Pay attention to LTE and 5G bands. mmWave is not available in most 5G ready countries.
Comment on Should I buy a Fairphone? If not, what SHOULD I buy and why?
odium@programming.dev 9 months ago
I need a lot more information about you before recommending something.
- your location (not all models of fairphone support all countries)
- what things you regularly do with your phone
- how strongly you care about various issues (privacy, Foss, environment friendly, fair trade, anti-monopolies, etc.)
- How much you need the money (it’s an expensive phone for the specs)
ahriboy@lemmy.dbzer0.com 9 months ago
thebardingreen@lemmy.starlightkel.xyz 9 months ago
Things I do regularly:
I also “Hey Google” all the time. I’m not sure what the state of deGoogled voice assistants is. If I could “Hey ChatGPT” it would be orders of magnitude more useful than “Hey Google.” Losing voice assistance isn’t a deal breaker, but it’s something I do use frequently.
Probably 40% of my phone use is Magic Arena and 40% is podcasts and audiobooks. Then probably 5% is “Hey Google, set an alarm for 5 minutes / OK Google, set an alarm for 6:00 AM.”
Google Services I need for work… but I’m willing to hack my way around to get them, as long as it’s possible.
I would like to degoogle as much as possible, but these are work requirements, and my ADHD brain can’t handle having two phones (one will get left uncharged / lost / never turned on and the odds are that will be the work one).
calamityjanitor@lemmy.world 9 months ago
Fair phone is awesome but keep in mind it uses a very slow IoT CPU, the Qualcomm QCM6490. I don’t know how intense MTG arena is but check reviews for comparisons before buying if that’s a big part of your phone needs.
Dekkia@this.doesnotcut.it 9 months ago
I’d say “very slow” is overstating it a bit.
It’s not a gaming phone of course, but besides that it’s more than enough for everything else.
THE_ANON@lemmy.ml 9 months ago
Jerboa is solid now for your information
odium@programming.dev 9 months ago
www.kimovil.com/en/…/fairphone-5
Fairphone 5 will support all of T Mobile’s 4g bands, but only half of the 5g bands. This means that it will have lower 5g coverage than a US phone, but it will have as much 4g coverage as any US phone using t mobile. Based on your use cases, I don’t think there will be too many problems if your phone doesn’t get 5g speeds. Remember that most ppl didn’t have 5g just 3-4 years ago and people were able to do everything that you’re planning on doing with 4g networks.
If you are going to look into alternative OSes, consider degoogled androids over linux phones as you seem to need some android specific apps. Most degoogled androids have the ability to install Google apps with something called microg. For voice assistants, you might be able to install Google voice using microg or choose an open source voice assistant like this one: github.com/PoCInnovation/Elivia-AI. I don’t use voice assistants much, so I’m not too sure how well those work.
Fluid@aussie.zone 9 months ago
Unfortunately what you’re looking for doesn’t exist. We all have been down this journey. There was some hope a few years back with Purism reviving dreams of a linux phone, but they shit the bed and now there is no viable alternative outside the big two.