this post was submitted on 24 Apr 2026
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The fact that you don't want an easy way to install apps outside of the initial deployment but (presumably) want an easy way to update your pre-existing apps would probably give you some trouble because they usually come from the same source. There are ways to blocklist or whitelist packages on some package managers but the specific details depends on the package manager.
Remove the store app and replace it with a daemon which does the updates in background.
If it's a pure Linux phone then apps would be installed through the command line and could be easily auto updated via a script.
So if you don't install a terminal emulator on the phone itself and only access the command line through something like SSH. You wouldn't have to worry about an app store at all ideally?
I have an Lposed module that you can indicate which apps you want to block updates for so they don’t get updated, regardless what any given shop tries. Easier than toggling it off for all those specific apps within each of Fdroid, Droidify, and Aurora.
There’s also Obtanium that lets you do updates a different way as well.
As for removing apps you can do so on any brew as long as you have root privileges. Sometimes you can even without, via ADB unless they’ve prevented it.
So I mean basically Linux phone doesn’t really need to be used as a way of making this an easier thing to accomplish. Root is right away the ultimate solution, and a custom ROM even better.