Puri.sm Librem 5 Phone Ships, Pine64 Pinephone Coming, Linux and BSD Phones

grarpamp grarpamp at gmail.com
Mon Sep 30 00:02:20 PDT 2019


https://www.pine64.org/


https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2019/09/purisms-librem-5-phone-starts-shipping-a-fully-open-gnulinux-phone/
https://puri.sm/posts/first-librem-5-smartphones-are-shipping/
https://pureos.net/

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AuT2w6BkT-k
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gvnt78mK-Ac
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yHcHi0TBFv4
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC64-PJ-yoF7aJ9pIHWEbrTQ/videos

Support the Digital Rights Movement... Get this phone !

Purism announced their first Librem 5 smartphones were rolling off the
assembly line and heading to customers. "Seeing the amazing effort of
the Purism team, and holding the first fully functioning Librem 5, has
been the most inspirational moment of Purism's five year history,"
said their founder and CEO Todd Weaver.

On Wednesday they posted a video announcing that the phones were now
shipping, and Friday they posted a short walk-through video. "The
crowdsourced $700 Linux phone is actually becoming a real product,"
reports Ars Technica: Purism's demand that everything be open means
most of the major component manufacturers were out of the question.
Perhaps because of the limited hardware options, the internal
construction of the Librem 5 is absolutely wild. While smartphones
today are mostly a single mainboard with every component integrated
into it, the Librem 5 actually has a pair of M.2 slots that house
full-size, off-the-shelf LTE and Wi-Fi cards for connectivity, just
like what you would find in an old laptop. The M.2 sockets look
massive on top of the tiny phone motherboard, but you could probably
replace or upgrade the cards if you wanted...

[Y]ou're not going to get cutting-edge hardware at a great price with
the Librem 5. That's not the point, though. The point is that you are
buying a Linux phone, with privacy and open source at the forefront of
the design. There are hardware kill switches for the camera,
microphone, WiFi/Bluetooth, and baseband on the side of the phone,
ensuring none of the I/O turns on unless you want it to. The OS is the
Free Software Foundation-endorsed PureOS, a Linux distribution that,
in this case, has been reworked with a mobile UI. Purism says it will
provide updates for the "lifetime" of the device, which would be a
stark contrast to the two years of updates you get with an Android
phone.

PureOS is a Debian-based Linux distro, and on the Librem 5, you'll get
to switch between mobile versions of the Gnome and KDE environments.
If you're at all interested in PureOS, Purism's YouTube page is worth
picking through. Dozens of short videos show that, yes, this phone
really runs full desktop-class Linux. Those same videos show the dev
kit running things like the APT package manager through a terminal, a
desktop version of Solitaire, Emacs, the Gnome disk utility, DOSBox,
Apache Web Server, and more. If it runs on your desktop Linux
computer, it will probably run on the Librem 5, albeit with a possibly
not-touch-friendly UI. The Librem 5 can even be hooked up to a
monitor, keyboard, and mouse, and you can run all these Linux apps
with the normal input tools...

Selling a smartphone is a cutthroat business, and we've seen dozens of
companies try and fail over the years. Purism didn't just survive long
enough to ship a product -- it survived in what is probably the
hardest way possible, by building a non-Android phone with demands
that all the hardware components use open code. Making it this far is
an amazing accomplishment.


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