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Honestly, I feel like I've woken up from a nightmare that has plagued the last decade if not longer of my life.

This isn’t about national security or innovation; it’s about a rent-seeker monopolizing access to a public resource.
eff.org/deeplinks/2024/09/next #FCC

The company I am CTO at is hiring for experts. IF there are any out there looking for a job (100% remote doesnt matter where you are), let me know!

Today is the day the bell riots were supposed to begin from and yesterday was thr day thry arrived in the past.

@dos I just saw the Librem in you name. The Librem was the phone we secretly wanted too. The hardware in the Librem was not a SBC that got turned into a smartphone. When people broke their Pinephones, it was a sad sight to see. Doing that to a Librem would have been devastating.

The SoC in the Librem was much stronger and perhaps the device was better in many ways as a usable phone. The Pinephone was an accomplishment in many ways but I think it's safe to say that both helped pave the way for Linux smartphones.

@AmpBenzScientist @lupyuen To be fair, PocketCHIP had a 480x272 display and the same GPU as the PinePhone (with fewer cores though). Even Neo Freerunner was fast in QVGA mode.

@dos @lupyuen The CHIP also had a custom distro. NTC and the community did a lot towards the same goal. The Pinephone was impressive but the community behind it seemed to have many goals. There was supposed to be a BSD distro available too.

Having received the early released PocketCHIP and the first available Pinephone version, neither were a disappointment. The Pinephone was arguably the best Linux Phone in terms of hardware support and the community.

The hardware isn't very powerful and that's a fair point to make but it's about as open as possible. Perhaps it's not powerful enough now but it was always underpowered. The budget SoC from 2012 lasted in a Linux smartphone for about 4 years.

My point is that it is possible. A phone that could not play videos made Linux phones a reality.

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