Your Android Phones Aren’t ‘Google’ Anymore, They’re All ‘Gemini’
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Cool, I still won't "hey" anything since all these voice things are janky and privacy nightmares anyways.
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Mine ain't.
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Cool, I still won't "hey" anything since all these voice things are janky and privacy nightmares anyways.
I'll consider using it when I can rename it as "asshole"
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Not to be confused with the gemini protocol.
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I'll consider using it when I can rename it as "asshole"
'Hey Asshole!'
beep
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Mine ain't.
GrapheneOS is go brrrr
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GrapheneOS is go brrrr
We have to enjoy it while we still can
Let's face it, unfortunately the GrapheneOS developer team depending exclusively on Google hardware is a terrible thing in the long run, I bet that overnight Google will close the siege with the Pixels or possibly even abandon them so the whole community will have no alternative
Google may also abandon Android, and there is no guarantee that another major company would keep it. I have real concerns about the Android model
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We have to enjoy it while we still can
Let's face it, unfortunately the GrapheneOS developer team depending exclusively on Google hardware is a terrible thing in the long run, I bet that overnight Google will close the siege with the Pixels or possibly even abandon them so the whole community will have no alternative
Google may also abandon Android, and there is no guarantee that another major company would keep it. I have real concerns about the Android model
It's a reasonable stopgap until Linux smartphones are ready. I don't need much, just regular phone features (phone, SMS/MMS, data, etc), decent battery life, and decent audio. Give me that and I'll ditch my Pixel.
And honestly, I could probably switch today if forced.
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I'll consider using it when I can rename it as "asshole"
"Don't call that dog "lifesaver;" call him "shithead.""
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It's a reasonable stopgap until Linux smartphones are ready. I don't need much, just regular phone features (phone, SMS/MMS, data, etc), decent battery life, and decent audio. Give me that and I'll ditch my Pixel.
And honestly, I could probably switch today if forced.
It is definitely getting there (depending on the device), but there are still more than a few rough edges. Calls, SMS/MMS and data is working for the most part, still some bugs here and there. The biggest issues with calls, SMS and data tend to depend on the carrier and country.
On my Linux phone (FLX1) battery life tends to be good enough if not using android apps, and... acceptable if using android apps. It is definitely a phone you need to charge every night though. Audio tends to be OK, but isn't configured out of the box to use USB audio.
Notifications tend to be my biggest problem with Linux phones at the moment, as they aren't well handled by apps and software outside of SMS and missed calls. Installed apps tend to need to be open for notifications to go through.
Honestly, I don't see Linux phones as being viable for the average person for quite a long time. But it is definitely possible to get by using it as your only phone.
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I've never gotten 'Hey Google" to work properly when the phone is locked. And my phone is always locked except when I'm already using it, in which case it's just easier and less awkward to hold down the activation button.
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It's a reasonable stopgap until Linux smartphones are ready. I don't need much, just regular phone features (phone, SMS/MMS, data, etc), decent battery life, and decent audio. Give me that and I'll ditch my Pixel.
And honestly, I could probably switch today if forced.
I'm so fed up that I'm about to go all in on linux smartphones as long as phone, sms and data work. Everything else. Guess I don't need it. To my knowledge those things do work. I just need to see how solid they are.
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It's a reasonable stopgap until Linux smartphones are ready. I don't need much, just regular phone features (phone, SMS/MMS, data, etc), decent battery life, and decent audio. Give me that and I'll ditch my Pixel.
And honestly, I could probably switch today if forced.
The problem is that everything is so reliant on apps nowadays. Paying for parking? There are multiple apps for that. Want to make payments on the go? Gotta use the banking app. Want to buy a buss, train or tram ticket? Download the app.
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The problem is that everything is so reliant on apps nowadays. Paying for parking? There are multiple apps for that. Want to make payments on the go? Gotta use the banking app. Want to buy a buss, train or tram ticket? Download the app.
If they want my money they'll change that.
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It is definitely getting there (depending on the device), but there are still more than a few rough edges. Calls, SMS/MMS and data is working for the most part, still some bugs here and there. The biggest issues with calls, SMS and data tend to depend on the carrier and country.
On my Linux phone (FLX1) battery life tends to be good enough if not using android apps, and... acceptable if using android apps. It is definitely a phone you need to charge every night though. Audio tends to be OK, but isn't configured out of the box to use USB audio.
Notifications tend to be my biggest problem with Linux phones at the moment, as they aren't well handled by apps and software outside of SMS and missed calls. Installed apps tend to need to be open for notifications to go through.
Honestly, I don't see Linux phones as being viable for the average person for quite a long time. But it is definitely possible to get by using it as your only phone.
I don't see Linux phones being viable for the average person for a long time
Which is really so sad isn't it? The whole thing is so modular it would really just take one dev team a few months to at least get the ball rolling if they had the investment but... It's just not instantly profitable enough for anyone to bother putting the initial money in
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The problem is that everything is so reliant on apps nowadays. Paying for parking? There are multiple apps for that. Want to make payments on the go? Gotta use the banking app. Want to buy a buss, train or tram ticket? Download the app.
Just say no. I use a web browser for 90% of things, and just avoid stores that force an app down my throat. I don't have a single store-specific app on my phone, and it's glorious.
I use GrapheneOS, and it's surprisingly fine. Most things still have a functional website.
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I’m ready for Linux Phone. No more of this big tech bullshit.
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If they want my money they'll change that.
The way things seem to be going these days, they'd rather have your compliance.
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If I had know the level of shit from google when I retired my previous 8 year old phone, I would have picked degoogled version of Fairphone.