• blargh513@sh.itjust.works
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    2 months ago

    So who is the strongest contender here? I hear stuff about pinephone, then nothing. Fairphone, more silence. Purism, so much silence.

    I will happily pay someone now for a half decent phone so that by the time android is fully enshittified we all have a place to go.

    • tuckerm@feddit.online
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      2 months ago

      As far as I know, the most useable pure Linux phone right now is the Furilabs FLX1. They’re currently out of stock, and doing preorders for their second batch. By “pure Linux” I mean “a distro pretty close to what you can use on your laptop.”

      There’s also several phones that can run Sailfish OS, including an official device. Sailfish OS isn’t quite vanilla Linux, but it might the most useable and supported non-mainstream option. I can’t find a clear answer about if you can run regular Linux applications on it, though.

      I used Sailfish OS on a Sony Xperia smartphone for about a year until my carrier switched to VoLTE, and Sailfish OS at the time didn’t support VoLTE. It does now, though, so I plan on trying it again soon.

      • definitemaybe@lemmy.ca
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        2 months ago

        Briefly looked into it, and Sailfish OS looks like it’s getting closer to reasonable for an average user. The Aptoide store seems to have major apps (WhatsApp), but it still requires some tinkering, like going into several settings screens manually to do things that pop-up automatically in Android. Not too bad, but definitely only for someone who’s okay with a bit of tinkering.

        WhatsApp is a “must” for most users globally as it’s the defacto messaging protocol standard used most places. Probably more important than SMS/MMS for most users. At least until everyone starts to switch over and something better (Signal, probably) starts to get a big enough install base that people use it.

        In Canada, I frequently tell people they can Signal, text, or Whatsapp me, but the only people who ever use Signal with me are family I installed it for.

        Games are probably a big deal, too. tbh, it’s not a “must”, but I’d be annoyed if I couldn’t play Minion Masters on my phone. (But I could probably set up Sunshine/Moonlight streaming, if needed.) I’m guessing a lot of people have games that they wouldn’t accept not being able to use.

      • BurgerBaron@piefed.social
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        2 months ago

        Furilabs has my attention simply because you can “seamlessly” run android apps on FuriOS in a container called Andromeda. Might be next after my Pixel 9 /w GrapheneOS is used up.

          • MonkeMischief@lemmy.today
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            1 month ago

            If they at LEAST have SD card expandable storage I’m all about it let’s freaking go.

            I went with a Motorola over a Pixel just because of those user-considerate features and a (warranty voiding :( ) unlockable bootloader. I’m really hoping something happens for this hardware.

          • SatyrSack@quokk.au
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            2 months ago

            Are you referring to just the rumors that they will partner with an OEM, or did I miss an actual announcement or something?!

      • iturnedintoanewt@lemmy.world
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        2 months ago

        I’m not sure FLX1 counts as a full 100% Linux phone. It uses the android driver stack in order to then boot to Linux. But I guess this might get them stuck with old insecure drivers? Not sure this is the best long term approach.

      • Seefra 1@lemmy.zip
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        2 months ago

        $550.00

        Fast, performant and cheap

        It may be fast and performant, but it’s not cheap.

        If I had $550.00 to spend on a new device I would spend it on a good and powerful computer, for video editing and 3D modeling, not on a phone.

        For comparison an used business laptop, costs about $120, an israeli spyware loaded phone costs about $150.

        Going from that to $550 is a big jump, and not affordable for most internet users.

      • blargh513@sh.itjust.works
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        2 months ago

        I had not heard of furi labs until now. I do have some concerns that they operate out of hong Kong, have no published corporate structure or stated ownership and that they are able to produce something so far ahead of any competitors.

        It smells like its got a lot of money and resources into it and I’d really like to know who is funding it.

        They show one employee on LinkedIn and no job postings. Company size is 2-10 people.

        When something seems too good to be true, it probably is. Purism sells their phones for 2x the cost, theyre huge and half-done. I would wager that they are a more realistic representation of where the market really is.

        • tomenzgg@midwest.social
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          2 months ago

          One of the developers used to work (maybe a lead?) on Droidian(/maybe Waydroid; I don’t remember, unfortunately) so part of the advancement probably has to do with already having familiarity of the problem-space.

          Also, Purism is trying to serve up entirely libre hardware whereas FuriLabs is using Halium to simplify how well things work in the hardware.

          So of course Purism is having a much harder time with things.