• Reygle@lemmy.world
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    7 hours ago

    I went Graphene a while back and can’t be happier with it.

    I’d still love to see a real Linux phone that really works and really has native Signal/etc apps but since buying a pinephone years ago to tinker with it, I’m not holding my breath.

    If anyone here has fears/questions about installing/using it, I can give you basics. NOT an expert, but installation was the easiest thing I could have imagined, took MAYBE 10 minutes literally following their official guide.

    • k0e3@lemmy.ca
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      3 hours ago

      This might be a silly question, but do you think it would be a good idea for me to first set up my old android phone with my bank and authenticator apps before I make the switch in case some of them don’t work?

    • eli@lemmy.world
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      4 hours ago

      I’m about to make the switch myself. I have a Pixel tablet and a P9 Pro. I swapped my tablet over just so I can test things out. I want to deGoogle completely. No play store.

      So far I’ve had to make a list of all my apps I have on my phone and go one-by-one seeing if there’s an apk for it somewhere outside of play store, and if not, then if there’s an alternative app, and then website or PWA it is.

      I’ve come to realize I have a lot of unnecessary bullshit on my phone to begin with. Think I’ll make the switch this weekend, just need to find a few more alternatives to specific apps.

      • ItsNotImportant24@lemmy.ml
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        2 hours ago

        What apps are you looking for alternatives for? I run Graphene and have replaced everything with foss alternatives and couldn’t be happier. Except my banking app and a couple that should absolutely be the official apps, but those are installed on a seperate profile.

        Also, dont use Aurora store for apps once on GOS. Its not recommended. Use Obtainium for apps straight from the source or accrescent along with GOS’ official app store.

        • eli@lemmy.world
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          47 minutes ago

          Well I found good alternatives(Fossify stuff) or most apps I use already have GitHub releases. I just need to try these apps out and if I dont like them then find other alternatives. Like map apps, calendar, voice recorder, etc. Again I found alts, just not sure how they’ll actually function until using them.

          My biggest one is the Steam app for their authenticator. I read some stuff online that Aegis supposedly can work as a Steam auth, but yeah.

          • ItsNotImportant24@lemmy.ml
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            28 minutes ago

            Well, I use Fossify calendar and have no problems with it. For maps I like and use CoMaps, but the others will work well too. The map apps though use lat and long so they only put you at the block of the address but if you put GMaps WV on your phone you can put the address in it and then click share and copy the lat and long it provides and paste it into comaps and it will route straight to the address, its a couple extra steps but quick and easy. I honestly think youll realize you wish youd have switched sooner. Graphene is just amazing. Plus you can talk to them on their platforms and channels

      • superglue@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        4 hours ago

        Check our Aurora store for apps you need from the Play Store. But ya, once you start scrutinizing the apps on your phone you realize 95% of it is just useless junk you dont need.

    • Lemmayng@lemmy.world
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      6 hours ago

      Agree. On my fifth anniversary with GrapheneOS and it still kicks ass.

      The Pixel phones on the other hand still leave a lot to be desired as reliable hardware. My 8 Pro is the best of the ones I’ve owned, but not by much considering my Pixel 6 Pro had a shitty Tensor modem, and my Pixel 4 XL had a spicy pillow.

      The sooner GrapheneOS moves to Motorola, the better.

      • Reygle@lemmy.world
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        6 hours ago

        I don’t have any serious complaints about my 9a REALLY, but I’d prefer something with SD, headphone jack, and I’d REALLY kill for something much smaller. (but no fold, that stuff’s for derpy weirdos)

    • echo@lemmy.ml
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      6 hours ago

      The software for linux phones is pretty much there. Gnome and KDE mobile are surprisingly capable. There’s built in apps for every basic thing you’d need on a phone like a dialer, SMS app, camera, etc. plus all the normal apps adapted to work with mobile like the calculator and maps apps.

      The only real limitation is with the hardware. I have no idea why all new linux phones launch with specs from a decade ago. You can get a better experience by flashing ported Postmarket OS to an Android phone like the Nothing phone or a OnePlus 6t.

      It shouldn’t be like that, no idea why it’s impossible to just have a linux phone with decent specs and a good camera on par with modern flagships.

      • ozymandias117@lemmy.world
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        4 hours ago

        Linux phones try to build from upstream Linux, and the major phone SoC vendors HATE upstreaming their code.

        They believe every character in their source code is absolutely top secret.

        A middle ground I wish was considered more is taking Google’s kernel and the vendors DLKM partition/DTB/DTBO for hardware support, and putting a GNU userspace on top.

        This has had problems in the past, because vendors would modify syscall tables such that they don’t match userspace anymore, but with GKI, I think we’re closer to that being a possibility

        • UnspecificGravity@piefed.social
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          4 hours ago

          Thats always the problem with building hardware open source products. You spend millions developing the OS to work with your stuff and you get like six months before someone else is competing with you, except they didn’t have to spend that investment. The only reason we got the steamdeck was because the guys that made it ALSO owned the means of putting games on it, so they didn’t really need to make money on the product itself (kinda like with Google and the play store).

          • ozymandias117@lemmy.world
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            3 hours ago

            At least with the vendors I’m referring to (2/3 that make all Android phones), they just took the open source code, hacked it up as quickly as possible to get some basic drivers working, and moved on.

            There wasn’t any “special sauce” in the source, they just didn’t want to spend the effort to upstream it

            Edit: Just because you said “hardware open source” I wasn’t advocating for open hardware, just for hardware vendors to, ya know, support the hardware

      • Squizzy@lemmy.world
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        5 hours ago

        100% I got a pixel, secondhand, to allow for gOS.

        All I want is a linux phone that takes good photos that I feel is secure. I need it to launch android apps in sandbox instances too but I understand that is possible.

        Linux phones are always missing modern stuff be it fast charging, nfc, decent compnents, etc.

        Love a tablet too, the pixel tablet with speaker stand is ideal if it wasnt the devils products.

      • Reygle@lemmy.world
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        5 hours ago

        Glad to hear it, as years back with the Pinephone, I had a… worse than that experience. It was not good.

    • kryptonianCodeMonkey@lemmy.world
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      4 hours ago

      I have company managed apps on my device. Teams, Outlook and Authenticator. Any idea if there might be any friction there with Graphene? It’s really the only thing from holding me back and I can’t really justify experimenting if it’s going to break things

      • NinjaTurtle@feddit.online
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        2 hours ago

        Should work, although haven’t tried Teams or Outlook, but I would recommend putting it on a different profile, you can make multiple users, then enable the google play store on there. Leave that as you work profile or google profile. Helps keep things separated.

      • mnemonicmonkeys@sh.itjust.works
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        4 hours ago

        I have company managed apps on my device. Teams, Outlook and Authenticator.

        That’s your first problem. If your company want to force you to use specific apps on a phone they should just buy you a phone for that

          • possumparty@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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            4 hours ago

            Oh, they turned that off? Okay, where in the policy does it say that you’re required to use your own device? No stipend no teams. No stipend no outlook. No stipend no authenticator. I’m not giving them a single millimeter.

      • Reygle@lemmy.world
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        5 hours ago

        Never used the stock rom on it, purchased it, turned it on, and immediately flashed it. BUT compared to my last “normal” android? (Smasnug- I’ll never NOT call them that thanks to a certain Aussie on YT) No. Nothing. That said I’m middle aged and never even considered using stuff like contactless payments with a phone, etc. Never saw the appeal of increased risk just to look like a douchebag at the checkout aisle or the drive through. Your mileage may vary if you use things like that, I can’t speak to it.

        Only thing I noticed was for my bank’s app, I had to enable “exploit protection compatibility mode” to make it function like it should.