I've seen a lot of people referencing these devices so figured I would ask about firsthand experience.
I have a handful of SD cards with various operating systems on, and Full Disk Encrypted eMMC installs.
The blog on http://pine64.org has lots of information about it.
There are issues. Modem drops out sometimes, there aren't enough programs (not apps, these are full desktop Linux programs compiled for aarch64) that work flawlessly on a small screen, updates break the system sometimes.
Most "reviews" expect a polished OS that "just works" when this device isn't ready for daily use unless you're a tinkerer who can spend time bug reporting, searching for answers, reflashing when (not if) things go wrong.
This device should be the future of mobile phones, but it isn't yet.
Get in now. Buy one, help code, help the Wiki, help with ideas.
Sadly, on both devices, the battery life is not what it should be. On the PinePhone, active use trashes the battery (no surprise if you have knowledge of ARM SoCs), but it lasts pretty long if you don't use it too much. With the Librem 5, active use is better, but as long as Purism don't implement a standby mode, 8-11 hours is all you get until you need to find an electrical outlet.
P.S.: I also have the Gigaset hardware that the Volla Phone is derived from, and run Ubuntu Touch on it. It's fine, but it does not run a mainline kernel, so it's a different kind of Linux phone and does not really compare 1:1 to Librem 5 and PinePhone.
I'm not a heavy user of the phone day to day so battery lasts easily more than one day.
It's not as snappy as an iPhone. But repairablility makes up for it.
I use Aurora Store for those apps that are closed source and I need. (E.g. the swedish app Bank ID which handles auth and sign for logging into banks and authorities).
Hackerwise I would like to try out PinePhone but as I understand it, it is not really for daily use yet. But I like the kill switches and that it doesn't rely at all on android code base
On PC's, desktop and laptop, and mobile devices we need to make a push to Linux or other open source systems if we want to preseve and semblence of privacy and commercial freedom.
The phone and parts can likely still be obtained over eBay or similar.
Has anybody here tried to use Fairphone in the US, and if so, what was your experience, and with which carrier?
* the cameras working only in the Megapixels app, * no sound notification about incoming SMS, * poor microphone quality in the calls (to the point that the person on the remote end complains), * the blue LED flashes all the same for all missed notifications, so I don't know if it is an email or a missed call, * there is no way to dismiss the uninteresting notification (e.g. without reading the email).
- Short battery life, was pretty much drained after maybe 4 hours of light use
- The phone would get insanely hot during use, or while plugged into the charger
- Display bugs, every time the phone rotated from portrait to landscape there were black bars or other artifacts
- Poor performance in general, typing too fast caused latency issues and opening apps really made the phone chug
Overall, I think Linux on mobile just needs some more time in the oven along with access to the hardware market that Android/iOS has been able to use for a while. I could probably deal with not having access to the Google/Apple app ecosystem if the phone itself were a smooth user experience, but that's just not the reality of it yet.
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=neG2Z21epLI
Anyone tried it?
I did not make the leap to the only other device now supported by Sailfish (which I think is the old Xperia model) because my work had ready provided me with a backup phone, so now I'm back on Android.
I could have made it last a bit longer by replacing the battery, but I was about to start a new job and knew I needed a reliable phone, so I wasn't sure it was worth investing keeping the fairphone going.
The OS is (was?) amazing. Lightweight, no BS tracking things AFAIK. Unfortunately, the Indian device vendor's deal didn't last enough and with the declining battery efficiency, I had to switch to an Asus phone running Android 9.
If I could get my hands on a low-cost Sailfish OS device running Indian bands, I will happily jump on-board again.
But I paid a couple of hundred bucks for something I knew was going to be in a beta state, so I'm not choked up over my purchase
Would be so nice if this kind of design becomes the norm.