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  • bionicjoey@lemmy.ca
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    1 year ago

    I recently picked up a Fairphone 4. I got it mostly because of the removable battery and easy repairing, but it’s nice to know I’m supporting a manufacturer that cares about sustainability.

    • MacroCyclo@lemmy.ca
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      1 year ago

      Cool, are those the modular ones intended to be able to replace all the different pieces of it?

      • bionicjoey@lemmy.ca
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        1 year ago

        Yup. Basically every part of the phone is repairable and replaceable. I bought it after I accidentally water damaged my previous phone- an LG V20 that had served me faithfully for almost 6 years. I initially thought I might be able to just replace the display of my V20 because the rest of it works fine, but LG no longer makes phones (and the V20 is an older model), so I didn’t have much option.

  • Joe_0237@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    Apple might turn evil? They have always been evil, and goole is evil to. Try a free android distro like CalyxOS, GraphineOS, LineageOS or /e/OS. This is not a complete list.

  • OrkneyKomodo@latte.isnot.coffee
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    1 year ago

    Currently using a Google Pixel 5 that’s running CalyxOS.

    Ditched Apple after they initially announced they were going to start screening messages and photos (although they later walked that back). I value privacy, and hence hate Google. But Google do make sole good hardware. CalyxOS allows me to have the best of both worlds… a privacy-centric OS, running on decent hardware that’s compatible with any Android app (although you still need to be a little careful what you install from a privacy perspective).

    I am aware that more modern Pixel models have been released, but I’m waiting for one that’s a little less massive. Every model since the Pixel 5 has been larger than it.

    • tomatobeard@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      I also have a Pixel 5 and like the size of it. Whenever I handle my wife’s Pixel 6 it feels freaking huge.

      Was thinking about Calyx or Graphene. Is it pretty low fuss for daily use?

      • OrkneyKomodo@latte.isnot.coffee
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        1 year ago

        I was on Graphene but switched to Calyx. Personally, I find easier. The integration of microG helps with a few things, such as apps stuck using Google’s push notification service and apps that require SafetyNet. I was going to try Graphene again, but I was thinking of waiting for a new phone.

        Calyx is very nice. I’ve found it to be no fuss at all.

  • nachtigall@feddit.de
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    1 year ago

    iOS because Apple ecosystem is much more convenient and consistent. I do not worry so much about the struggle you mentioned because the EU will fix it (see USB-C, sideoading, more to come)

  • any1th3r3 [he/him]@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    Pixel 6 Pro running GrapheneOS, which I got a couple months ago. Pixel phones are the only ones compatible with GrapheneOS, otherwise I would’ve kept my Samsung phone tbh

    • DovahFiST@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      So I know I’m in the minority not really caring all that much about the whole Google ecosystem, I enjoy it and how everything stays connected, I’m not necessarily on a crusade to prevent all data tracking on myself and all of that.

      I have a Pixel 6 Pro as well and looks like I’m gonna wait until the 9 pro to upgrade again if possible, my 6 pro is over a year old and still showing no signs of stopping, still plenty of power for everything I need it for and beyond. Is there anything beyond de-googling that GrapheneOS provides? Can I stay google-ified while running it? Just trying to see what kind of benefits it provides other than de-googling

  • Zed@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Android because I like the freedom it provides.

    As for the phone I’m using. It’s a Oneplus 3 I got a few years back, it’s falling apart but I can’t afford changing it, so I’ll be using it till its last breath.

  • jalkasieni@sopuli.xyz
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    1 year ago

    iPhone 11. I agree on the dangers of corps turning evil, but I don’t agree that the solution is to move from ”might turn evil in the future” (Apple) to ”already pretty far in the evil camp” (Google). This is already becoming apparent with the enshittification of Google search. Chromium and Android will soon follow.

    • tebro@lemmy.tebro.fi
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      1 year ago

      I am in the same boat, in my world Apple is better than Google. It works a bit better out of the box, and lately I don’t use my phone for a lot of things anyway, mostly doomscrolling on reddit (now lemmy).

  • Krik@feddit.de
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    1 year ago

    Xiaomi Mi 10T with LineageOS 19 (there’s no v20 for it) I bought it because I needed a new one that supports 5G and didn’t cost a fortune.

    Next one might be a Fairphone 5 whenever it comes out. Or a Pixel with GrapheneOS.

    I’m also interested in a mobile that runs Linux instead of Android (see PinePhone). But there’re none that have good/current hardware.

    • KindnessInfinity@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      I’d recommend getting that pixel. They have 5 years of support with security patches. Do know that the 5 years is with newer devices from 6/6a & up

  • Rik@laguna.chat
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    1 year ago

    Fairphone 4 running /e/OS. I love the modularity, quality and robustness. Just the fact that if I drop my screen I can just replace it for €80 using my own hands.

    /e/OS is still in development, which you sometimes notice, but I love its privacy focused aspects. It is decoupled from Google, includes a tracker monitor and blocker, an appstore that can download apps from the Google Play store anonymously and best of all the developers do deliver. All their releases are well tested.

    The only thing I struggle with are in app purchases. If they use the Google Play platform they just won’t work.

    I bought this phone from Murena, which is a branch of the /e/Foundation that sells devices with /e/OS preinstalled.

    • FleaCatcher@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      but I love its privacy focused aspects

      Having worked at /e/OS, on the microG part, I can tell you that the privacy focus is way less than whatever you think it is. Also, the companies (yes, plural) behind /e/ or whatever it’s called now are French, and the French laws regarding government and intelligence agencies access to personal data are lax. By using /e/ and their services, you are not passing data to the US, you are not passing data to China, but rather you are passing data to France and the /e/ team - which if you search around, you might find out that they don’t have a really good street cred.

  • quantum-drifter@lemmy.ca
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    1 year ago

    Android. Pixel 7. Because it’s a pretty close to stock experience and Pixels get updates the quickest and most frequent updates compared to other Android phones.

    • siyuze@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      How is it in terms of speed/responsiveness? I’ve been considering getting one

      • DovahFiST@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Every pixel I’ve ever had has been extremely responsive. My OG Pixel XL, my Pixel 2 XL, my Pixel 4 XL, and my current Pixel 6 Pro were always very responsive and didn’t seem to slow down at any point. I’d imagine the OG Pixel XL is probably a little.laggy-feeling compared to the newest pixels but yeah; hate to admit it, because I don’t like iPhones, but the Pixel series is like the Iphone of Androids - and only the good things about the iPhone being only manufactured by 1 company - it’s the phone of the actual developer of the OS and gets lots of extra features first because of it, only stock OS apps preinstalled except for maybe a carrier app if phone is financed through them (I have the T-Mobile app on my current Pixel, for example). Super nice build quality, I’ve always ended up being tougher on my phones and the Pixels have held up really really well. Highly recommend them honestly.

    • Deleted@lemmy.dbzer0.comOP
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      1 year ago

      Um no? Depends on what you mean by “locked down”. For custom ROM? Probabaly. But for me, I just want to install apps without the approval of a corporation. If the appstore servers shut down or gets DDOSed for some reason, you’re out of luck.

      • relevants@feddit.de
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        1 year ago

        If you are an EU resident you could just keep your iPhone and wait for the sideloading law to kick in, then you don’t have to worry about that anymore either.

          • relevants@feddit.de
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            1 year ago

            Oh, in that case I guess Apple might region lock the feature, so switching is still a good call. Although in the grand scheme of things I think the legislation will still have a positive impact elsewhere and possibly motivate some US states to follow suit, like what California did after the GDPR.

      • ShadowAether@sh.itjust.works
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        1 year ago

        Did apple shut down sideloading then? When I was testing on iOS, dev local installation was a pain but I would assume that’s still an option if you enable the dev features

    • ShadowAether@sh.itjust.works
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      1 year ago

      I don’t think they are any more “locked down” than the other vendors, usually they have a bunch more features on top of base android. I never used their store tho so idk if that’s what you’re refering to

  • Joe_0237@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    CalyxOS on a google pixel.

    Freedom! Freedom! Freedom!

    Easy installation, just unlock the bootloader and enable adb in settings and plug into a computer and run the installer.

    CalyxOS is set it and forget it. It will update itself seamlessly unlike other free Androids and unlike stock Androids. No maintainacnce. Support will likely continue after the manufacturer kills off your device.

    Automatic updates and one click installs from f-droid. On calyx its even easier to install free as in freedom apps than it is to install the garbage on Google play.

    You can still run your shitty non-free apps from google play (using the aurora store, a free as in freedom app to download google play apps from google play) if someone is forcing you to install their crap.

    • Sproux@mander.xyz
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      1 year ago

      Does it have the issue that rooted devices sometimes have where certain fast food and banking apps don’t work?