OrionOS1
| OrionOS logo | |
| File:OrionOS1 Home Screen.png Screenshot of the OrionOS 1 home screen | |
| Developer | Orion Technologies |
|---|---|
| OS family | Unix-like, OrionOS |
| Working state | Current |
| Source model | Closed-source with open-source components |
| Latest release | 1.2.3 (build 21O123) / July 23, 2025 |
| Repository |
|
| Marketing target | Tablet-PC hybrids, productivity tablets |
| Update method | OTA, Orion Suite, Orion Bridge |
| Package manager | Orion App Center |
| License | Proprietary software with open-source components |
| Preceded by | None |
| Official website | oriontech.io/orionos |
| Support status | |
| Actively supported | |
OrionOS 1 is the first major release of the OrionOS operating system, developed by Orion Technologies for its Orion-branded hardware lineup, particularly the OrionPad and OrionSlate series. Unveiled during the company's Orion Future keynote on March 12, 2025, it officially launched on April 28, 2025.
Built on a modified Unix-based kernel with a modular UI framework, OrionOS is designed to bridge the gap between mobile convenience and desktop-level functionality. It introduces an adaptable multi-mode interface, supporting both touch input and desktop peripherals across a single OS environment.
Features[edit | edit source]
Dynamic Mode Switching[edit | edit source]
OrionOS features AdaptiveShell, which automatically switches between a touch-friendly tablet UI and a desktop-like windowed interface when a keyboard or trackpad is attached. This allows for seamless transitions between productivity and casual use.
Orion Tasks[edit | edit source]
Orion Tasks is a native productivity feature that introduces split-screen multitasking, resizable floating apps (TaskCards), and persistent sessions that can sync between devices via OrionCloud Sync.
FileScope[edit | edit source]
The new file manager, FileScope, offers full directory access with tabbed browsing, external drive support, and integrated OrionDrive cloud features. It supports ZIP, ISO, and native .orx archives.
OrionDock[edit | edit source]
Inspired by traditional desktop docks, OrionDock combines app launching, recent files, and system widgets into a persistent, customizable bottom bar, even in tablet mode.
Cross-App Intelligence[edit | edit source]
Using on-device machine learning, OrionOS supports SmartFlow, an assistant-driven layer that suggests clipboard actions, file destinations, or quick responses based on user behavior across apps.
Security[edit | edit source]
OrionOS 1 includes full-drive encryption (SecureVault), biometric app locks, and real-time permission tracking. All sensitive processing is handled via a secure enclave co-processor known as the OrionCore.
Release and updates[edit | edit source]
The first developer beta of OrionOS 1 was released on March 14, 2025, followed by a public beta on March 28, 2025. The stable version, OrionOS 1.0, launched globally on April 28, 2025, alongside the first OrionPad device.
Subsequent updates have added performance improvements, app enhancements, and security patches.
Version history[edit | edit source]
| Version | Build | Release date | Notable changes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1.0 | 21O001 | April 28, 2025 | Initial release |
| 1.1 | 21O089 | June 3, 2025 | Performance optimizations, added trackpad gestures |
| 1.2 | 21O114 | July 9, 2025 | FileScope upgrade, SmartFlow refinements |
| 1.2.3 | 21O123 | July 23, 2025 | Security fixes, power efficiency improvements |
Supported devices[edit | edit source]
OrionOS 1 is officially supported on the following Orion devices:
- OrionPad (1st generation)
- OrionSlate Pro
- OrionPad Air
- OrionPad Mini
- OrionDock 2-in-1 (via hybrid firmware)
Minimum hardware requirements include:
- Orion A1 or newer SoC
- 4 GB RAM
- 64 GB storage
- SecureCore chip
Reception[edit | edit source]
Early reviews praised OrionOS for its flexible UI, strong file management, and integration of productivity tools. TechRadar described it as “a serious rival to iPadOS for professional users,” while The Verge noted its “ambitious attempt to unify mobile freedom with desktop depth.”
Some criticism focused on third-party app availability at launch and occasional instability in SmartFlow automation.