That’s how Nextbit sees its Robin smartphone, anyway. That’s because along with the rather stard 32GB of internal storage you’re granted 100GB of cloud space. Once your phone starts to fill up, it automatically offloads seldom-used apps data to your cloud account. Yes, it technically deletes that stuff from your phone, but like Drive or other cloud storage it’s safely tucked away inside your personal slice of the cloud. The data is ready willing for recall back to your phone when needed. Nextbit has opened up preorders for $399, which is a $100 jump from what Kickstarter backers were able to score the Robin for. Should you decide to preorder the Robin you’ll need to be patient, as the phones won’t ship until February 2016. On the spec front, the Robin has a Snapdragon 808 processor, 5.2-inch 1080p display, 32GB of storage, 3GB of RAM, NFC. The phone’s bs support all four major U.S. carriers. The story behind the story: Nextbit certainly has the hardware chops at the top of its team, with veterans from HTC leading the flock. However, for $379 you can get a Nexus 5X, with updates support directly from . And for $100 more than the Robin you can buy a Nexus 6/a>. Though be careful, it may fill you with evangelistic zeal.