• DupaCycki@lemmy.world
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    5 hours ago

    When I hear ‘mainstream phone’, in my mind I picture an iPhone or a Samsung. So yeah, Linux phones are definitely not achieving that this decade. Though personally I don’t think they necessarily need to, at all.

    Point 4 is probably not happening any time soon, if ever, either. Rest is slowly being done and progressing, so I’m not seeing any major problems there.

    I don’t think anyone realistically expects a Linux phone to compete with an iPhone in terms of ease of use, quality of life features or UI/UX. As far as I’ve seen, people just want a decent phone with basic functionalities like long battery life, good camera, easy to use and smooth UI, maps and navigation. All while being more private and secure, of course.

    • xiii@lemmy.world
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      5 hours ago

      Mainstream phone as in “I don’t need to debug it via terminal”

      The issue I’m pointing at: safe, long battery life, snappy maps while driving is what took AOSP more than 5 years.

      It would be very unfortunate to discard all that work and start from scratch.