←back to thread

751 points akyuu | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.001s | source
Show context
walterbell ◴[] No.46174679[source]
https://tbot.substack.com/p/grapheneos-new-oem-partnership

> GrapheneOS has officially confirmed a major new hardware partnership—one that marks the end of its long-standing Pixel exclusivity. According to the team, work with a major Android OEM began in June and is now moving toward the development of a next-generation smartphone built to meet GrapheneOS’ strict privacy and security standards.

replies(9): >>46175172 #>>46176080 #>>46176141 #>>46176211 #>>46176273 #>>46176996 #>>46177060 #>>46178884 #>>46178901 #
axelthegerman ◴[] No.46175172[source]
Oh that's one of the best news in the smartphone world in a long time.

It's impossible to escape the Apple/Google duopoly but at least GrapheneOS makes the most out of Android regarding privacy.

I still wish we could get some kind of low resource, stable and mature Android clone instead of Google needlessly increasing complexity but this will over time break app compatibility (Google will make sure of it)

Edit: I do think Pixel devices used to be one of the best but still I'd like to choose my hardware and software separately interoperating via standards

replies(8): >>46175545 #>>46175845 #>>46177212 #>>46177739 #>>46178950 #>>46180868 #>>46182640 #>>46186722 #
tenthirtyam ◴[] No.46175845[source]
I'm not knowledgeable enough -- what would it take to escape the Apple/Google duopoly?

I'm imagining a future where you buy a smartphone and when you do the first configuration, it asks you which services provider you want to use. Google and Apple are probably at the top of the list, but at the bottom there is "custom..." where you can specify the IP or host.domain of your own self-hosted setup.

Then, when you download an app, the app informs the app provider of this configuration and so your notifications (messenger, social media, games, banking, whatever) get delivered to that services provider and your phone gets them from there accordingly.

Is there anything like that in the world today?

replies(4): >>46175876 #>>46175967 #>>46176711 #>>46177580 #
JoshTriplett ◴[] No.46175967[source]
> I'm not knowledgeable enough -- what would it take to escape the Apple/Google duopoly?

At this point? Reliable emulation that can run 99% of Android apps, to provide a bridge until the platform is interesting enough for people to develop for it "natively".

I think the easiest way to do that would be to run Android in a VM.

replies(7): >>46176007 #>>46176346 #>>46176483 #>>46177691 #>>46177706 #>>46178066 #>>46179281 #
1. palata ◴[] No.46177706{4}[source]
Well if you rely on running Android apps, you still rely on Android.

Actually, if you rely on the app, you really on the Android SDK which is not open source.

Now if you could run AOSP but your own apps built with an open source SDK, that would be a different story. Some people seem to really want to do that with PWAs. I personnally tend to hate webapps, but I have to admit that they can be open source.