The installation was very easy! It’s very greatful that my data doesn’t send to Google any more.

  • Lucelu2@lemmy.zip
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    4 hours ago

    i am very stupid when it comes to phones… how can I wipe android and install graphenous. I will buy a new chip/SIM for my last phone to test/see how it works. Reveal your magic please. I just want a basic phone (text, call, maybe even a map/weather app and like a note app). I can use cash money or bank cards for paying for stuff- don’t need an app/service for that, perfectly capable as an adult to manage paying for shit without an electronic device.

    • FG_3479@lemmy.world
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      2 hours ago

      You need to get a Google Pixel, then go to the GrapheneOS web installer on your PC and follow the instructions.

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    7 hours ago

    Welcome to serenity in the middle of the storm. Isn’t it great at first boot after install where you only have a clean canvas with a couple of apps and absolutely no bloat?

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          7 hours ago

          Absolutely not. You can choose whatever sources you want (your mileage may vary). You have the option to block location and just add the name of the cities you want to keep an eye on as well. It’s a delight to use.

          I use Openweather as my source for most data points.

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    16 hours ago

    You can always add widgets if you want something to break up the gridded icons. 🫡 Welcome to the fam.

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    16 hours ago

    Does anyone know if Google pay and banking apps from India (UPI) work on GOS? Pretty much impossible to live in an Indian city without these apps now

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      7 hours ago

      Google pay will not work. As for the banking apps, it’ll depend on how the app is implemented. I can pay with my Chase app, but no Google pay (yes, I tried, Sue me 🤣)

    • RandomDude
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      6 hours ago

      I personally don’t have GrapheneOS, but as far as I know, Google Pay doesn’t work, but banking apps should (from what I’ve read)

    • alt_xa_23@lemmy.world
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      16 hours ago

      Unless something has changed in the past couple years, google pay doesn’t work.

      Here’s a compatibility list for banking apps: link

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      15 hours ago

      Most apps will work with just sandboxed play services installed. But, If your app has implemented play integrity checks then you need play store installed, and you need to be logged in too. Only then you’ll be able to use banking apps.

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        13 hours ago

        It really depends on the banking app, for example mine used google play store to download but doesnt need it to run at all (updates happen from it though). So i can run it on my main profile with GPS (google play store) disabled.

        Protip - Download something like the Shelter app so you can set up a Work profile space and install the apps that need GPS to run n then this can be the space where you have these apps. Shelter has a really handy feature that lets you get notifications from these apps when on another profile n can send files between. Best of all you can pause the work space, basically stops all apps.

        At the start i had quite a few GPS apps here but I’ve slowly using less n less. At the moment there are three apps there that I need for work but only rarely so really need to unpause that space like 2% of the time.

        P.S - try and ensure the apps on your main profile are not downloaded from GPS/Aurora Store. You can check the app info to see which store you downloaded them from. If you can, get them from other stores (others have given good tips on those already) or their own websites/githubs. Basically want to have zero connected apps n can disable google play store n services on your main profile.

    • cryptix@discuss.tchncs.de
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      13 hours ago

      PhonePe works perfectly fine. Bhim UPI works sometimes but definitely needs play services and does not work on private profiles. Need to be installed in main profile.

      • macros@feddit.org
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        9 hours ago

        Still have it?You can try maemo Leste on it. https://maemo-leste.github.io/

        Far from usable as daily phone, but they are making good progress despite their small team. Dillo works as Browser for sites without js, SMS works well, calls are possible, Bluetooth is missing but everything else pretty much works.

        Of course the 256MB RAM pose a heavy limit for todays apps. You have to choose ones which use it sparingly. E.g. mupdf, gnumeric instead of libreoffice and so on.

        But its awesome for mobile ssh and, little games like SNES ones. I am starting to use it as second phone.

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      1 day ago

      Graphene really is the next best thing. If you can get your hands on a used Pixel or splurge for a new one, you won’t regret converting. At least until there’s a production-ready gnuPhone

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        I don’t really understand why Pixel is that evryone likes/they support.
        I can’t accept the fact that there is no external sd card support.
        I believe I am getting old because I am very stuck on this point, even more than the headphone jack.

        Nevermind I just saw Motorola is actually making a deal with gaphene OS. They were my next future phone with sd cards and even styluses- if this goes through, can’t wait!

        • TheOubliette@lemmy.ml
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          24 hours ago

          Pixels are the main target of aftermarket ROMs because they are reference Android devices with highly available unlocked developer modes. Most companies producing phones do things like add propriety changes that require substantial workarounds for relatively basic hardware functionality and make it much more difficult to even install an aftermarket ROM.

          Really this is all a consequence of capitalism itself and the need to lock in ecosystems to establish controlled markets (allowing for controlling one’s own profit). Every phone could be fully unlockable and hackable by the end user, but companies specifically prevent this in order to maximize their own profits.

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              22 hours ago

              Yeah but apple actually takes care of its customers. They are one of the few ones that is exactly what it seems, and isn’t expensive or cheap. Most people saying apple devices are overpriced simply aren’t the target demographic for the products.

              • mad_djinn@lemmy.world
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                9 hours ago

                Most people saying apple devices are overpriced simply aren’t the target demographic for the products.

                “poor people making poor people noises” is all I’m getting out of you. what are you doing on lemmy dont you have an ai chatbot to flirt with?

              • huppakee@piefed.social
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                18 hours ago

                takes care of its customers

                They sure don’t do that from the good of their heart,

                apple devices are overpriced

                they make their customers pay for a ‘service’ that robs them of their freedom

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                19 hours ago

                Apple routinely slows down its phones with every major update, promoting people buying $1k+ phones every 2-3 years.

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                22 hours ago

                isn’t expensive

                Bullshit. Upgrading from 1 TB of internal storage to 2 TB on a laptop is not a $250 expense. Before the memory crisis, I could have bought a brand new M.2 SSD with the full 2 TB for less than that.

                • Rekorse@sh.itjust.works
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                  19 hours ago

                  Its expensive for you and me, but not for someone who needs apple to handle it for them. That’s the whole point. If you can do it yourself, or know someone who can do it for you for free, then you aren’t the customer Apple is looking for.

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              19 hours ago

              No problem friend. It is fairly hard to handle all those other phones - see how LineageOS keeps it’s supported list fairly small!

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          11 hours ago

          Do you mean internal SD card slot? Because pixels absolutely support external sd cards

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          I also like having expanded storage. But if you actually care about privacy?

          You want the minimum amount of data on your phone at any given time. Your recent camera roll, any cached music and apps, and that is really it. Everything should be offloaded to your private storage ASAP

          Because for as shit as google and apple are? You can also remote wipe those devices. less effective if it is a government agent that has it, but it is a thing. And, depending on the storage setup, that sd card might be raw dogging it to begin with.

          • Default Username@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            24 hours ago

            It shouldn’t be difficult for a custom ROM like GrapheneOS to make the user explicitly allow a microSD card to be mounted if that would cause any security issues.

            • NuXCOM_90Percent@lemmy.zip
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              23 hours ago

              And welcome to software development. Every feature needs time (money), engineers (money), and testing (money). With most testing continuing in perpetuity because any pull request could break it.

              And when you add on that graphene is a nonprofit baked FOSS project… Well, if it is as simple as you think it is then get to making a pull request, I guess?

          • MolochHorridus@lemmy.ml
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            22 hours ago

            Couldn’t you encrypt the SD card? And while you’re at it encrypt the internal storage also. Linux should support that, right?

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            1 day ago

            I understand sd card is a security risk. But you don’t have to use it.
            The utility is the key.
            I’m just 100% against corporations enshittificating their products so you pay hundreds more for a 50$ part.

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          1 day ago

          It is because there are hardware security features that most other Android phones do not support and Graphene OS is going for maximum security and privacy. Besides, they’re coming out with their own hardware by partnering with Motorola shortly.

        • ilinamorato@lemmy.world
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          24 hours ago

          I can’t accept the fact that there is no external sd card support.

          OK, this is going to sound dismissive, and I really don’t mean it to be. But why?

          For data transfer, you can still use the USB port (I do it all the time). Other than that, there’s more than enough storage available onboard for any reasonable amount of usage. I don’t even really keep anything critical on my device at all, so what there is is kind of overkill already.

          I just don’t understand the need for an SD card with storage being as plentiful now as it is. I want to understand.

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            6 hours ago

            If you want to carry your whole music library around, a big SD card makes that work. I understand streaming is the trendy thing and I was using Navidrome myself, but I rolled back my plan and switched to SD card for it. I’ve saved money.

            Another use case is for carrying a heap of ROMs. I’ve also done this until I realised gaming on my phone was uncomfortable and bought a dedicated device.

            Having the SD card wasn’t a dealbreaker for me when I bought this phone but I do really like having it.

            • ilinamorato@lemmy.world
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              4 minutes ago

              I’ve always said I’ll listen to music more when I get through my podcast backlog and audiobook backlog. Neither of those seem particularly…imminent, lol.

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            22 hours ago

            I’m a data hog. Storage is cheap and it should be available on my phone also.
            People always saying physical Media is important, and most of the time they tink of cds and dvds.
            I use my sd cards for physical Media sorage.
            I used my camera and accidentally recorded 40 gigs of video.
            With external card I do not have to worry.
            Music, books, picture heavy pdfs, movies full tv series sits comfortably in my palm.

            • ilinamorato@lemmy.world
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              21 hours ago

              Interesting. Thanks for letting me know.

              I think of myself as a data hog also, but only on my computer; I’m mostly a minimalist on my phone.

              • Melobol@lemmy.ml
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                19 hours ago

                It really depends on how much you are using your phone.
                If I would go back 20 years I would be attached to my desktop pc and my ebook reader pocket pc. ln that case I would not need extra storage for my phone. Tho thinking of it… I had two different external cards for that handheld even back then. :)

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          20 hours ago

          They’re not that impressive specs wise, somewhere between mid range and a “real” flagship that has a Snapdragon Elite chip. The only reason to get it is the top of the line security features that allow GrapheneOS to function. Or the software if you’re into Ai and such and don’t want Graphene, but that’s like the opposite of privacy.

        • humanamerican@lemmy.zip
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          23 hours ago

          I feel your pain on storage and headphones but Graphene is worth the sacrifice to me. I also like that my 8a will get updates until at least 2030.

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        23 hours ago

        I’d argue that Graphene is a better thing since it’s based on an OS that’s been designed for mobile from the ground up. I expect it’s going to be a while before Linux UX on mobile catches up to desktop, but Graphene works great already.

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          23 hours ago

          Sad thing is that Linux used to be ahead on phones. Everyone swore by N900 and it was sabotaged by ms buykilling Nokia.

          • ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆@lemmy.ml
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            22 hours ago

            It would’ve been a cool world if we got Linux that could work seamlessly between desktop and mobile. Imagine if you had architecture where apps were built as services with an API, and then you could connect either desktop or mobile UI to them. Heck, at that point you could even make custom UIs across apps, or pipe them together the way you do with shell scripts. And then you could also have a device like a phone which has all your apps and data, and you could plug it into a dock with more memory, GPU, etc. So, you wouldn’t have to juggle a bunch of devices and sync data between them.

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          21 hours ago

          By those standards, Halium + ubports might be worth while, it’s using enough of the android binaries to get the job done but is still real linux.

          • ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆@lemmy.ml
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            21 hours ago

            For most use cases though, you don’t really have much of a benefit of running Linux over Android on a phone though. There’s enough Linux compatibility on Android already to make it work seamlessly with your Linux devices. In my opinion, as long as the stack is open source and well supported, it doesn’t really matter whether it’s Android or Linux based.

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        24 hours ago

        Is it actually usable for everyday stuff though? I heard that bank apps are pain in the ass among other things. Maybe this new deal with Motorola changes things.

        • ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆@lemmy.ml
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          23 hours ago

          You can install Google app store in a container, and all the apps I’ve used work fine on it out of the box. It absolutely works fine as a daily driver.

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          21 hours ago

          (Edit: Maybe) You can’t do mobile deposit, but surely you can still just use the bank’s website.

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          24 hours ago

          I have been using it for 2+ years exclusively. I had a few issues with mobile deposit with my old credit union, but I moved to a new one and it works. So does the Discover app. Pretty much everything else is great, and I worry much less about my phone spying on me.

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          21 hours ago

          Graphene only supports pixels currently.

          They have hardware encryption tech other phones don’t have that graphene uses

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          18 hours ago

          Fairphone can’t run Graphene and the other de-Googled Android ROMs that it can run aren’t nearly as secure

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      21 hours ago

      The Pinephone was a fun expiriment. I want that pinboard switch on other devices, but the linux dev/update cycle is very unconducive to the needs of most daily drivers.

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        21 hours ago

        what kinds update cycle do you mean? cuz with a bigger userbase that will be greatly improved im sure, i use arch (btw) and i would love a similar experience on a phone. Maybe librephone will get the stone rolling. One can dream.

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    Welcome to the fold!

    Just a heads up, GOS doesn’t recommend the F-droid app as apparently there’s some security concerns. SideOfBurritos on YouTube talks more about it. An app like Droidify or Neo Store would be better and still uses the same F-Droid repositories. I use and really like Obtanium which allows you to download and manage apps directly from their websites, GitHub, F-Droid, & more.

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      7 hours ago

      Is there a way to install Obtainium other than downloading it from a seemingly random website?

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        You can download the APK right from their website as well as I believe their GitHub.

        Their website also has the certificate hash to verify with AppVerifier

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      Seconded on Obtainium. Basically any FOSS app is gonna have a repo there with releases regardless, and you can always just use an f-droid repository if they only publish releases there.

      Plus, way easier to export a list of installed apps to restore them at a later date!

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        24 hours ago

        and you can always just use an f-droid repository if they only publish releases there.

        So Obtainium users can install F-Droid apps through Obtainium?

        • AmbitiousProcess (they/them)@piefed.social
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          22 hours ago

          Yep! It’s not the same experience as F-Droid (e.g. it’s not gonna be you scrolling through a list of apps, picking the one you want, and hitting install. Obtainium is more of a “get the URL to where the app’s releases are, paste it in here, add it, then hit install, plus you might have to do a little config so it selects the right release if there are multiple”, but once it’s set up, it’s set up.

          I fully replaced the F-Droid app with Obtainium for actually installing and updating apps, but I still keep the F-Droid app around just because I can go on there, search up apps, do a little browsing, then take the app I want and put it in Obtainium.

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        1 day ago

        Here’s the Side of Burritos video with two followup videos in the description (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IzpVI4zaso0)

        I don’t really know much about it to be honest, and the video is pretty old, and someone in the comments says the issue is fixed but I haven’t seen that anywhere else. I just use Obtanium anyway since you can get most FOSS apps from GitHub, a for ones that don’t, you can still find F-Droid apps. SideOfBurritos also has a more recent video about how to set up and use Obtanium if you’re interested.

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    1 day ago

    Welcome ! Quick tip: Google has a database of cell towers that helps getting a location quickly and helps starting the GPS connection even indoors.

    You don’t have that on GOS. So when you use localization with organic maps, you’ll notice it struggle to find you. You have to have a clear view to the sky to get a ping and then you can use it inside your car for example.

    I also use https://github.com/barbeau/gpstest to get the ping more quickly.

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      24 hours ago

      GrapheneOS has some services of its own that improve location speed and accuracy when enabled: SUPL and PSDS. They’re both implemented in ways that try to preserve privacy. See here for more info:

      https://grapheneos.org/faq#default-connections

      With these enabled, it’s usually quick to get your precise location.

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        12 hours ago

        I have both enabled but still difficult to get a ping without a clear view to the sky. I will try network location though.

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      1 day ago

      You can improve a coverage alternative with one of the many apps which discover and upload cell towers to Beacon DB.

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    21 hours ago

    It’s really easy. I installed dirty unicorns and a few others onto an Android phone years ago and had to install a program and follow a bunch of steps, adb, etc. GrapheneOS can be installed from a browser using another phone or tablet with each step basically a button on the site. I was a little surprised how simple it was.

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      14 hours ago

      Yeah I installed Graphene years ago on an old Pixel 4a and I remember it being a bit of a process. But I just got a new Pixel a couple of weeks ago and I was surprised how easy it is now.

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    23 hours ago

    I just got a Pixel 9 last week and put GrapheneOS on it. Couldn’t be happier with it so far. The install was completely painless using web installer. All my apps worked out of the box. Google Store works fine in the sandbox. UX is good, and you don’t have any of the crap Google normally loads like all the adaptive services, and all the other junk that runs in the background.