• frank@sopuli.xyz
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    4 hours ago

    I have a FP5, and love it. Yes, of course I wish it had a headphone jack.

    Dual sim for my two countries I use it for, plus no sim tool needed to change hardware sim is a nice little plus.

    Replaceable battery is dank. It’s small and light enough to toss in a small bag if I’m going somewhere and I honestly basically never think about my battery life now.

    All the rest of the hardware is pretty good. Not amazing, you can get more for the money, but also it feels good to have some morality in it. And I don’t want to break it bir the peace of mind that if I do it’s an easy repair, fantastic.

    I hated the Fairphone case though. Terrible POS. I got a random internet one and it’s much better.

  • rbn@sopuli.xyz
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    8 hours ago

    Does someone have experience with a de-googled Android phone (graphene, /e/, …) for professional use in IT? I need a ton of authenticator apps (Microsoft Authenticator, Oracle Authenticator,…), various VPN apps and privacy-invading ‘security’ apps. Does such stuff typically work without play services and with a custom rom?

    In the past I used a custom rom on my private phone and already there it was a bit of hassle to get the banking app running. I’d assume it to be worse with these professional spyware apps. Am I right?

    • bloubz@lemmygrad.ml
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      5 hours ago

      On grapheneos you can setup a separate user profile and install Google services there. Note that fairphone is not supported by GrapheneOS

      If the OS is not 100% degoogled, it can be running microg for example, this should work as a replacement for Google services

    • dynamoMaus@feddit.org
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      7 hours ago

      Every thing you said works perfectly fine on my calyxOS FP5. Haven’t tried Oracle Authenticator

  • kittenzrulz123@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    7 hours ago

    I personally use a Pixel 9 with GraphineOS, I would love to use a fairphone however they desperately need to get themselves together and improve security significantly.

    • callcc@lemmy.world
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      1 hour ago

      I can’t tell you the details but for some good reasons, GrapheneOS don’t support Fairphone hardware. They somehow fuck things up in the security domain.

    • SayCyberOnceMore@feddit.uk
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      6 hours ago

      How so?

      Do you mean the company?

      The phones are getting updates years after other phones support stops…

      Edit… just saw your other post.

  • Maiq@lemy.lol
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    12 hours ago

    I really wanted one but it’s hardware isn’t supported by grapheneOS. I wish these two companies would partner up, that would be the best of both worlds.

    • houseofleft@slrpnk.net
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      9 hours ago

      Might not be the same, but they do partner with Murino to offer an /e/os degoogled alternative.

      • Maiq@lemy.lol
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        8 hours ago

        That’s cool. At least its degoogled. GOS’s security is a must for me though, after using it I don’t ever want to go without. But I’m glad fairPhone is offering alternatives.

    • kittenzrulz123@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      7 hours ago

      GraphineOS hasnt been a company since they split off from copperheados and rebreanded to GraphineOS, they have no budget to maintain more phones. In addition Fairphone has a long history of severe security problems, using publically available keys for verified boot, having a broken implementation of verified boot, delaying critical security updates, not providing all promised updates, and not having the hardware security features that GraphineOS demands. Heres the thing, GraphineOS is the most secure mobile OS because they dont compromise on security. Putting GraphineOS on the fairphone would require watering it down so much that it wouldn’t truly be GraphineOS anymore.

      • Maiq@lemy.lol
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        7 hours ago

        I get the reason gOS only supports the pixel, its the most secure hardware. Would never want them to water down their security for anything. I would very much like fairPhone to meet or exceed gOS security demands. That way they could be paired together to achieve a true completely degoogled secure phone.

        • kittenzrulz123@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          5 hours ago

          There is no way for them to do that, GOS requires a security chip with a standard only Google meets atm. For Fairphone to meet GOS requirements not only would they need to improve their security but they would need to build several custom chips (that are not cheap nor easy to design).

  • Lad@reddthat.com
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    10 hours ago

    Apart from the excellent repairability, this would feel like a downgrade from my S21 Ultra. Love the concept though.

  • skarn@discuss.tchncs.de
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    15 hours ago

    I am writing right now from my degoogled Fairphone 4 running /e/OS.

    I would buy again in a heartbeat.

    It’s definitely not the most bang for your bucks. But it’s good enough for any use, it already outlived my last 3 phones, and it shows no sign of giving up (even when I was using the Google infested OS a few months back).

    I’d recommend it.

    • JustEnoughDucks@feddit.nl
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      6 hours ago

      Interesting, my girlfriend’s friend bought a FP4 because she wanted an eco-friendlyish phone that would last a long time and she says it has been the worst phone of her life with tons of bugs, super slow specifically over 4G, mediocre camera, android auto works badly, etc…

      (She uses android, not /e/ or calyx)

      I want so hard to believe, but there are just as many reports of it being very bug ridden as positive reviews, so it is difficult, since the negative ones always seem to be detailed and specific.

      I would also consider a pixel for graphene, but no SD card and 128GB or 256GB internal memory only is a deal breaker. My SD card + flash in my current phone is already at 245GB

      • houseofleft@slrpnk.net
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        4 hours ago

        Ah that sucks! What kind of issues did she have?

        I’m obviously one person, so not a good sample, but I’ve had F4 with stock android for about 3 uears and haven’t seen any bugs yet, even with android auto.

        As to the camera, I’d agree it’s “fine” but if you ignore the repairability and ethical supply chain angle, you can definitely get a much better camera for the same price range.

      • SayCyberOnceMore@feddit.uk
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        6 hours ago

        I replaced the stock apps with better ones from fdroid and a friend’s car just doesn’t seem to like Android Auto from any phone, so maybe the bugs aren’t with the phone?

        I don’t use Android Auto either (because it’s 99.9% Google), but I know my car (Merc A220) just sometimes won’t connect to my Fairphone over bluetooth… and it’s definitely the car. Literally pull over, get out of the car, lock it… unlock it, get back in and bluetooth connects again. Not touched the phone… ffs

    • houseofleft@slrpnk.net
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      9 hours ago

      I’m writing from F4 as well. The longer I own it, the more I’m impressed. Fixability has saved me replacing the phone twice now (I dropped it on the screen, and got cement in the usb charger).

      If you’re just considering spec, its fairly pricey, but the repairability easily makes up for it. Have a pair of their bluetooth headphones too which I love.

      Question for OP: how did you find installing /e/OS? I have android still but am thinking about trying to install.

      • boonhet@lemm.ee
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        15 hours ago

        I agree that nobody should trust any corpo, including Apple, but there’s nuance to that story that never gets mentioned in these discussions.

        Apple used to slow down devices whose batteries were starting to fail, in order to reduce the likelihood that your device suddenly turns off before the battery reads as empty. Simply put, if the battery couldn’t guarantee a certain power output down until empty, they’d throttle the CPU.

        The notably scummy part here is that they didn’t tell users, and it wasn’t an option you could change. To make up for it, they had a cheap battery replacement program for several years and informed users about the issue, and I believe it’s optional now?

        This was also several years before other manufacturers started offering OS support timelines comparable to Apple’s. Apple still let you update a 6 year old iPhone when others were doing 3 years for flagships. Fairphone of course was an exception.

        You should still get a Fairphone if it meets your actual needs or a Pixel if you need GrapheneOS, but if you’re a non technical user who actually can make the most of a flagship, I’d recommend an iPhone over Samsung (just as expensive as Apple and these are the guys who put ads in TV UI nowadays) or Google (questionable stability with the Tensor chips in some iterations) at least. 5 years ago I’d recommend OnePlus, but those days are over. The stock ROM is now ass. I keep my old 7 pro around to play Real Racing 3 and with a custom rom I’m like 3 android versions beyond OEM support and it’s actually super smooth. But I won’t recommend it to a non techy user.

        PS: I’m an Apple user, but not a diehard fan boy. I make comments explaining or defending them often because I feel Apple gets way more flak than their competitors who are usually equally scummy.

        • chaos@beehaw.org
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          7 hours ago

          Yup. I had an iPhone 6S that was affected by this. When the battery was starting to get older, things like opening the camera would sometimes just cause the phone to die. I got the battery replaced for free, but flipping it to throttle instead of randomly shut itself down was an improvement, and likely extended the usable lives of the affected phones, not artificially shorten them. It shouldn’t have been done secretly but it wasn’t a conspiracy to sell more iPhones.

          • lightnsfw@reddthat.com
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            3 hours ago

            It shouldn’t have been done secretly but it wasn’t a conspiracy to sell more iPhones

            If they weren’t trying to sell more phones they’d have given you a notification with instructions to replace the battery and designed it in a way that a person with no special skills could do so instead of just crippling the device.

        • boonhet@lemm.ee
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          15 hours ago

          Additional note: they also did it with some Macbooks and I can tell you it had nothing to do with battery AGE. Machines that shower either a faulty or significantly worn battery would be slow. Apple considered 80% of nominal capacity to be the limit where a battery should be replaced under warranty on those, but the slowdowns started at like 50 or 60 percent if I recall correctly. By faulty I mean devices where the system scan in AST legally said “internal fault” or something. I used to refurb Macbooks.

          It was noticeable in the 2012 macbook air because that model, a weird unicorn year with components that differed from both the 2010-2011 and 2013-2017 models, would significantly slow down with a bad battery even when it was connected to AC power. Literally removing the battery made it usable again. In other model years it was never really noticeable.

    • SayCyberOnceMore@feddit.uk
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      14 hours ago

      Yeah, I have a FP3+…

      I’m actually feeling guilty about considering a FP5 because my current phone works absolutely fine, had recent updates and I have a good spare battery ready to swap out on long days… so… I’ll probably stay with this one even though I want the new one

      • experiencetheworld@feddit.org
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        14 hours ago

        For how long did you had the FP3+? How much did it costs?

        I currently have the Xiaomi Redmi Note 9 Pro and bought it for 250€. Ofcourse I’m awear that it’s a Chinese phone but I bought it when I didn’t know any better. This year it will be 5 or 6 years old but still works for the daily needs and I like to use things till the break or aren’t really useable anymore.

        So I’m curious how much yours had cost and for how long you used it. Also some other questions:

        1. How much do you use the phone?
        2. How long does one charged battery lasts?

        If you don’t feel comfortable with sharing information don’t answer the question but I would be interested as I maybe want my next phone to be a Fairphone too.

        • SayCyberOnceMore@feddit.uk
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          6 hours ago

          Um, not sure. I wasn’t an early adopter, so 4+ years?

          And… I think it was ~€400 + usual taxes and delivery, so, say €450 in total?

          It’s basically in use everyday, although I don’t spend that much time on calls, but with (my own enabled) GPS trackers and sensors enabled for Home Automation and generally letting the family know where I am, I’ll easily get a day out of the battery…

          If I’m travelling I’m using the phone a lot more so the spare battery would probably be needed (in a 18 hour work day)

          I’ve also bought a replacement bottom module as the USB port has become a little loose from charging… not replaced it yet (to get the most out of it), but will do soon.

          So, yeah, the best bits are: instant battery replacement / recharging (it’s great walking past all the other phone users tethered to their wall chargers) and longevity with replacment parts that I can change myself. (And still getting updates)

    • jnod4@lemmy.ca
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      13 hours ago

      How’s the cameras? My Samsung cameras are absolutely incredible and I’ve finally managed to leave my olympus camera at home and it’s incredibly useful to have something that can relatively compare