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2014-09-30
, 16:38
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Community Council |
Posts: 4,920 |
Thanked: 12,867 times |
Joined on May 2012
@ Southerrn Finland
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#122
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Wait... Android? I bought Jolla because I've been told it runs Linux. Now you are telling me that it is actually an Android device in disguise? I have never installed the Android support and was delaying it for as long as possible. Does the above mean that it does not matter anyway and I may as well install it right now?
If you install the Android support then you will have two copies of Android. Right now you have only one, so at least it matters
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2014-09-30
, 18:16
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Posts: 423 |
Thanked: 478 times |
Joined on Sep 2014
@ Netherlands
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#123
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Not today...
https://twitter.com/JollaHQ/status/516953296888942592
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2014-09-30
, 18:40
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Posts: 1,548 |
Thanked: 7,510 times |
Joined on Apr 2010
@ Czech Republic
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#124
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However, it does contain parts that are made for Android, and this is out of necessity:
Because HW manufacturers like Qualcomm that makes the chipset that's ticking inside your Jolla will not create device drivers for Linux, a clever trick called libhybris is used to enable the Linux ( = SailfishOS in Jolla) to use the Android drivers.
It's doable, what is needed is just the new kernel hooks and interfacing to the existing (and open source BTW) libhybris functionality.
What it requires, of course is recompiled libraries and new kernel. That's the reason @rainisto says it is "impossible"; it is not something you could ever submit to Harbour
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2014-09-30
, 18:42
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Posts: 7,074 |
Thanked: 9,069 times |
Joined on Oct 2009
@ Moon! It's not the East or the West side... it's the Dark Side
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#125
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2014-09-30
, 18:50
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Posts: 496 |
Thanked: 651 times |
Joined on Jan 2010
@ London
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#126
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So it seems that Younited client for Jolla will be an android app. That's rather disappointing
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2014-09-30
, 18:59
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Posts: 233 |
Thanked: 532 times |
Joined on Sep 2011
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#127
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I'd suggest that it is worse than disappointing. Jolla made a big thing about how the Android support on the phone was simply a filler whilst waiting for all the wonderful native apps (which they've then hindered by making it difficult to release software in the Jolla store because of the rules, and by still not having the ability to charge for apps). They then make a big thing about their partnerships - and then the first bit of software that supports one of those partnership is ... an Android app. And it took, what, 7 months to do that?
Talk about shooting yourself in the foot.
And yet I suspect there will be those that somehow excuse this.
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2014-09-30
, 19:43
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Posts: 338 |
Thanked: 496 times |
Joined on Oct 2010
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#128
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Mmh, well not really. It is not so straightforward. @pichlo, You can be assured that the Jolla device is not Android, it is Linux: pure and simple.
However, it does contain parts that are made for Android, and this is out of necessity:
Because HW manufacturers like Qualcomm that makes the chipset that's ticking inside your Jolla will not create device drivers for Linux, a clever trick called libhybris is used to enable the Linux ( = SailfishOS in Jolla) to use the Android drivers.
This is unfortunate fact-of-life for us, almost all HW vendors think this way, they see only Android as a viable OS and will not create Linux drivers, not even when offered large sums of money to do it!
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2014-09-30
, 19:48
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Posts: 338 |
Thanked: 496 times |
Joined on Oct 2010
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#129
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I'd suggest that it is worse than disappointing. Jolla made a big thing about how the Android support on the phone was simply a filler whilst waiting for all the wonderful native apps (which they've then hindered by making it difficult to release software in the Jolla store because of the rules, and by still not having the ability to charge for apps). They then make a big thing about their partnerships - and then the first bit of software that supports one of those partnership is ... an Android app. And it took, what, 7 months to do that?
Talk about shooting yourself in the foot.
And yet I suspect there will be those that somehow excuse this.
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2014-09-30
, 19:53
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Community Council |
Posts: 4,920 |
Thanked: 12,867 times |
Joined on May 2012
@ Southerrn Finland
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#130
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This is *perhaps* not entirely true. Meizu have their Ubuntu pre-loaded MX4, and Ubuntu ROM for existing MX4 users coming in December. It's possible that Mediatek has produced native drivers for Linux, rather than using their existing Android ones and running it through libhybris (which Ubuntu also uses). This is a very high volume device from a big OEM. It's not beyond the realms of possibility that drivers for the main SoC will be native (though I'm sure everything else will be Android).
If you install the Android support then you will have two copies of Android. Right now you have only one, so at least it matters