• elidoz@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    smartphone manufacturers have almost no common standards, they are made to be bought and then disposed of instead of upgrading the specs

    it’s impossible to do stuff like upgrading ram which would be very easy on a computer, and every smartphone has a different cpu

    companies are doing their best to keep the open source guys out of the game, which in my opinion would solve a lot of the issues if this weren’t the case

    I want a smartphone without ios or android but just plain linux, which should be upgradable and durable, possibly with open source firmware and that kind of stuff

    • Mikina@programming.dev
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      1 year ago

      From my experience, all the linux for mobile distros I’ve tried on my Pinephone were a really bad experience, with a lot of issues. But the option is there, and while it wasnt reliable enough to use as a daily phone, I still carry it in the bag with a dock and Kali, which sometimes can get useful during pentesting.

      • theneverfox@pawb.social
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        1 year ago

        The problem is the chipsets, which include the radio. They have their own proprietary code, including some built in firmware. Along with things like roaming, negotiating frequencies, requesting MMS downloads and other niggly details, you have stuff like handling sim cards, emergency services modes, and public alerts. All of which I’ve heard are lightly documented and a pain to work with… It’s a lot of compatibility layers built up over the years

        You can get a Linux phone today, the consensus just seems to be it’s not ready as a primary phone