For all the hullabaloo around AI this year, the consumer products that feature AI seem a bit lackluster. They’re either augmenting existing designs ( ) or they’ve flopped hard. Take the Rabbit R1, which was such an instant failure that it made its way into mainstream news.

But one modder is determined to make the thing useful—with a bit of old-fashioned Android ROM power. If you missed the feeding frenzy that was the Rabbit R1 launch, here’s a quick recap: the Rabbit R1 is a handheld gadget that claims to leverage the power of artificial intelligence to replace some (or all) of the functions of a smartphone, automatically performing the tasks that you’d normally do yourself via apps and texts. At launch, the barebones hardware (basically just a front-end for APIs and a lot of ChatGPT-style voice interfaces) was , with almost all of the promised near-magical functionality either broken or unavailable until an unspecified date.

It was so bad, the makers of the Rabbit R1 have been . Despite all its problems, the Rabbit R1 is actually kind of cute. With its squat orange case and prominent scroll wheel, it looks like one of those experimental smartphones you would’ve seen ten years ago (like the Blackberry Passport).

Maybe that’s why smartphone modder Facundo Holzmeister of the decided to get a custom-baked version of Android running on the thing. Unsurprisingly, the Rabbit R1’s mobile hardware already runs Android under its hood. The open-source OS is, after all, .