It looks like ubuntu touch on the fairphone 4 is nearly perfect, and the features that don’t work I won’t miss. I’m very tempted to buy a second hand fairphone 4, but I can’t really find much on the experience of ubuntu touch. How do you install apps? Are there repo’s that I can look at? And is it just branded ubuntu touch, or will any ubuntu apps made for arm work on ubuntu touch? If anybody has some links or personal experiences they could share, that would be greatly appreciated.

Thanks a lot in advance!

7 points
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https://open-store.io/ is the Ubuntu Touch specific app store. If the model supports Waydroid, you can also install Android apps with some caveats.

You basically can’t install normal Linux apps on Ubuntu Touch.

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4 points

I didn’t use Ubuntu Touch for awhile now, but did they remove lxd containers? I was able to run desktop apps on my phone.

Don’t get me wrong it was a terrible experience using it. But it worked.

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3 points

Thank you

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3 points

You should be able to run other desktop apps too, through libertine. Though, to be fair, my only time testing it was on a pinetab 1 and it was a feature not yet fully working at that time. I cannot confirm how well it works now

https://docs.ubports.com/en/latest/userguide/dailyuse/libertine.html

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2 points

That was why I added “basically”. Yes, theoretically that option exists, but practically you can’t realistically run anything in a usable way with that.

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-1 points

Hi there, ubuntu touch is just ubuntu. It has been taken over by the community after ubuntu abandoned it iirc.

Anyway, its just linux so you can install apps and stuff that run on linux. Beware, not all apps are mobile friendly (yet).

I personally am involved in the postmarketOS microcosm (pretty much the same idea but based on alpine). Works pretty great but I cant tell you how it compares to ubuntu touch since I have no personal experience with ubuntu touch but from what I hear, its kinda cool.

If you are somewhat adept with linux you could download an emulator and check the features for yourself before you buy a phone. That way you could get an idea of the look and feel. But beware, setting up an emulator will be a lot more work than flashing a phone is.

Let me know if you need more info.

Good luck.

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5 points

Sorry, but this is not true. Ubuntu Touch is based on Ubuntu, but it differs significantly from desktop Ubuntu.

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3 points

I’m noticing some conflicting information, do you have any sources?

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4 points

Yes, I have used Ubuntu Touch as a daily driver for two years and even developed some apps for it.

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3 points

Does it get the same security updates then? Docs state it supports older hardware, which if secure that would be awesome

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5 points
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Sort of, but no. Ubuntu Touch uses libhybris to run the original Android kernel and device drivers. It’s a bit more complicated than that, but basically it is Android with a more Gnu/Linux like layer on top. This means you can run it on older hardware and the top-layer still gets some security updates, but for the most part you are stuck on the old Android parts with all the security issues.

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1 point

Rough. Thanks for the info

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1 point

Of course. Many devices are mainlined and get the exact same updates as PCs.

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2 points

Do you know what’s stopping pmOS from supporting fairphone 4? Wouldn’t it be one of the easiest devices to support?

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5 points

I think you are looking at this from a different angle than me. PostmarketOS is a small project which is very dependent on community contributions. The fairphone 4 is community supported and this means it works pretty well. See wiki for more info: https://wiki.postmarketos.org/wiki/Devices

Most people who come from the proprietary „give money, get product“ world think only official support counts and they will get anything more than community support which is not the case. In the open source world, if you dont have the skills to repair your device, you ask someone to help and often they do for free. If you need it done NOW, you pay someone for it. Its not different than in proprietary land. Fast, good, cheap. Pick two! ;)

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3 points

Sorry, totally missed it and didn’t see it on the list. Thanks!

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0 points

@jeffreyosborne @haui_lemmy It’s not officially supported, but it works with pmOS, except camera (big issue), fingerprint, GPS, and a few more things. Camera I think it’s a problem with the library or the driver, not sure

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1 point

I’ve heard ubuntu touch uses a library from android to be able to use most cameras, but because pmOS is alpine they don’t have that library.

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1 point

Thanks a lot!

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Linux Phones

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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.

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