Out of curiosity, what about PostmarketOS is not daily driveable? Postmarket is a vague umbrella OS with a lot of DE options, all of which have vastly different user experiences. KDE mobile, phosh, and GNOME mobile have all come a long way and provide everything a smartphone OS needs. The only thing I’d argue that could prevent daily driving is lack of app support and lack of good mobile Linux hardware, but that’s not PostmarketOS’s problem.
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Cake day: September 8th, 2020
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echo@lemmy.mlto
Technology@lemmy.ml•Chinese makers of DRAM modules, SSDs have a serious advantage over American and Taiwanese suppliers, says SMI SVP
111·24 days agoAnd they’re gonna sell to consumers right? And not cash in on the data center bubble right? …right?
echo@lemmy.mlto
Technology@lemmy.ml•OpenRouter shows that multiple smaller models working together surpass frontier performance
3·27 days agoReminds me of the Magi from Neon Genesis Evangelion
echo@lemmy.mlto
Linux@lemmy.ml•How do you feel about distributing small Linux tools via GitHub and Gumroad?
13·2 months agoI’m highly suspicious that this entire project and even these responses are all AI-generated. Something about the grammar and use of em dashes that really seems fishy to me. And in their first (almost identical) post to this one, someone said that hiding the source code could make people suspicious it’s been authored by AI, and OP responded “what counts as ‘AI-authored’ to you?”. Veeeery sus
Yeah, device support is the biggest issue. But the OS as a whole is pretty good. I used it with a OnePlus 6T and a Nothing Phone 1, both of which have pretty decent support. Some things about it were broken, and I didn’t try putting in a SIM card and making calls or texts, but the overall experience was good. I have high hopes for when we eventually get good “flagship” linux mobile phones that have full PostmarketOS compatibility.