I hope they choose to focus efforts on linux instead of trying to keep Google from fully obliterating their ability to offer apps on the Android platform.
Even if they are thrown a bone during this fight, it’s going to keep happening until they lose. The reason linux is so bad to try to use as a smartphone right now is because entities like these are busy trying to piss up a rope with Google and Android. We could have actually had robust and feature rich linux phones if they had taken the hint when Google first started shitting on people trying to use their Android phone in the way they want to.
Linux phones can also implement features that Google is slow to add in aosp.
Whelp, fuck Google. I’ve been slowly transitioning to being Google Free. Google = EVIL.
Gotta get around to deleting my Google account thankfully I got all my play books onto Calibre.
Don’t delete. You may find in the future you used Gmail for an account you forgot about. Just let the account sit there.
Disagree, migrate everything important you can think of, let it sit for a year or two and then delete. If you didn’t need it in that time, chances are you likely never will.
Since many years I’ve used exclusively GrapheneOS with F-Droid. Fuck proprietary software and especially fuck Google.
So, like, will Linux phones be able to run a compatibility layer that lets FDroid Android apps work on them?
Besides Waydroid there’s also SailfishOS which has AndroidAppSupport, which works a lot better than Waydroid, but still isn’t perfect. Of all the Linux mobile OSes, I think SailfishOS has the best design and ecosystem. You might have seen the preorder campaign for the new Jolla phone that might be interesting if you want to move away from Android phones.
That sounds like good work being done!
Afaik Jolla doesn’t work in USA but if the is is open-source maybe I can find a way to install it
Sadly some parts of SFOS is closed source. I think it should work in the US, they just currently don’t sell anything from their stores outside of the EU. Any community port should be able to run, but then without the official AndroidAppSupport and only with Waydroid.
AFAIK the only closed source component has something to do with the AndroidAppSupport, or am I wrong?
Closed source is closed source in any case though, and we don’t like closed source.
Yes, that’s called Waydroid.
I know that waydroid exists but will it work on Linux phones in the same way that Xwayland can seamlessly or relatively seamlessly allow X11 apps to work on a wayland compositor without the user having to think about it too much.
It’s not as seamless as it should be sadly. You have to use a command to install it on Ubuntu Touch.
That doesn’t sound too bad for if I have a Linux phone. What I’m more thinking about is can you use all the gestures for navigation and stuff that you’re used to and will the app work full screen and basically can you forget that you are not using a native app.
I guess this is all hypothetical and some apps will work better than others just like anything else.
UT has a unique interface and gestures, so it does take time getting used to but it’s getting nicer to use overtime.
Waydroid is running LineageOS, so I believe so.
Too late Google Linux phones are booming.
Linux phones are booming.
Booming, eh?

If you’re having problems finding the linux line on the graph, it’s one of those at the 0%.
There’s more interest I have seen first hand in the groups. Many phones have locked bootloaders.
More interest is a very far cry from “linux phones are booming”. Linux phones are not booming, they are niche projects for people that like to tinker and don’t need any of the most popular phone apps and features.
Until we can install linux on more than a couple phones, trust cellular connections across all the networks and have access to the majority of features and apps that a smart phone should possess, linux phones will never “boom”.
I say this as a Ubuntu touch user on the Fairphone 4. It is not an experience that anyone else I know would accept from their smartphone.





