No. I have a second phone with it just to play with.
It's functional, but rough. App support is lacking, VoLTE doesn't work still which means on countries like the US which shutdown 2/3G you cannot make or receive calls. The UI is clunky and dated.
I think a lot of these issues would go away pretty quick if it got a lot of attention. But then it's unlikely to get much attention without that stuff. Vicious cycle. It's a good base to build on.
I think postmarketOS will probably win out on market share for Linux phones, mostly because it can use regular flatpak apps, you don't have to develop special apps, which i thought you had to do for Ubuntu touch (which I guess is now called ubports). Not sure, someone correct me if I'm wrong about the specially built apps part.
is it ready for normies to daily drive?
No. I have a second phone with it just to play with.
It's functional, but rough. App support is lacking, VoLTE doesn't work still which means on countries like the US which shutdown 2/3G you cannot make or receive calls. The UI is clunky and dated.
I think a lot of these issues would go away pretty quick if it got a lot of attention. But then it's unlikely to get much attention without that stuff. Vicious cycle. It's a good base to build on.
thanks for the insight. if you use google voice app on it would that work as a replacement for VoLTE?
There isn't a Google Voice app. It's not Android.
You could probably place calls from the browser but not receive them.
I heard of some people setting up IP phone stuff for it, but it doesn't seem simple.
Seems pretty polished, but I genuinely don't know. None of my devices support it, so I haven't had the opportunity to test drive it.
At some point, "normies" are just going to have to break down and learn something.
I think postmarketOS will probably win out on market share for Linux phones, mostly because it can use regular flatpak apps, you don't have to develop special apps, which i thought you had to do for Ubuntu touch (which I guess is now called ubports). Not sure, someone correct me if I'm wrong about the specially built apps part.
Palm OS was really good, but without a great app store it never stood a chance.