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258
Canuck

@sh.itjust.works

Canuck 10 points 5 days ago path: 0 24314132, hotness: undefined, score: 10, children: 2
Canuck 107 points 2 months ago

We need go start talking about the year of the GNU/Linux phone

path: 0 23524197, hotness: undefined, score: 107, children: 2
Canuck 103 points 7 months ago

And so it begins...

path: 0 20650900, hotness: undefined, score: 103, children: 4
Canuck 52 points 4 months ago

I have a GNU/Linux phone I carry in my other pocket. Here are the biggest issues I can see:

  1. Driver support for components in the mainline kernel (lets you install any distro and things like camera, Bluetooth just work)
  2. Power management; turns out it is a hard technical problem to have your phone suspend to save energy, while being awake enough to know what and when to turn back on to receive chats/calls, playback music, etc
  3. Cameras have a lot of stuff beyond drivers happening behind the scenes these days in software that would need to be developed, especially given it is a big reason people choose their phones for
  4. Phone certification is tough, this has stopped even companies like Fairphone from shipping their devices worldwide, I imagine even harder for a device like the Purism Librem 5 where you can literally upgrade Wi-Fi, BT, and cellular generations like a gameboy cartridge
  5. App ecosystems take a while to build up, it is a chicken/egg scenario. I think things are in a useable state for all the default apps an iPhone has, but if you want Uber, Uber Eats, you either have to draw even more power essentially running Android via Waydroid, or use a typically more janky web app that may be missing some features
path: 0 22204347 22204596 22204711 22205023, hotness: undefined, score: 52, children: 11
Canuck 51 points 2 months ago

path: 0 23580534 23581958, hotness: undefined, score: 51, children: 6
Canuck 42 points 5 months ago

Gamers Bay of course with Steam and Bazzite. If there's a spot for mobile, Mobian & Postmarket are both top tier

path: 0 21497167, hotness: undefined, score: 42, children: 4
Canuck 36 points a year ago

Mobile GNU/Linux is getting better, but I think it is 5-10 years out from what's needed. I suppose people need to adopt Desktop first. The nice thing is you can install Android apps including Google Play on it natively, and they appear in your app drawer like a regular app

path: 0 18288743, hotness: undefined, score: 36, children: 16
Canuck 31 points 2 years ago

Bing Copilot is also clearly Zionist

path: 0 7918012, hotness: undefined, score: 31, children: 0
Canuck 26 points 4 months ago path: 0 22278363, hotness: undefined, score: 26, children: 2
Canuck 24 points 4 months ago

Google has no incentive to walk back, especially given what they saw Apple has been able to get away with on their end. And as we've seen with AOSP publishing delays, device tree information restrictions, locked bootloaders, they are making it increasingly hard for Android to be an OS that can be forked and installed on devices, let alone for you to install your own software.

The community ought to prepare for the realities of this, and put mitigation measures in place. Valve saw the similar direction Windows is going years ago, and made the same decision: GNU/Linux is the next best truly open/free-as-in-freedom experience, and we should all aim to use and improve that ecosystem on smaller form factors. Waydroid/ATL can act as temporary bridges for both developers and users alike while native binaries are ported.

If you're making new apps, target to develop with qt/qml + rust so it can run on the only GNU/Linux equivalent of Android WearOS, AsteroidOS. This let's you deploy one codebase on watches, phones, tablets, and computers screen sizes with a convergent design.

path: 0 22372916, hotness: undefined, score: 24, children: 1
Canuck 22 points 7 months ago path: 0 20857930, hotness: undefined, score: 22, children: 1
Canuck 20 points 5 months ago path: 0 21749534, hotness: undefined, score: 20, children: 2
Canuck 19 points 10 months ago

Steam could make this happen faster if more of their user base requested the ability to play (x86 compatible) Android games on their Deck.

path: 0 19151584 19152325, hotness: undefined, score: 19, children: 1
Canuck 19 points 7 months ago

Tailscale is not American, it's Canadian 🍁

path: 0 20883563 20883700 20888360, hotness: undefined, score: 19, children: 1
Canuck 19 points 10 months ago

Yes you can install it on any Linux device, especially since it's a convenient flatpak. Any desktop apps on mobile, and mobile apps on desktop. Tux does not discriminate 🐧

path: 0 19151398 19151453, hotness: undefined, score: 19, children: 0
Canuck 18 points 7 months ago path: 0 20482300, hotness: undefined, score: 18, children: 3
Canuck 17 points 3 years ago

A GUI option in the Settings app to limit charging to 80%, extending the life of the device.

path: 0 6170429, hotness: undefined, score: 17, children: 1
Canuck 17 points 9 months ago

Yo dawg, we heard you like virtual machines, so we put virtual machines in your virtual machines, so you can run Linux on your Android on your Linux

path: 0 19619035, hotness: undefined, score: 17, children: 0
Canuck 17 points a month ago

Joke's on them, my phone runs GNU/Linux and has hardware kill switches for the mic/camera and for the cellular baseband which I use while at home, instead using Wi-Fi calling

path: 0 23863155 23863805 23863837, hotness: undefined, score: 17, children: 5
Canuck 16 points a year ago

Because they're DRM free, they're super easy to install too! Another install method is Heroic

path: 0 14470196 14474604, hotness: undefined, score: 16, children: 0

thanks for using Leebra!

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