And so people don’t have to scroll to find it, the person’s GitHub documentation: github
Linux Phones
Community about running GNU/Linux on phones. Projects like Ubuntu Touch, Plasma Mobile, PostmarketOS, Mobian etc. Either on former Android phones or hardware like the PinePhone.
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Horrible to install or actually doable by mere mortals?
Horrible user experience or actually useable by mere mortals?
Seems pretty cool regardless of the answers to those questions!
Judging by the comments, this is an early development state. So, installation is probably not doable by mere mortals. User experience is probably like 70% there, as once it generally runs on a device, then the UI stuff works the same as elsewhere, but some rather important hardware features might not work yet, like phone calls or the camera, as those tend to need separate work for the specific hardware...
Thanks @Codename_goose@sh.itjust.works for linking the GitHub project. Just at a cursory glance, am I reading correctly that you have to boot to PMOS from your computer each time you reboot your device? I don't have any real problems with that, just want to set my expectations.
It sounds really interesting and great in term of e-waste reduction.
I can only imagine of difficult it has to be to install though😅
Any clarification on processor limitation? Seems to stop at A11. I just happen to have an XS so A12. Wondering if it's a small thing or if the the architecture or security or both is so different it might never be possible.
Anyone that used pmOS before recommend this?
Pmos is a pretty solid os with great tui image building tools. I know I'll probably wait a bit on this until I try it on one, there's likely a lot that doesn't work yet
Yes, used on PinePhone and PinePhonePro, works well.
iPhones already have the longest software update cycle on the market (though many manufacturers are finally catching up), this could make a 7 year phone become a 15 year phone nowadays since the annual hardware changes are kinda meaningless. That's ridiculous, in a good way. Of course it's been possible for the many Android devices that support PostmarketOS for quite a while, but then those are phones that had way less original support and much smaller market share individually, so if this catches on, it could be even more impactful than Postmarket on Android phones.