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2017-07-22
, 11:25
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Posts: 339 |
Thanked: 1,623 times |
Joined on Oct 2013
@ France
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#12
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well in my view your target market has two clear groups within it
1, those who just want a hardware keyboard for their phone
2, those who want real linux on a phone with a hardware keyboard
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2017-07-22
, 12:08
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Posts: 166 |
Thanked: 454 times |
Joined on Apr 2015
@ Poland
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#13
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On my "old" Motorola PhotonQ, it is usable, but there are no shortcuts that I know to switch between apps, most buttons can't be reached by the keyboard, so that you constantly switch between the touchscreen and the keyboard.
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2017-07-22
, 12:25
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Posts: 7,075 |
Thanked: 9,073 times |
Joined on Oct 2009
@ Moon! It's not the East or the West side... it's the Dark Side
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#14
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2017-07-22
, 13:43
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Posts: 368 |
Thanked: 975 times |
Joined on Aug 2013
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#15
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You want this to be commercially successful or at least not a flop so android OTB is the only thing that make sense.
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2017-07-22
, 14:38
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Posts: 634 |
Thanked: 3,266 times |
Joined on May 2010
@ Colombia
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#17
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Now that we are getting closer to finish the Moto Keyboard Mod and Youyota Tablet, I have started to work on the next excitement - reviving the N950/Lauta concept with a modern SoC and hardware.
The first choice has been made: SoC will be Qualcomm 64-bit. There are a few choices but Qualcomm's is the best in overall performance and support.
Qualcomm (Chosen): Solution extremely expensive. Components are hard to get. But support is great (in terms of drivers). Performance at top tier, power management is great.
Intel: They exit mobile chipset business and atom range is not as power efficiency as Qualcomm.
MTK: Cheaper than Qualcomm, performance is OK. But drivers often being the issue. Components often out of stock...
Allwinner: Lower end cheap SoC with unknown support other than Android
Rockchip: Strength on Media but not a mainstream chipset.
Then here comes the question: Which OS we can use? I have a few in mind but the community's opinion will play a great rule.
AOSP: Can be shipped as a default choice, for warranty purpose, at least every basic function is working. But as Wicket mentioned in here, it seems to be causing barriers porting proper GNU releases?
The advantage for AOSP is mainly cost-free and lawsuit free, I can't sell something under other OS that might have broken functions...
Sailfish OS: A proper OS that I want to ship with default OS. But to obtain official adaptation costs a lot of time and money. On the other hand, we can leave it to a community port only. The question will be is it worth the cost adding Android layer.
Nemo: Any opinion on advantage/disadvantage on that? On official wiki page looks like the development ceased 4 years ago... If this can be achieved in terms of open UI and community/developer friendly in a latest release/kernel that will be a great choice.
Ubuntu Mobile: Is it cancelled? Is it worth developing?
GMS Android: To make this project successful and have funds improving HW/SW in the future, selling it to general public in a GMS version seem to be a good choice. Although I hated Android...
Lineage OS: As an alternative to GMS Andoid, but is it possible shipping as the default OS?
Any suggestions/ideas/loves/hates please post here.
The Following 11 Users Say Thank You to wicket For This Useful Post: | ||
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2017-07-22
, 15:17
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Posts: 1,335 |
Thanked: 3,931 times |
Joined on Jul 2010
@ Brittany, France
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#18
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Don't forget that the Android crowd is a lot less tolerant about hardware or software issues. You need to launch with an almost perfect product and can't ask for a premium price if it is not.
People using debian are used to solve their own problems, looking for workarounds and will actively assist improving the OS.
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2017-07-22
, 15:45
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Posts: 36 |
Thanked: 121 times |
Joined on Sep 2015
@ California
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#19
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The Following 9 Users Say Thank You to linuxunux For This Useful Post: | ||
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2017-07-22
, 16:03
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Posts: 166 |
Thanked: 454 times |
Joined on Apr 2015
@ Poland
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#20
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The Following 3 Users Say Thank You to mp107 For This Useful Post: | ||
Tags |
n950 revival, q-device, qwerty keyboard, sailfishos, sailingchen |
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Would be great to make this device as developer friendly as possible. I don't know how compatible it is with the GMS, but making bootloader unlockable as simply as on Nexus would be great. Its another problematic area right now and making it appeal to developer community would surely help you.
I wonder whether its possible to ship with TWRP out of the box. If it is, why do others keep their crippled recoveries ...
I wonder if you could consider keeping the warranty after device was re-flashed, in terms of hardware failure. Again, its an option that would appeal to many developers.
As for Android base, Lineage would be great. Porting SFOS to it would be simpler if it has Lineage base, at least it used to be in CM days. However, I don't know whether Lineage folks make it possible to preload it on the device.
I presume that you want to be ready ASAP since all components get older every day. So, if Lineage takes too long time, ship a working product as soon as you can - being AOSP + GMS.
With the product available for developers, there will be people porting Lineage to it anyway. Maybe it would be great to get in touch with their community and ask if there are any specific requirements that can make their work easier.
I presume many in this community would be very interested in getting such device with SFOS. I do wonder if we can get SFOS images for extra fee, similar to Sony Xperia X program, and how large would the fee be. With Lineage ported/shipped it should be possible to make community port as well. When the choice of chipset is done, maybe its great to check whether it would be problematic with Jolla and/or porters.
Few additional pointers: please include SD Card slot. If possible, please use AMOLED screen.
Good luck!
PS: Ubuntu Mobile is discontinued and there is only a fan-based UBports