

For a counterpoint, I ask you to see his Cybertruck review, he definitely put his kiddy gloves for it.

jkrtn@lemmy.ml on 02 May 2024 14:13 collapse

Oh, thank you. Damn, you hate to see it.

yamanii@lemmy.world on 02 May 2024 13:45 collapse

It’s 200 USD contrary to the 700 USD humane pin, I think it’s ok as a niche toy, it’s why Marquess was also much more forgiving of it.

moitoi@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 01 May 2024 09:39 next collapse

Any link to the r1 running doom or Minecraft?

thequantumcog@lemmy.world on 01 May 2024 09:49 collapse

Well, looks like rabbit is taking down these videos 😂. All of the videos of rabbit r1 running doom or Minecraft are now private. Still found one on twitter. twitter.com/i/status/1784224319557730722

moitoi@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 01 May 2024 10:32 collapse

Thanks! It looks like that they aren’t happy with them.

chrash0@lemmy.world on 01 May 2024 12:40 next collapse

what else would it be? it’s a pretty common embedded target. dev kits from Qualcomm come with Android and use the Android bootloader and debug protocols at the very least.

nobody is out here running a plain Linux kernel and maintaining a UI stack while AOSP exists. would be a foolish waste of time for companies like Rabbit to use anything else imo.

to say it’s “just an Android device” is both true and a mischaracterization. it’s likely got a lot in common with a smartphone, but they’ve made modifications and aren’t supporting app stores or sideloading. doesn’t mean you can’t do it, just don’t be surprised when it doesn’t work 1-1

[deleted] on 01 May 2024 13:30 next collapse

.

thequantumcog@lemmy.world on 01 May 2024 14:01 next collapse

You are missing the point. The point is that there is no need for such a device, a simple android app can do everything that rabbit r1 does.

chrash0@lemmy.world on 01 May 2024 14:16 next collapse

i didn’t think people would really be surprised. but maybe i’m jaded by my experience in the industry.

if we’re arguing whether or not it’s objectively stupid, i think that’s up to the market to decide.

kinda seems like a toy to me anyway, and it’s kind of priced that way

daq@lemmy.sdf.org on 02 May 2024 15:56 collapse

I’d still expect a lot more from a toy at $200. That’s cheap drone money or a decent RC car.

erwan@lemmy.ml on 01 May 2024 14:31 collapse

Yeah, but everyone could see that as soon as they released it.

It doesn’t matter how it’s implemented, it could have been done as an app from day one.

But they made it a device instead because it makes it easy to raise funds and to get journalists to talk about it. As simple as that.

utopiah@lemmy.world on 01 May 2024 18:25 collapse

nobody is out here running a plain Linux kernel and maintaining a UI stack while AOSP exists.

Wrong, that’s even why I bought a SteamDeck (edited to add the most famous), PineTab2, PinePhone, and a reMarkable and use them pretty much daily.

Are there a lot of these compared to Android? No, but please do not say “nobody” when you mean “most” or “the vast majority” because by doing so you are reducing the perception of choice. Some people, like me, DO prefer plain Linux when they can. By hiding the fact that commercial solutions do exist this is helping an already dominant solution.

fubarx@lemmy.ml on 01 May 2024 13:42 next collapse

Big whoop. MediaTek eval kits offer either Linux or Android AOSP. Why is this news?

aniki@lemm.ee on 01 May 2024 16:00 next collapse

Anyone have a hacked APK? I wanna test it out.

Dkarma@lemmy.world on 01 May 2024 18:32 collapse

It’s just chat gpt dude

cyrus@sopuli.xyz on 01 May 2024 19:22 next collapse

Yeah that’s the function, playing around with it would still be fun though? Especially data mining and seeing what else there is apart from the LAM server leak.

aniki@lemm.ee on 02 May 2024 09:59 collapse

So? I wanna fuck with their implementation of it.

Alpha71@lemmy.world on 01 May 2024 18:09 next collapse

“Duh”

egeres@lemmy.world on 01 May 2024 18:15 next collapse

How many android apps are designed by teenage engineering?

gex@lemmy.world on 01 May 2024 19:52 collapse
PhAzE@lemmy.ca on 01 May 2024 18:21 next collapse

These products male no sense on the age of smart phones. They will end up just being an app we download or free features of our phones at some point.

ZILtoid1991@lemmy.world on 01 May 2024 18:42 next collapse

Note that this is mostly due to the closed source drivers and nonexistent Linux support for smaller SoCs. Some manufacturers are quite good in that front (e.g. Broadcom/Raspberry Pi, Rockchip), with others you’re lucky if they allow you to use Linux at all, with no GPU drivers (which you often have to pirate the binaries, thanks ARM for making Mali a completely closed source project from its open source origins).

xthexder@l.sw0.com on 01 May 2024 20:01 next collapse

Note that since it’s just an Android app, there is no purpose in selling this e-waste device other than increasing the price, since it does nothing you can’t already do on your phone.

macaroni1556@lemmy.ca on 01 May 2024 20:05 next collapse

Broadcom is actually terrible, the Rpi foundation just had an in.

NXP deserves some credit for good board support packages and documentation.

thequantumcog@lemmy.world on 02 May 2024 04:56 collapse

Broadcom is also closed source (I think). I have to use closed source drivers for my broadcom wireless adapter on Linux.

tomjuggler@lemmy.world on 02 May 2024 10:46 next collapse

As a former Android developer, you can’t just do anything in an android app on a modern smartphone. The system is fighting you for resources the whole time. It makes sense to have something like this running as root on a device that you control.

Not that I’m sold on it, just saying…

SnipingNinja@slrpnk.net on 02 May 2024 20:16 collapse

Isn’t that more non standard implementations by OEMs? Because pixel and stock-ish Android devices don’t have such issues afaik.

notannpc@lemmy.world on 03 May 2024 17:19 collapse

I never really understood who these products were for. I can’t help but think the only end result is a small number of people getting rich off of VC money and some misguidedly optimistic folks getting ripped off by buying these devices.