can an average person use a linux phone?

@linuxphones

I’ve been reading some articles about mobile Linux and many of them state one must be an “advanced user” or that the software isn’t secure. How true is this?

I already use Linux on my laptop, but I’m not a software developer or anything like that. Would I be able to slap a new OS onto an old Android phone and be on my way, or would I run into problems?

#MobileLinux #Linux #LinuxPhone #FOSS

19 points

I would advise against it. Most of the Linux phones are really not “average user” friendly yet.

However if you have one of the well supported devices from here: https://devices.ubuntu-touch.io/ you can give it a try.

permalink
report
reply
12 points

Number 1 rule is to try it out on a second phone. Do not try with your current phone. Just don’t.

Second rule : read the first rule again.

In all seriousness, I have had so much fun with mobile Linux OS’s, trying out different phones and OS’s but there’s a deep learning curve and at the end of the day, there is not one that is completely ready to be use as a daily driver or have all the apps that I need - looking at you DUO Mobile (2fa).

However there is /e/OS, where is degoogled, has a built in tracker blocker and uses microG. Use it as a daily driver on my One plus 6t but its technically still Android. Someone did mentioned Murena, same OS.

Buy a cheap supported phone off of EBay and have a go. If you have any questions, let me know.

permalink
report
reply
8 points

@duckweed @codenul
I’m replying via tokodon running manjaro plasma mobile on a pinephone. The keyboard app crashed halfway through.

Fun but not reliable yet.

permalink
report
parent
reply
8 points

Can they? Probably. Would they want to? Most certainly not. You lose a lot of functionality that you’re used to, and simple things become complicated. If you’re an average person, meaning you don’t really care that much about privacy, and you don’t really enjoy tinkering with things, then a Linux phone is just going to be a source of constant frustration.

permalink
report
reply
6 points
*

aa

permalink
report
reply
5 points

@duckweed @linuxphones

I think, they are not quite there yet for the moment and the average user (but I am by no means a dev. or fluent in code).

However, I can really recommend you to look at alternative Android OS’es. Here it depends on what you want.

For Privacy, the best one is GrapheneOS. You can have all google stuff (apps and google services) running sandboxed. And you can create multiple users for different purposes: like one for your daily use, with no Gapps, and another one 1/

permalink
report
reply

Hi there! The links in your response are not clickable for Lemmy users, here are the clickable versions: !linuxphones@lemmy.ml

permalink
report
parent
reply
1 point

Why is this one post cut up in 3 posts?

permalink
report
parent
reply
2 points

@InFerNo mastodon has shorter character limits than lemmy

permalink
report
parent
reply

Linux Phones

!linuxphones@lemmy.ml

Create post

Community about running GNU/Linux on phones. Projects like Ubuntu Touch, Plasma Mobile, PostmarketOS, Mobian etc. Either on former Android phones or hardware like the PinePhone.

See also:

Related chats:

Community stats

  • 183

    Monthly active users

  • 199

    Posts

  • 1K

    Comments