See https://linuxphoneapps.org/categories/conference-companion/ - both Confy and Kongress are decent. And then there’s a relict from N900 times: https://flathub.org/en/apps/at.priv.toastfreeware.ConfClerk
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The color picker unfortunately is a wider issue, it’s a standard component of IIRC libadwaita that’s just used in Gajim.
use JMP.chat to be able to call/text anyone in my contacts. On the Linux side that’s not really doable although with WayDroid it’s workable.
Just to make sure (and sorry for asking): Have you tried Dino for this usecase?
OS updates are paywalled (subscription)
This, at least for the C2, has changed https://forum.sailfishos.org/t/long-term-sailfish-os-updates-free-of-charge-for-all-jolla-c2/23491 (likely because it’s conflicting with EU law), and they’ve instead introduced a Voluntary Subscription.
Honestly, I rather pay for my OS than paying for it with my data / privacy or living in an ad-infested garbage fest.
Edit: and their mix up with some Russian business (not sure about the current status of it) also doesn’t help instill confidence.
That’s history, see https://forum.sailfishos.org/t/sailfish-community-news-30th-november-jolla-reborn/17473.
linmob@lemmy.mlMto
Linux Phones@lemmy.ml•What are people usong as thei music player app nowadays?
3·1 year ago+1 for Gapless. My library is not nearly as large, but it’s still plenty quick (no noticeable delay) with my 1 digit gigabytes library and IMHO the best native feeling media player on Phosh/GNOME Mobile.
It also does the Album -> Artist -> Song thing (which made me notice that I still have not fixed every error in metadata I managed to add to a part of my Library by blindly applying musicbraiz suggestions via Tagger, but that’s just a me thing).
It’s pretty much “real”. You can install every package in the repos via apt, and they should work. Caveats can apply with regards to stuff that needs extra adjustment for accelerated graphics or new kernel features.
It’s not a font … and it says LINMOB (for LINux on MOBile).
I drew it in GIMP ages ago (15 years maybe?); and did not have the time to come up with a new logo since. (I am not super happy with it myself - but it’s not a priority, there’s way more important stuff I don’t have time for).
That said: Contributions welcome! (at https://framagit.org/linmob/linmob.frama.io)
linmob@lemmy.mlMto
Linux Phones@lemmy.ml•There is now an 'on the go' section in Flathub to promote mobile apps
4·1 year agoThis is great, even if at least one app in that collection is only available for x86_64, which makes it hard to actually run on a phone ;-) They also updated the Device Support section of metainfo guidelines: https://docs.flathub.org/docs/for-app-authors/metainfo-guidelines/#device-support . Looks like some apps on the KDE side still need proper metainfo to show up: https://invent.kde.org/teams/flathub/issues/-/issues/34
Modern Android? More like Modern GNOME - it’s called adwaitapod and adwaita is the name of GNOME’s style. :-)
No, it’s just that when you use a mainline kernel, you’re just not reusing all the Android (often user-space) drivers that make cameras work on Android and due to that stuff, starting from drivers for the SoC camera interface to the camera sensor have to be re-implemented. Whether you are on glibc (e.g., on Debian/Mobian) or musl/Alpine does not really matter.
Also, Camera APIs and the whole “desktop Linux” camera stack (think of things like debayering, white-balance) is nowhere near as developed as what Android has (and that, IUC, Ubuntu Touch can reuse on Halium by plumbing things together).
A Pixel 3a may be a good choice. It’s older, but not huge—and it’s very well-supported in Ubuntu Touch (and Droidian, both use Halium/libhybris to re-use the Android kernel drivers), and also in postmarketOS (mainline Linux 6.9.3 as of this message).
On postmarketOS, camera support is not fully there—the front camera is somewhat supported. Also, Wi-Fi is still a bit annoying, calls only work with headset on postmarketOS, so I would say: Use Ubuntu Touch or Droidian for now, and maybe move on to postmarketOS once it’s a bit more solid.
linmob@lemmy.mlMto
Linux Phones@lemmy.ml•What linux phone is closest to ready for daily use
2·2 years agoI’ve been told that PinePhone 2 is not happening this year. (If AllWinner will continue to supply A64 SoCs, it might take even longer.)
Regarding SoC, the likely/obvious candidate is RK3566 - but we’ll have to wait and see for the when and how. (I, personally, would love to see a PinePhone V - think PineTab V, but as a phone).
PineTime: It has nice companion apps on Mobile Linux, but I went back to my Pebble Time Steel - the always on display matters to me.
linmob@lemmy.mlMto
Linux Phones@lemmy.ml•What linux phone is closest to ready for daily use
2·2 years agoYeah man, I think the article I initially read about PP Mobian situation was this one here just for reference if I am even remembering right – https://blog.mobian-project.org/posts/2023/09/30/paperweight-dilemma/
Someone stepped up (see https://blog.mobian.org/posts/2024/01/08/highlights-of-2023/ and afaik a-wai also mentioned this at fosdem (https://fosdem.org/2024/schedule/event/fosdem-2024-3290-towards-a-bright-future-with-mobian-/), also long standing issues like the out-of-tree-WiFi/BT driver are being worked on currently.
linmob@lemmy.mlMto
Linux Phones@lemmy.ml•What linux phone is closest to ready for daily use
2·2 years agoRegarding Beepy: I really tried, but … compared to that, PinePhone was easy to get to a somewhat works state in mid 2020. See https://linmob.net/enter-beepy-esc/#flaws
Depends, guessing from this conversation I’d assume there’s currently nothing to thank for.
And because of that: If you like Phosh, consider giving back:
- https://liberapay.com/Phosh/ and
- https://honk.sigxcpu.org/piki/donations/ are simple ways to do so :-)
linmob@lemmy.mlMto
Linux Phones@lemmy.ml•Volla Tablet will ship with Android, but supports Ubuntu Touch multi-boot (crowdfunding)English
2·2 years agoUbuntu Touch suggests that this will use Halium most likely, which is good for features, but … it’s not mainline.
Although: Thanks to Chromebooks, there are now a few Mediatek SoCs with okay mainline support. But while the Helio G99 seems quite similar to the Kompanio 520 at first glance, they are quite different, sadly.
linmob@lemmy.mlOPMto
Linux Phones@lemmy.ml•A Talk at FOSDEM 2024: 'The Linux Phone App Ecosystem'English
2·2 years agoThis sounds a lot like the Flattr model - a service that had its moment in 2010/2011, but ultimately failed: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flattr
Payments are a challenge, with processing fees and taxes in an international context, small sums don’t work out well - there’s a reason why services like Liberapay push you to do bigger amounts at one time instead of small amounts at multiple points in time.
linmob@lemmy.mlOPMto
Linux Phones@lemmy.ml•A Talk at FOSDEM 2024: 'The Linux Phone App Ecosystem'English
2·2 years agoThis may seem odd, but from a person that has a two-digit amount of phones: You know that it’s possible two own more than one phone at a time, e.g., a Linux Phone and a Game Phone? ;-)


That’s an option, https://linuxphoneapps.org/apps/dev.geopjr.archives/ can also read zim files, but I’ve found it to be a bit clunky - still, I recommend giving it a try.