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401 points Bluestein | 3 comments | | HN request time: 0.438s | source
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msgodel ◴[] No.44357671[source]
They should switch to an SOC with mainline Linux support so you don't have to throw it out in three years.
replies(4): >>44357802 #>>44357999 #>>44360318 #>>44362684 #
1. ppseafield ◴[] No.44357802[source]
Which SoC should they switch to? Google's Pixel phones for Android 16's release just updated[0] their kernels to 6.1, which means the bleeding edge kernel version for Android phones is a release from December 2022. What Qualcomm SoCs are supported by this kernel, and how fast are they?

[0] https://www.androidauthority.com/pixel-linux-6-1-android-15-...

replies(2): >>44357892 #>>44361064 #
2. msgodel ◴[] No.44357892[source]
If the drivers were upstreamed it would be supported by the latest kernel.org kernel even before release.

AFAIK outside the Pinephone and Liberem 5 no hardware manufacturers explicitly target this and only 10 year+ old Qualcomm (other vendors such as Freescale tend to behave much better) SOCs have open source graphics drivers because the SOC vendors themselves often refuse to support their own hardware.

Google is able to do this because they build their own SOCs (probably because they got tired of being jerked around by Qualcomm) but still don't merge their stuff upstream (or at least they don't last I checked.)

3. charcircuit ◴[] No.44361064[source]
Android 16 uses the latest LTS branch of Linux which is 6.12.