I'm hoping to dedicate a video or 2 to every major subsystem of the phone. As usual, you can access these early on Minds, Odysee, and Mewe. 0:00 - PinePhone 0:45 - Advantages 1:05 - PostmarketOS experience 1:27 - How to add an OS 2:14 - PostmarketOS experiences 3:10 - Overall impressions 4:22 - Upcoming work
Yep! I'm not sure what was done to fix it, but the photo at 3:38 came directly from the file system and I was pretty suprised to see they were no longer tinted.
I come from a machine learning engineering background: i deeply believe people should share their battery usage logs to help with future data-driven approaches to optimising the battery ussage. You can use reinforcement learning with enough data points. Ontop of that, i want to develop an IP configuration to make anonymity a first class citzen via routing all tcp traffic through tor. Was just looking at a means of falling back to Voice over IP via tcp rathher than UDP to create a annonomous phone call experience.
Thanks for letting me know. I didn't want to leave anyone high and dry if their favorite carrier was having troubles. Hopefully the list is growing every day.
Yep. I might try eMMC installation very soon now that I have a new backup PinePhone. Will have to research this Tow-Boot stuff. I've heard a little bit about it but haven't had the chance to try it yet.
Pmos so far I don't see is very usable. Phosh(no althernative input methods for none latin langauge, sqeekboard and phosh-osk-stub are the only keyboards to use, Ibus doen't work), Gnome(online account signed popup, or some apps like pure maps, virtual input keyboard is not recoganized by wayland, not poping up, I have to use the physical keyboard to force the input), Plasma(really have trouble to sync the gmail, contact), others are desktop interfaces, sxmo(very limited, requires too many configurations, apps don't show up in the applist, even though the name is simple mobile.. but it is the most complicated one). Ubuntu Touch(no VoLTE), pretty much can't use in the States. So far the only linux mobile that can be used daily with all the requirements and android(de-googled) apps running is Sailfish OS which I have used for 2 years. Really hope Pmos can get out the of the beta testing and have the official production release.
It sounds like it is still a work in progress. I find that Samsung's Keyboard (v5.6) for Android is very well-designed so I'm hoping there is a similar project out there somewhere for postmarketOS. Maybe if I can get de-googled Android on this phone, it will be my next OS to test.
I don't know the answer to this one. Mainly, I'd want to know if the Helium/T-Mobile networks support 4G and for how long, since this Pine model has a 4G modem. I've heard mixed reviews about using Waydroid to run Android apps on GNU Linux, but this is another possibility.