this post was submitted on 07 Apr 2022
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Hello

I'm being pushed into the market by google/android to acquire a new phone due to it slowing down. I'm sick of this marketing tactic and the clutter of preinstalled apps and junk software.

What phone and operating system could I get that could allow me to use for a long period of time and out of reach from subversive tactics from giant corporations?

I'm basically a farmer and so know nothing about coding and not too technologically oriented but would really like to break away from the capitalist/hyperconsumerist phone craze. Thank you.

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[–] cypherpunks@lemmy.ml 2 points 2 years ago (2 children)

/e/OS

Last time I looked, /e/ OS was going-to-be-open-source-later software (but was already distributing images). Now it looks like they have published a lot of source code but their FAQ ominously says

Yes – all our source code is available and you can compile it, fork it. Some pre-built applications are used in the system; they are built separately from source code available here, or synced from open-source repositories such as F-Droid. We ship one proprietary application though.

...which, for me, goes from cool to wat to nope in three sentences.

(I do wonder what their one proprietary app is, but am not going to spend more than the minute i just spent trying to find the answer to that question.)

[–] Jama@lemmy.ml 2 points 2 years ago (1 children)

The only app is magic earth, a maps app. It has a great privacy policy, tho, and works very well. You can use whatever you want, of course

[–] AgreeableLandscape@lemmygrad.ml 1 points 2 years ago

Why include it as a default though? If they simply dropped a recommendation, or asked to install it letting you know it's proprietary, sure people might still complain but it won't be seen as nearly as serious a violation of FLOSS principles.

[–] AgreeableLandscape@lemmygrad.ml 0 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago)

I do wonder what their one proprietary app is

I vaguely remember there was this weird PDF reader app I'd never heard of the last time I used /e/. Going to bet it was that. Never used it, installed Book Reader from F-droid in its place.

Now, why that would be a default, I don't know. The only non "it's sponsored" theory I can come up with is that vanilla AOSP, by itself, has no actual ability to read PDFs. There is no default app for it and none of the common browsers can open them either. This is actually a problem in LineageOS because it only ships the AOSP default apps.

Or maybe it's their custom app store that connects to Google Play without signing in? It doesn't seem it's based on Yalp/Aurora Store.