The Russian technology firm F+ revealed plans for two new devices: the R570 smartphone and the Life Tab Plus tablet, both slated to run the native Aurora operating system. Reports on the products have circulated in the business press, highlighting F+’s strategy to deliver a complete mobile workplace solution tailored for corporate and public sector use. The company’s announcements point to a broader program that combines dedicated hardware with software built around the Aurora OS, aiming to create a cohesive, enterprise-ready ecosystem.
Details circulating in industry channels indicate that the devices are designed to be assembled in Kaliningrad, with Aurora OS installed during the manufacturing process. This approach underscores a preference for local production support and a streamlined supply chain, aligning with governmental ambitions to bolster domestic tech capabilities. The overarching concept positions the R570 and Life Tab Plus as a turnkey mobile work platform, integrating management tools, security features, and productivity applications suited to enterprise environments.
According to the official description of Aurora OS on its developer site, the R570 is framed as a secure corporate smartphone designed to automate field and mobile work. The device is presented as a versatile instrument for managing teams, workflows, and data across a distributed workforce, with a focus on reliability and secure communications.
Industry observers note that, while the workplace solutions under Aurora OS have shown steady adoption in various deployments, the perceived advantage hinges on the presence of fresh capabilities that differentiate them from existing Aurora-based products. In a market where competition among enterprise mobility solutions is robust, the success of F+’s approach will depend on real-world efficiency gains, strong vendor support, and the ability to integrate with legacy corporate systems.
Earlier discussions in the tech press touched on related efforts in Russia to advance mixed-reality wearables as a potential alternative to conventional smartphones. Those developments, while still nascent, reflect a broader trend toward immersive devices in the local tech landscape, alongside traditional mobile hardware.