The Fairphone 5 price has been dropped to €499. The phone is designed to be the most advanced environmentally friendly smartphone. (shop.fairphone.com)
from dwazou@jlai.lu to technology@lemmy.world on 15 Apr 20:44
https://jlai.lu/post/18047950

I don’t like smartphones. I use a dumbphone.

But this is a wonderful initiative.

#technology

threaded - newest

shortwavesurfer@lemmy.zip on 15 Apr 20:51 next collapse

I really wish this was available in the US. I’ve found myself able to hang on to devices longer and longer. So this would be perfect. I’m only charging my battery to 80% and discharging it to 30% before charging it again just to prolong the life of the battery because that’s the first thing that dies on most devices. Having a user replaceable battery again would be an absolute godsend.

Stalinwolf@lemmy.ca on 15 Apr 21:04 next collapse

I’m interested in this one also. I like the look of it. Currently a long-time Pixel user, but I’m open to other options. It will take a truly good camera to pull me away, though.

woelkchen@lemmy.world on 15 Apr 21:23 next collapse

Sometimes last year Marquez Brownlee (I think it was him, I don’t think it was Dave2D) was conducting a blind test among his audience which Photos they thought looked best. Some top brands were jumping up and down from one test scenario to another but the Fairphone ended up in the midfield constantly. True, that’s not a glowing recommendation of the camera but at least an insurance that one doesn’t get utter trash either.

Stalinwolf@lemmy.ca on 15 Apr 21:46 next collapse

Do you recall which ones scored the highest?

SqueakyBeaver@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 16 Apr 00:13 next collapse

iirc, it’s typically the pixel a series, normal pixel series, the most expensive iPhone, and the Samsung flagship (or smth like that)

The Pixels tend to give really punchy contrast which a lot of people like

woelkchen@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 09:06 collapse

Not off the top of my head but I distinctly remember that the Pixel A phone scored higher than the flagship Pixel model.

I would need to look the video up but I’m also between appointments, so I can comment for a bit but not do research.

Lazhward@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 04:37 collapse

Do you happen to know whether this was before or after the camera update? The camera has been noticeably improved at some point.

woelkchen@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 09:04 collapse

Not off the top of my head, sorry.

shortwavesurfer@lemmy.zip on 15 Apr 22:19 next collapse

That’s honestly one thing I’m really glad about. I’m legally blind, so pictures don’t honestly matter that much to me, and so I could really give a fuck less what the camera looks like as long as it functions well enough to act as a magnifier for me to read small print on things occasionally.

Like if I go pick up one of those frozen pizzas from the store and I need to read the box to know what temperature to set the oven to and how long to put it in. I use the camera to just zoom in on the print and read it and then leave the camera.

lostbit@feddit.nl on 16 Apr 09:03 collapse

the camera is average. Don’t buy this phone for the camera

Naz@sh.itjust.works on 15 Apr 21:15 next collapse

This is a 50% DoD and is considered best possible practice to prevent lithium-ion dendrite formation.

Updoot for good advice.

Proof:

<img alt="" src="https://sh.itjust.works/pictrs/image/06be41de-c8db-4e2f-991f-108ab7926b44.png">

Whooping_Seal@sh.itjust.works on 15 Apr 21:52 next collapse

If you don’t mind clarifying, what do you mean by DoD?

Naz@sh.itjust.works on 15 Apr 21:56 collapse

Depth of Discharge, sorry – 0 to 100 would be a 100% depth (the entire battery), 30 to 80 is 50%.

shortwavesurfer@lemmy.zip on 15 Apr 22:22 next collapse

The really nice thing is that the larger phone batteries get the more you get to use at 50% depth of discharge. My phone is 5,000 mAh and so I get to use 2,500 mAh of it. Once average phones start getting 5,500 mAh, that will mean I will be able to use 2,750 mAh. 250mAh may not sound like a lot, but it can go a decently long way.

Ulrich@feddit.org on 15 Apr 22:27 next collapse

This is a 50% DoD and is considered best possible practice to prevent lithium-ion dendrite formation.

Not entirely true. “Best possible” would be left plugged in and charged to 50%. Next best would be 49-51%. Then 48-52% and so on.

Also it’s not that difficult or expensive to swap a battery and not really worth the stress, in my opinion.

polle@feddit.org on 15 Apr 22:44 collapse

What kind of software creates this plot?

Lazhward@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 04:34 collapse

Looks like AccuBattery.

polle@feddit.org on 16 Apr 08:20 next collapse

ThanCC!

MisterFrog@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 08:35 collapse

Missed opportunity to call it “AkkuBattery” for all the dual language pun enjoyers out there 🎩

Pherenike@lemmy.ml on 15 Apr 21:22 next collapse

Murena does ship them to the USA, but with /e/OS preinstalled, which is great if you’re into privacy and degoogling. I don’t know how it works with US carriers though. Feel free to ask them on their forum, community.e.foundation

shortwavesurfer@lemmy.zip on 15 Apr 22:12 collapse

/e/OS doesnt interest me because its far to iphone(esk) in design. Though i might be able to flash LineageOS instead. I also want nothing to do with Google Play Services or even Micro-G. I even think Micro-G is too much of a compromise and won’t use it. If an app won’t run because Google Play Services doesn’t exist, then I don’t run that app. If I don’t get notifications because Google Play Services doesn’t exist, then I don’t get notifications. So be it.

otp@sh.itjust.works on 15 Apr 22:41 next collapse

its far to iphone(esk) in design

It’s far too iPhone-esque in design

“It’s” has the apostrophe because it’s “it” + "is

“too” has two o’s when there’s an excess of something. More stuff = more o’s!

“esque” is uh…just how it’s spelt

iPhone capitalization is just their branding.

I only commented to help with “esque”, but saw other things I could help with. Knowledge is power!

bdonvr@thelemmy.club on 15 Apr 23:33 collapse

It’s pretty open hardware I’m sure it would be very easy to flash it to Fairphone’s OS

dumblederp@aussie.zone on 15 Apr 21:40 next collapse

There’s other phones with user replaceable batteries. I looked it up a month or so ago. They’re not as ethical as fairphone, but still better than my drawer of working phones with dead batteries.

CmdrShepard42@lemm.ee on 15 Apr 21:56 collapse

Phones like the Galaxy Active which have terrible hardware to make them entirely unappealing outside of that one crucial feature. They do this on purpose.

Ruthalas@infosec.pub on 15 Apr 21:42 next collapse

Are you using something to automate that? If so what? Does it require root?

Natanael@slrpnk.net on 15 Apr 21:55 next collapse

Several Android manufacturers have their own settings in the OS for battery longevity (automatic schedule based smart charging, or charging limits)

Don’t think it’s native in Android. Charging limits need support in the charging controller chip, plus driver support in the OS.

shortwavesurfer@lemmy.zip on 15 Apr 22:08 collapse

So my device settings have the functionality built in to stop charging automatically when the battery hits a certain percentage. And so I have set it to stop charging automatically at 81%. I also use BatteryBot Pro from F-Droid to alert me when the battery rises above 80% or drops below 30%

Sine_Fine_Belli@lemmy.world on 15 Apr 22:33 collapse

Yeah, same here honestly. For real, I wish it was available in the US too

CaptainBasculin@lemmy.bascul.in on 15 Apr 20:57 next collapse

I wish importing phones were an option for my country, but no. Even if I secured a way to bring it here, it takes 1000 dollars just to register its IMEI to use here.

muhyb@programming.dev on 16 Apr 01:27 collapse

Şu an yurtdışından telefon getirtecek olsam IMEI değiştirir geçerdim. iPhone için mümkün olmayabilir. Bu hale getirenler utansın.

VolumetricShitCompressor@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 15 Apr 21:02 next collapse

If they just didn’t drop the headphone jack.

IllNess@infosec.pub on 15 Apr 21:36 next collapse

How else would they push their mediocre reviewed Bluetooth headsets and ear buds?

tetris11@lemmy.ml on 15 Apr 21:46 next collapse

my phone has a headphone jack, my phone before that had a headphone jack. Wanna guess how often I used it? Zero because I have decent bluetooth headphones

Natanael@slrpnk.net on 15 Apr 21:49 next collapse

I use my backup headphones when my Bluetooth headset has run out of battery

Tattorack@lemmy.world on 15 Apr 22:08 next collapse

I use mine. Bluetooth is great and all, but it’s still not the same quality as a hard-line. And they also run out of batteries.

otp@sh.itjust.works on 15 Apr 22:34 next collapse

My decent Bluetooth headphones have the option to plug in a headphone cable to use them wired. I use it occasionally so I can reduce audio latency, which can be useful with gaming…and essential with rhythm games.

communist@lemmy.frozeninferno.xyz on 15 Apr 23:54 next collapse

I used mine all the time because I hate using bluetooth even though I have expensive bluetooth headphones, I have now cancelled you out

Walk_blesseD@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 16 Apr 00:19 next collapse

Okay? You’re not the one asking for a headphone jack tho??? Pointless comment.

HellieSkellie@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 16 Apr 01:32 next collapse

Ok I use my wired headphones

endeavor@sopuli.xyz on 16 Apr 09:03 collapse

I just have a dap that can receive bluetooth. More battery life, drives literally anything to very loud, 4.4mm out and can hold it’s own music library and play it without eating phones battery or memory.

sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works on 16 Apr 02:44 next collapse

My last phone had a headphone jack. Wanna guess how often I used it? All the time! And that was despite having decent Bluetooth headphones.

I loved wearing my cans when mowing the lawn because it cut down on the noise, and I also used them when laying in bed since they had much better audio. I would use my Bluetooth headphones the rest of the time because they were more convenient.

My new phone doesn’t have headphone jack, and I’m super bummed.

Lazhward@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 04:21 collapse

So now you still do the exact same things but with a little dongle, right?

nekusoul@lemmy.nekusoul.de on 16 Apr 06:33 next collapse

Yup. If anything, they should add a second USB-C connector. Much more versatile and you can still charge your phone if one of them dies.

These flaky, but simultaneously bulky headphone connectors need to die. They’re inferior in pretty much every way imaginable.

Asetru@feddit.org on 16 Apr 06:35 collapse

USB-C to headphone jack dongles suck. You lose them easily, you can’t charge your phone if they’re connected and if you disconnect your headphones the device still behaves as if they’re plugged in. It’s so much less convenient and on the other hand there’s just no downside to having a dedicated headphone jack, so I still don’t get why they’re no longer including them.

Lazhward@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 07:51 collapse

You lose them easily

Just leave them connected to the headphones.

you can’t charge your phone if they’re connected

Dongles with an additional usb port exist.

if you disconnect your headphones the device still behaves as if they’re plugged in.

Again, leave the dongle connected to the headphones, not the phone.

It’s so much less convenient

It is less convenient, but I’d argue not by all that much. More importantly it’s not any less convenient for the vast majority who are already only using Bluetooth.

there’s just no downside to having a dedicated headphone jack

  1. It’s an additional, and to most people superfluous, point for water ingress. Water damage is the most common type of damage in phones.

  2. It takes up space which could be utilised otherwise, like with a slightly larger battery or larger speakers or camera modules.

  3. It’s an additional part which needs to be manufactured, stocked, installed and purchased. Extra cost which only benefits a few. This is especially important to Fairphone in particular because they don’t use off-the-shelf components and promise to supply replacement parts pretty much indefinitely. I.e. Fairphone would have to design a custom module and then have that module in stock and manufactured specifically for them for the lifetime of each of their devices. That’s not a trivial expense.

Asetru@feddit.org on 16 Apr 09:47 collapse

I can’t have them connected to my headphones all the time because I connect headphones to other devices that all have a fucking headphone jack.

  1. It’s an additional, and to most people superfluous, point for water ingress. Water damage is the most common type of damage in phones.

I’ve had watertight phones with a headphone jack over a decade ago.

  1. It takes up space which could be utilised otherwise, like with a slightly larger battery or larger speakers or camera modules.

Yes. Anything you add to a phone is a tradeoff. No shit. These points are what is usually used to justify the lack of a jack. But maybe, just maybe, they don’t save as much money as they make with selling wireless headphones and this is just an excuse? Especially the big companies like Apple or Samsung that sell their own peripherals? And this whole thing is just an excuse to sell overpriced gadgets that need to be replaced every few years because of their batteries? Maybe, just maybe, it’d be valid if consumers still had a choice and could pick phones with or without a jack and would have to pay for the luxury of using decent headphones with a few milliamperehours?

  1. It’s an additional part which needs to be manufactured, stocked, installed and purchased. Extra cost which only benefits a few. This is especially important to Fairphone in particular because they don’t use off-the-shelf components and promise to supply replacement parts pretty much indefinitely. I.e. Fairphone would have to design a custom module and then have that module in stock and manufactured specifically for them for the lifetime of each of their devices. That’s not a trivial expense.

Manufacturing a phone is not a trivial expense. Removing features is a business decision and a headphone jack costs money but doesn’t earn any whereas they can produce more cheaply without one. I get it. It’s just that doing so requires you to buy and use battery powered headphones that are much less sustainable than traditional magnets tied to a cable. How a company that lives off its promise to safe the world jumps on that wagon is a miracle to me. Companies that remove headphones don’t care about audio quality (which is why Sony still produces phones with audio jacks, I guess) or sustainability. Which is odd for a company like fp.

Lazhward@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 10:24 collapse

requires you to buy and use battery powered headphones

This is simply false though, we’d agreed that you are required to buy and use a dongle, and that this is an added inconvenience. But you are not required to switch to wireless headphones and your old cans haven’t suddenly become useless. People still have a choice between wired and wireless, wired has just become a little less convenient, that’s all. I completely agree with you that people shouldn’t go out buying new gadgets if their old stuff is still functional, but you can just continue using your old headphones if you get a new phone if you buy a dongle with it. Inconvenient yes, but not the end for wired headphones.

scroll_responsibly@lemmy.sdf.org on 16 Apr 02:44 next collapse

my phone has a headphone jack, my phone before that had a headphone jack. Wanna guess how often I used it? Zero because I have decent bluetooth headphones

That’s just like your opinion man

StJohnMcCrae@slrpnk.net on 16 Apr 04:31 next collapse

Boo this man!

tetris11@lemmy.ml on 16 Apr 09:09 collapse

…are they booing me, or are they booing headphones?

TheGrandNagus@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 06:52 next collapse

Wanna know how many times I played a piano in the past 20 years?

Zero. Clearly they shouldn’t exist.

tetris11@lemmy.ml on 16 Apr 09:06 collapse

No, but maybe you should re-gift it to someone who does…

TheGrandNagus@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 10:34 collapse

You’re not making sense.

Your position was that someone else is wrong to desire audio jacks, because you personally don’t need one after spaffing money on some Bluetooth earphones.

My point – which I thought was very obvious, but apparently you missed it – was that just because you don’t see the value of something doesn’t mean others don’t or that it shouldn’t exist.

I don’t have a piano, and I don’t know why you think I do.

My entire metaphor is that I don’t play or have a piano, but I recognise that it’s stupid for me to discourage others from having them solely because I personally don’t have or want one.

vala@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 10:16 collapse

This is fine if you don’t care about having the best audio quality and lowest latency possible.

tetris11@lemmy.ml on 16 Apr 10:23 collapse

I feel like latency only matters if you’re realtime gaming. In any other situation the video just syncs to the audio.

As for quality AptX-HD is decent for low bitrates even at 24-bit, and LDAC remains excellent for anything higher.
Unless you’re listening to high-res FLAC (in which case, god help your earphone impedance when listening to normal songs), I doubt the loss is audible

tostiman@sh.itjust.works on 16 Apr 07:10 collapse

Ah, that’s a dealbreaker for me

ptz@dubvee.org on 15 Apr 21:12 next collapse

Anyone know what the bootloader unlock process is like for Fairphone? I know they support it, but does it take 7 days like OnePlus or constantly have issues like Motorola?

solrize@lemmy.world on 15 Apr 21:25 next collapse

Wait the Fairphone has a locked bootloader? The mind wobbles.

derGottesknecht@feddit.org on 15 Apr 21:45 collapse

Else anyone with physical access can install spyware without anyone noticing. Thats a bit of security which most people probably won’t notice but can be deactivated in a minute by any owner, so I don’t mind.

hanke@feddit.nu on 15 Apr 21:29 next collapse

First thing I did on my Fairphone 4 was to flash iode OS on it.

I don’t know much about bootloaders and such, but I was done and happy within an hour after purchasing it.

Also, if I am not mistaken, I think warranty is still valid if you run custom ROMs.

Fairphone is very pro openness 😄

derGottesknecht@feddit.org on 15 Apr 21:38 collapse

They have a howto on their support page

fairphone.com/…/bootloader-unlocking-code-for-fai…

And i just tested it, you get the unlock code immediately.

ptz@dubvee.org on 15 Apr 21:45 next collapse

Oh, nice. That was my question. I wish it didn’t require a code at all, but at least you don’t have to wait a week like some other manufacturers. Thanks!

Zak@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 02:51 collapse

I don’t understand why this requires a code rather than a toggle in developer settings like a Pixel. That doesn’t SRM like openness and a commitment to treating users fairly since they could change their policy at any time.

yumyumsmuncher@feddit.uk on 15 Apr 21:14 next collapse

Shame there is no Graphene OS support for it

woelkchen@lemmy.world on 15 Apr 21:28 next collapse

The biggest downside of Fairphone IMO is that they don’t maintain their hardware support in LineageOS and for the retail product then branch development off, add a bit of custom branding and adapt whatever Google requires these days. It would greatly improve custom ROM support in general.

CmdrShepard42@lemm.ee on 15 Apr 21:54 next collapse

And it doesn’t support US bands for TMobile

FireWire400@lemmy.world on 15 Apr 22:00 next collapse

You could always go for /e/os though

Edit: Didn’t know it was this bad…

TacticalCheddar@lemm.ee on 15 Apr 22:05 collapse

/e/os is a security dumpster fire. It’s even worse than stock Android. Stay away from it.

stephen01king@lemmy.zip on 15 Apr 23:01 collapse

Can you explain?

NotForYourStereo@lemmy.world on 15 Apr 23:32 collapse

Every other version of Android gets security updates out within a couple weeks of release at most.

/e/OS users are lucky if they get them within a couple months.

stephen01king@lemmy.zip on 16 Apr 00:22 next collapse

Thanks for the answer. How does it compare against other Android forks in terms of security update speed?

Also, isn’t Fairphone once also criticised for falling behind on Android security updates or was I misremembering this?

NotForYourStereo@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 00:41 collapse

It’s literally the worst.

Also correct, though I am not particularly familiar with Fairphone. Seems like they are down to bimonthly updates, if that.

*We are including two months of security patching in a bi-monthly maintenance release.

sudneo@lemm.ee on 16 Apr 06:26 collapse

No offense, but that’s not what a security dumpster fire is. Security updates are important, of course, but they are also not the biggest deal.

In fact, I bet that the vast majority of users (on Android or otherwise) are lagging way behind in updates anyway.

TacticalCheddar@lemm.ee on 16 Apr 08:46 next collapse

That is not the only issue, it’s just one of the more major ones that shouldn’t be dismissed like it’s nothing. Another major one is the unlocked bootloader. You can take a look at all the Android ROMS here.

I think people should treat carefully when changing the OS of a mobile device. Changing your OS to something less secure just because you want to shove it to Google and Apple is not enough to warrant it. Better to stay with something safe that you know than with something insecure like /e/OS.

Luckily we have Graphene so you can actually switch to a more secure and private OS that is not made by an American corporation hungry for data.

Incogni@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 09:23 collapse

/e/OS has official builds for the fairphones, you can re-lock the bootloader there, afaik. At least according to this: doc.e.foundation/devices/FP5/install

You can also buy the phone directly with /e/OS pre-installed & closed bootloader, from what I read on the fairphone website.

lostbit@feddit.nl on 16 Apr 09:02 collapse

good on you for asking the question. OP does not know what he is talking about

uawarebrah@sh.itjust.works on 15 Apr 23:20 next collapse

Was thinking the same thing. Not Graphenes fault though but a failing of OEMs to provide what’s necessary.

OhVenus_Baby@lemmy.ml on 15 Apr 23:33 collapse

Graphene isn’t the best choice for everything. It doesn’t have good backup solutions nor device to device backup or anything solid for complete snapshots and when restoring your so called backups you’ll realize what all it truly lacks.

It’s hardened and has a lot of security and privacy features but none of that matters if your opsec is bad, or it’s feature set doesn’t match your threat model. I am not knocking it at all. It just isn’t the white knight for every case.

hersh@literature.cafe on 16 Apr 00:21 next collapse

What’s wrong with Seedvault?

OhVenus_Baby@lemmy.ml on 16 Apr 02:30 next collapse

Seedvault works, I’ve restored from backups multiple times.

However there are still many parts of overall data that aren’t fully backed up.

Certain app data doesn’t get saved.

Settings are but not in entirety requiring manual rechecks of all settings and reconfiguration if needed. Which saves no time because then you cannot trust it fully for what was and was not altered meaning you then must asses everything which took away the total value, and adds a layer of distrust.

Profiles must be backed up individually which creates a giant hassle to restore/maintain consistent backups, which also requires different drives for each profile to be recognized correctly.

App lists are impartial requiring a wrote down list or some form of rememberance that’s not reliant on the backup list of installed apps.

I can go on with more its late in my time zone and I have to sleep so. It’s a good project and has merit. It is just not where it should be to really be useful at scale. I am aware of the experimental setting to create a more comprehensive backup. Even with it checked on the backups are not complete. Thus the use of Graphene while a great project has definite major flaws. If they implement device to device backups it would be a game changer. Not high up on their list of to dos though.

hersh@literature.cafe on 16 Apr 03:03 collapse

Thanks for the info. I have not really tested Seedvault myself so this is all good to know.

Ironically, one of the main reasons I switched to GrapheneOS was because Google’s backups were so frustrating and I was hoping Seedvault would be more comprehensive.

zergtoshi@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 07:00 collapse

I’m being bugged by Seedvault caring for apps that have a ‘don’t backup app data’ flag.
I could live with that being a default setting, which can be manually overwritten in the Seedvault settings for these apps.
Apps not allowing (in case of Seedvault: encrypted) full backups while offering no or bad built-in backups is just cumbersome when trying to have current backups.

AmbiguousProps@lemmy.today on 16 Apr 00:29 next collapse

Seedvault worked fine for me when I moved phones last year.

OhVenus_Baby@lemmy.ml on 16 Apr 02:40 collapse

I agree. Seedvault works but if you really use the project and its features as intended you’ll see problems I listed above which is not complete I’m just tired there are plenty more.

You’ll start to see the problems and the lack of value add from graphene. I’d feel much safer on a Linux machine and correct backups, under most threat models and opsecs, even without all the advanced security features than stuck locked into graphene as a half baked project. Which is saying something, and why I said it depends on your opsec and threat model I wasn’t bashing the project it just is not the end all be all right now.

The year of Linux is upon us. Soonish*

Its had more dev time across the board which is why I would choose it first and foremost. What it lacks in certain features its fundamentally more complete. Regardless of distro mostly.

sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works on 16 Apr 01:22 collapse

Agreed.

That said, it would be awesome to have an alternative to Pixel devices if you do want GrapheneOS.

OhVenus_Baby@lemmy.ml on 16 Apr 03:06 collapse

The project has sort of silo’d itself into security which is only one part of the equation. Rather than overall completeness, functionality, maintainability. It’s lacking major fundamental feature sets. Thus its more of a tails meets whonix/Qubes right now not a all in one bow wrapped package to save the day for its consumer base. Many many other issues/bugs I didnt list. Perhaps I’ll add more tomorrow. If everyone wants.

sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works on 16 Apr 03:16 collapse

And that’s exactly what it should be IMO. I prefer a project with narrow goals to one that does everything, but poorly.

If I want backups, I can use something like Syncthing. When moving to a new device, I prefer to install everything from scratch because I generally don’t use most of the apps I have anyway. I don’t put anything critical on it, so why would I need to restore from a snapshot?

If you want those features, it’s not the ROM for you.

I just want a simple device with a long support cycle and no spyware, and GrapheneOS delivers. I have Google Play Services on a sperate profile, and my main profile is completely free of that crap. I want a Linux phone, but every phone has serious limitations, like missing audio, sketchy calls, or completely broken camera. GrapheneOS is the closest experience I have to that.

cmnybo@discuss.tchncs.de on 15 Apr 21:20 next collapse

The lack of an FM radio and headphone jack make it unusable for me.

cyberwolfie@lemmy.ml on 15 Apr 22:20 collapse

Are there phones available these days with both of these things?

eneff@discuss.tchncs.de on 15 Apr 23:11 next collapse

Yes

cmnybo@discuss.tchncs.de on 15 Apr 23:14 next collapse

Yes, a quick search on GSM Arena shows 189 phones with a radio and headphone jack. That’s just phones from the last year.

cyberwolfie@lemmy.ml on 16 Apr 05:59 next collapse

Interesting, I very rarely see headphone jacks and had noe clue that FM radio in phones was a thing still. Nice resource, bookmarking that for later!

pineapplelover@lemm.ee on 16 Apr 07:03 next collapse

not really flashship phones. Well the Xiaomi ones might be flagship but I don’t really keep track with those phones

UnityDevice@lemmy.zip on 16 Apr 09:55 collapse

Unfortunately, almost all of them are mediatek based, so while that makes rooting easier, there’s very little chance of getting a custom ROM running on them.

desktop_user@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 16 Apr 03:12 collapse

yes, even some that never mention the radio have one (n10 5g us model).

PixellatedDave@lemmy.world on 15 Apr 21:22 next collapse

I have the fairphone 4 and have had no issues. As long as a fairphone exists I don’t see any reason I should switch.

Notamoosen@lemmy.zip on 15 Apr 21:26 next collapse

Have you had to replace any parts yet?

madnificent@lemmy.world on 15 Apr 22:19 collapse

I had to replace parts on my FP5. It fell on very bad asphalt at speed whilst cycling in a foreign country. The glass on the camera modules scattered. Display protector broke and the case got some good damage. I was instantly calmed realising it is a FairPhone and knowing I could order replacement parts.

Repairs were trivial and it feels good to have created just a tiny amount of e-waste instead of a large amount. The black aluminium case has some war wounds (scratches) reminding me of the trip.

Notamoosen@lemmy.zip on 16 Apr 00:02 collapse

Knowing it’s so easy to repair, do you think it’s worth bothering with a case and/or screen protector?

RogueBanana@lemmy.zip on 16 Apr 04:07 next collapse

If you hate cases so much, sure. But why create e waste and waste your money when you can avoid that by using a case?

sudneo@lemm.ee on 16 Apr 06:32 collapse

FWIW, I have the FP3 for now more than 4 years. I have only replaced the battery 6 months ago. A case would have been extra waste (to produce the case itself) in my case, and probably will be trashed after as it might not fit the next phone.

RogueBanana@lemmy.zip on 16 Apr 09:48 collapse

If you can keep it safe then cool. I cannot take that risk as my current screen protector is already cracked a little within a year lol.

Lazhward@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 04:40 next collapse

I don’t bother with a case for this reason, haven’t broken anything so far. Just replaced the battery a couple times.

UndergroundGoblin@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 16 Apr 08:10 collapse

You defentently need a case for the FP5. Without its very slippery.

IndianaJones@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 15 Apr 22:09 collapse

Do you use their OS?

solrize@lemmy.world on 15 Apr 21:30 next collapse

500 Euro for what amounts to a midrange phone still seems like yuppie consumerism to me. Better to get an older phone and hold onto it. My Moto G4 lasted 7 years before obsolescence and physical wear caught up with it. I wonder how many current Fairphones will still be in use in 2034.

dumblederp@aussie.zone on 15 Apr 21:42 collapse

Turns out ethical wages and materials cost money. I agree that older tech being more ethical as whatever ‘cost’ is may have was paid by the first owner.

solrize@lemmy.world on 15 Apr 22:23 collapse

I still have a made in Finland Nokia N9 that cost $200 around 15 years ago. Too bad it became unusable in the US with the shutdown of the 3G network, whenever that was.

melroy@kbin.melroy.org on 15 Apr 22:09 next collapse

I'm waiting on a Framework Phone.

Ross_audio@lemmy.world on 15 Apr 23:22 next collapse

No headphones jack.

Trash generating hypocrites.

HMD are doing everything better than fair phone now with their latest models. More repairable, more flexible, long term support and updates.

Cheaper too.

Nobilmantis@feddit.it on 16 Apr 01:29 next collapse

No headphones jack.

Most people use bluetooth devices nowadays. Few have wired headphones, which they can still use by using a €2 adapter that you just leave plugged to them all the time. Then there is a 0,1% that complains on the internet demanding that phone companies keep a extra hole on their devices for a specific purpose another hole can already do. Oh and HMD phones don’t have it either, at least for what i could find.

More repairable

They seem about the same (glass, back, speaker, battery, port), but on the ff5 you can replace the cameras as well.

more flexible

Tf does that mean? You can bend it?

long term support and updates.

Liar? Fairphones have like 8 years of security updates and major android version upgrades. HMD gives like 3 years on their latest devices… What are you talking about?

Cheaper too.

I’ll give you that, but it really ends there.

HMD phones are not a bad choice at all but if the affordability isn’t first in the list I don’t see how they would make a better purchase over a Fairphone.

ISOmorph@feddit.org on 16 Apr 02:58 next collapse

I don’t know anything about HMD so I can’t add to that. However I’d like to correct you regarding the headphone jack. The people that like it so much are generally privacy enthusiasts. Leaving your Bluetooth on makes you easily trackable. Using USB-C headphones helps in that regard but expediates wear and tear on the port by a lot and often makes the phone unusable a lot quicker, because you obviously need it for charging. Audio jacks generally have very low wear and tear. Hope that helps you understand we’re not crazed evangilists hanging on to the past for the sake of it.

desktop_user@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 16 Apr 03:09 next collapse

having only one battery that needs to be charged, one way to get the headphones disconnected (unplugging), and the greatly reduced battery drain by not needing Bluetooth on should be good enough reasons for 3.5mm jacks to stay.

Lazhward@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 04:53 collapse

expediates wear and tear on the port by a lot

How much is a lot? And good thing the usb-c port is a $15 user replaceable part then. Also dongles with two connectors exist if you specifically want to charge and use headphones at the same time.

AndyMFK@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 16 Apr 08:07 collapse

Another hole can carry analogue audio? I think you’re referring to a USB port when you say “another hole can do the same job”, but obviously it can’t carry analogue audio. You need an external DAC to convert the digital audio it can output, to analogue. (The phone already has an internal DAC so this is dumb)

And then of course you run into the issue of being unable to use it while the phone is charging because you have 1 port for 2 different jobs

Not all of us like the idea of wireless earphones, there are still many who prefer to spend good money on nice IEMs or headphones that don’t have to be charged to work, rather than overly expensive, subpar wireless options that will inevitably turn into e-waste when the batteries can no longer hold a charge.

Not to mention the ubiquity of the 6.5mm/3.5mm jack, this is standard across every piece of music gear you can think of from synthesizers to electronic drum kits to guitars, pedals, and interfaces.

You certainly don’t walk into a recording studio and find USB C ports to plug into

Bob@feddit.org on 16 Apr 10:08 collapse

long term support and updates.

Three years of security upgrades is very bad, in my opinion. Google offers seven years, and Fairphone offers eight.

Ulrich@feddit.org on 15 Apr 23:37 next collapse

That’s cool. Let me know when it gets support for GrapheneOS and finds it’s headphone jack again.

altphoto@lemmy.today on 16 Apr 01:21 next collapse

Big red flag:

<img alt="" src="https://lemmy.today/pictrs/image/fbe62d02-2abb-4a04-829c-9ab9a9370d59.png">

iturnedintoanewt@lemm.ee on 16 Apr 01:24 next collapse

I’d just install another OS to begin with. But again, I’d reaaally like it to be GrapheneOS. And then again, Pixels also come with all that crap (and much more) enabled by default.

VeganCheesecake@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 16 Apr 07:54 collapse

Graphene doesn’t. The way I see it is like buying a laptop with pre-installed Windows, and replacing the OS.

bilb@lem.monster on 16 Apr 01:48 collapse

Doesn’t that basically equate to “yep, this is an android phone?”

altphoto@lemmy.today on 16 Apr 01:53 collapse

Yup. My current one is dying and I’m using it almost always wired to a charger or battery. I don’t care how badly they try to waste my battery, I’m not buying a new Android phone ever. If this one dies, I’m prepared to not use a phone until there’s a reasonably priced Linux phone.

Forester@pawb.social on 16 Apr 01:57 collapse

Just replace the battery then. Most phone shops have the ability and tools to do it in about an hour to 3 hours.

altphoto@lemmy.today on 16 Apr 02:00 collapse

I’m afraid. Lol phones with non replaceable batteries suck.

dubyakay@lemmy.ca on 16 Apr 02:05 next collapse

What a non sequitur.

DonPiano@feddit.org on 16 Apr 07:35 collapse

They are replaceable, it just takes some tools and work, both of which you can get at the phone repair shop.

kittenzrulz123@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 16 Apr 08:32 collapse

The answer is likley never, GOS devs dont trust Fairphone devs (due to poor security practices) and Fairphone devs are unwilling (in some cases unable) to meet the extremely high standards for GOS.

sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works on 16 Apr 01:32 next collapse

I would totally be interested if they had solid Linux support, such as postmarketOS or mobian. Those systems continue to get updates long after most Android devices stop supplying updates, so it would fit really well with a repairable phone. It shouldn’t be the default, but it would be awesome if they helped the Linux phone community make it the best supported hardware for the various Linux phone projects.

According to the postmarketOS wiki, audio is completely broken, so you have to use Bluetooth. That kind of sucks.

JigglySackles@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 02:18 next collapse

I hope Graphene eventually shifts to support the fairphones. Doubtful, but it’d be perfect

LodeMike@lemmy.today on 16 Apr 03:09 next collapse

Hows their secure boot?

AVengefulAxolotl@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 06:50 next collapse

If we could get a Fairphone with GrapheneOS, that would be the perfect phone for me. Repairability & the most secure and private Android. Sign me up!

vga@sopuli.xyz on 16 Apr 06:52 collapse

No, it’s the other way around. Fairphone needs to implement the things Graphene requires.

grapheneos.org/faq#future-devices

oascany@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 03:07 next collapse

This would’ve been my new phone if it had a headphone jack.

weissbinder@feddit.org on 16 Apr 09:40 next collapse

Really sad they dropped it

Rubanski@lemm.ee on 16 Apr 09:46 collapse

From an environmental standpoint it doesn’t make any sense to drop it. More batteries, more e waste

MITM0@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 04:19 next collapse

Bring back the headphone jack

CheeseToastie@lazysoci.al on 16 Apr 06:55 next collapse

We can but hope. I have a dongle that plugs into my charging point to make it a headphone jack, but it’s not the same

Kazumara@discuss.tchncs.de on 16 Apr 07:13 collapse

I recently went through that dongle buying experience. Having to get the correct DAC and amplifier chipset so the sound won’t be too low is annoying. For the record I ended up going with one that has the CX31993 DAC and the MAX97220 amplifier, it doesn’t have a real name so I’ll just give a link: aliexpress.com/item/1005008755907868.html. It is a bit louder than my first impulsive buy, but I haven’t tested the microphone yet.

CheeseToastie@lazysoci.al on 16 Apr 09:08 collapse

Thanks for the link!

endeavor@sopuli.xyz on 16 Apr 09:00 collapse

No thanks, i’ve broken every single one. A dap with bluetooth receiver works better.

dependencyinjection@discuss.tchncs.de on 16 Apr 09:24 collapse

What do you do to break them?

In my forties and never broken a headphone jack, headphones, cable, or in fact anything like that. I tend to take care of my stuff and not treat it in such a way as I’m going to break it.

endeavor@sopuli.xyz on 16 Apr 10:17 collapse

Put it in my jeans pocket and move about my day as usual. Cycling broke them in a year, reliably.

Mrkawfee@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 06:02 next collapse

Anyone tried this Linuxphone?

commerce.jolla.com/…/jolla-community-phone

Asfalttikyntaja@sopuli.xyz on 16 Apr 06:37 next collapse

I looked at it, but it looks really outdated phone. Would be interesting if we live in a 2015, but not today.

sykaster@feddit.nl on 16 Apr 06:50 collapse

In what way does it look outdated?

Asfalttikyntaja@sopuli.xyz on 16 Apr 06:53 collapse

Look at its specs. Processor and screen and so on.

Miaou@jlai.lu on 16 Apr 08:14 next collapse

People need to stop wanking over specs for a device that’ll be used 99% of the time to send text messages and watch YouTube videos

What do you need on a phone that takes 8gb+ ram?

quack@lemmy.zip on 16 Apr 08:33 next collapse

I need my pocket sized spaceship computer for shitposting and occasionally checking my email

merdaverse@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 09:44 collapse

That’s sound in theory, but app developers don’t really test on low end phones, so the apps tend to get more and more bloated as time goes by. As soon as you need something with a map, you’re pretty much fucked. Looking at all the hiking maps that just get progressively worse without adding anything that I care for.

Vanilla_PuddinFudge@infosec.pub on 16 Apr 09:49 collapse

Also put the OS into perspective. The specs might not do for Android normally but might be just fine functionally, for Linux.

peetabix@sh.itjust.works on 16 Apr 06:39 next collapse

Looks ok but I dont like the subscription model for os updates. First 12 months is free, then you have to pay.

But I guess they have to make their money somehow.

vga@sopuli.xyz on 16 Apr 06:52 collapse

I used a Jolla when it was new. It was pretty decent, and in fact had many innovations. Apple brought gestures to their OS several years after. It was one of the first implementations of a phone UI implement on Wayland, and one of the first serious Linux non-Android phones. Might still be.

Unfortunately, being a pioneer does not always help. Application developers didn’t get interested in it enough so it never really got any apps.

vga@sopuli.xyz on 16 Apr 06:50 next collapse

I wish they could implement the parts of the Pixel phones that allow GrapheneOS to be used.

Tangent5280@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 07:05 next collapse

What parts are these? I’ve always wondered what this was about, why the pixel was the only phone that could support GrapheneOS

neon_nova@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 16 Apr 07:17 next collapse

The last I looked was that the Pixel was the only phone that allowed you to load a custom rom and relock the bootloader. Other phones kept the bootloader unlocked once it was modded.

So, graphene could be put on those phones if the devs wanted to do it, but it would be less secure since the bootloader would remain unlocked.

Also, supporting a small line a phones is probably infinitely easier than a range, of devices, but it would be nice to have another option. Especially now that the Fairphone pice is reasonable.

Prism@feddit.org on 16 Apr 07:51 collapse

The Fairphone can be locked after flashing a custom rom. /e/-OS is officially supported. You can even buy it from them with /e/ preinstalled. iode-OS also works. I don’t know about Graphene OS, but tbh, I don’t see the benefit of Graphene OS for the average user. /e/ has built in privacy features, is google-free and runs MicroG as alternative to Google Play Services. Most apps run fine. You can even use your apps that you purchased from the PlayStore.

I’ve been using Fairphone 5 with /e/-OS for over a year and love it.

Luffy879@lemmy.ml on 16 Apr 08:19 next collapse

/e/ has built in privacy features

/e/ uses a for profit 3rd party for unencrypted backups. That alone should be a big red flag.

is google-free and runs MicroG

So it runs google. MicroG just limits what data is sent to google.

You can even use your apps that you purchased from the PlayStore.

You can do the same with aurora store. That’s available on just about every phone.

joel_feila@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 10:12 collapse

Well even graphene os still runs a version of Android. So there is still some goggle code in that. But ripping oit google play, amd various goggle services means goggle doesn’t track you with those. Yeah if you still ise gmail and log into toutube every day they will.

Luffy879@lemmy.ml on 16 Apr 10:45 collapse

there is still some goggle code in that.

But that code is open source, and it has been verified that it dosent track you.

vga@sopuli.xyz on 16 Apr 10:06 collapse

e-OS is said to have the worst security of pretty much all Android distributions. Dunno if this is a fact, but apparently the upgrade schedules are not great.

MicKet@swiss.social on 16 Apr 10:20 collapse

@vga @Tangent5280

https://www.kuketz-blog.de/weshalb-grapheneos-aktuell-nur-google-pixel-geraete-unterstuetzt/

(From an Interview - The relevant parts are in English)

Security seems not easy.

Luffy879@lemmy.ml on 16 Apr 08:22 collapse

I mean, you could use CalyxOS

It dosent have such things as 2 factor pin auth for fingerprint, but its the closest to Graphene

jabjoe@feddit.uk on 16 Apr 09:01 collapse

Not quite the same. The big thing with GrapheneOS is it can run the actual Google services, but sandboxed. Organic Maps is better than Google Maps in everyway, but it’s routes are so much worse because it has no traffic into to go on. It’s an anticompetitive network effect, but it’s hard to fight without law makers.

andallthat@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 07:12 next collapse

I like it a lot but I need two physical SIM slots so it doesn’t work for me, unfortunately. But great idea and love the price drop

FuckFascism@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 07:18 next collapse

Unfortunately it’s not available in the US though.

kepix@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 09:02 next collapse

ass stock operating system, no macro lens, shit battery, still overpriced. you are better off with a refurbished pixel with a custom os.

im still not sure the whole business thing is a just a greenwashing scam or not.

on the other hand the battery can just be popped out, has a cool semitranspaerant early 00s design.

Nonbinary_Sahrah@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 16 Apr 10:01 next collapse

the poor stock os and the pricing are ultimatly what where a dealbreaker for me. I just bougth a google pixel 6 pro for 200€ of of ebay used about a year ago and installed graphene os on it. honestly better specs for the price but still shit 5G module on the pixel 6. Nevertheless better specs for chesper price and yeah graphene os is awosme.

joel_feila@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 10:15 collapse

Well even if the manufacturing of the phone is no greener, replaceable battery is still greener.

Flukas88@feddit.it on 16 Apr 09:42 next collapse

Out of curiosity… how is doing that in 2025?

Srootus@sh.itjust.works on 16 Apr 09:57 collapse

Its fine, I haven’t noticed any slowdown yet, the main issue right now is that there was a screen problem that caused the OLED pixels to stay on when a black screen was present. They removed the AoD while they fix it, they’ve fixed it a few months back, but we still don’t have AoD.

sonosonic@lemy.lol on 16 Apr 10:28 collapse

I’ve had this phone for over a year with Murena e/OS/! 90hz refresh rate is so nice