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1. markus+(OP)[view] [source] 2025-08-26 11:17:48
Everything coming from China is going to be closed source as well, and it's going to be pretty hard for banks to onboard themselves on open source solutions. I think the ultimate solution is: two phones, one shitty one just for banking/trading/whatever, which only stays at home most of the time, and one Linux phone that we more or less own, for calls/texts/web browsing, which stays with us.
replies(1): >>Aperoc+S3
2. Aperoc+S3[view] [source] 2025-08-26 11:51:15
>>markus+(OP)
It only matters if you treat phones as a development environment.

It's tempting to have full control over everything OSS style, but the reality is you can only tenably have that for very specific parts of life.

replies(2): >>skeezy+k7 >>OkayPh+1N
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3. skeezy+k7[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-08-26 12:12:18
>>Aperoc+S3
i wanted my phone to be more than just a kiosk though. thank fuck desktop never ended up in this mess
replies(1): >>const_+na
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4. const_+na[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-08-26 12:33:18
>>skeezy+k7
The irony is that our phones are unbelievably powerful and run laps around computers from just 5-10 years ago, but then we use them as locked-down glorified web views and advertisement deliverers.

Or, as you say, kiosks.

replies(2): >>goodpo+Xx >>geyser+Xy
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5. goodpo+Xx[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-08-26 14:33:47
>>const_+na
advertisement deliverers and massive surveillance devices
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6. geyser+Xy[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-08-26 14:38:35
>>const_+na
Not to mention all the functionality, sensors, etc that our laptops have never had.
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7. OkayPh+1N[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-08-26 15:38:12
>>Aperoc+S3
Why? I have the freedom to fix or modify most things I own. What makes phones so special that it justifies licking the boot of some techbro billionaires?
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