Looks like a new model for the Fairphone has been announced! What do you think about it?

Personally I love the fairphone project but after having tried GrapheneOS on my Pixel 6a it would be hard to move to a different OS

  • Square Singer@feddit.de
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    1 year ago

    As the owner of an FP4, I will not get any further FP products.

    The hardware is mostly fine, but it’s also meh. The speaker sucks, the microphone sucks, the camera sucks. Just talking to people on the phone is a pain, since people just can’t understand me.

    But worse is the software. Updates are slow (still no Android 13 on the FP4) and terribly buggy. Each update brings new bugs with it, old bugs are resolved only very slowly. One example of this is that some devices experience ghost touches. So in the newest update, they just lowered the sensitivity, so that the devices that didn’t have ghost touches before now often don’t register touch at all. On the forums there is a long list of known bugs. The weird thing here is that every user seems to get a random grab bag of bugs.

    And lastly: There is the price. It’s so incredibly expensive, that it basically invalidates any benefit you get from the repairability. If I buy a comparable phone for ~€400 less, I can use that money to get the battery and screen professionally replaced a few times.

    So all in all, I am really not happy with the FP4, and this will most likely be my last Fairphone, unless Fairphone will finally migrate their software development to an in-house team where the devs actually use the phone themselves. Software QA is so terrible, that I can’t imagine anyone at Fairphone actually using the phone themselves.

    • uzay@infosec.pub
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      1 year ago

      You could look into CalyxOS. I don’t know if you’d consider installing an alternative System on your phone, but the FP4 is one of the few ones that let you unlock and relock the bootloader. Mine has been on Android 13 for a while now with very few software issues.

        • uzay@infosec.pub
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          1 year ago

          Not at all. It has OTA updates that download and install automatically in the background, and apply on the next reboot.

      • JakoDel@lemdro.id
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        1 year ago

        I honestly wonder why people suggest all these weird lineage spinoffs instead of the real thing… oh well

        • uzay@infosec.pub
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          1 year ago

          Well when you install CalyxOS you can relock the bootloader afterwards, it comes with microg, which vanilla Lineage dodn’t support at all last time I checked, and it comes with a firewall app as well. So, different focus than Lineage I’d say.

    • SandboxScience@feddit.de
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      1 year ago

      There definitely are bugs. But to be fair, for every phone I ever owned the forum looked the same: so many people complaining about so many different problems/bugs/hardware issues that you question why you even bought the phone in the first place. Most often the average user is perfectly fine but would never open up a forum post to announce this.

    • Fubber Nuckin'@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      In terms of the price, to be fair, it’s supposed to last like 8 years. You’re basically buying your next phone too when you buy one of these. It’s also more expensive to do what they’re doing.

  • notepass@feddit.de
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    1 year ago

    The Fairphone is always just such an odd decision for me. On one hand, I would love to have a phone with long support and swappable parts. On the other hand, I hear so many complaints about the software and wait for major version updates that I am not enterily sure if it really is a good buy.

    The price is pretty okay, a bit less than 100€ per expected usable year. This is in line with other manufacturers. Also, the biggest bull of the expenses probably comes from the way the manufacturing and materials are checked.

    Is there any sense in installing a custom ROM on the phone to get rid of the software issues?

    Or maybe there will be less issues this time? From what I heard some of the problems where caused by Qualcomms support windows being closed and the company actually updating everything themself. Which might be solved by using a SoC with somewhat decent support now.

    • menturi@lemdro.id
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      1 year ago

      the biggest bull of the expenses probably comes from the way the manufacturing and materials are checked.

      Could you expand on this? I am unfamiliar with Fairphone’s methods for determining and checking sources for materials and manufacturing. Is it flawed?

      • notepass@feddit.de
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        1 year ago

        As far as I know, Fairphone uses “conflict free” materials. This is more expensive and harder to get than just searching for the cheapest seller of any material (e.g. lithium) and just going with them. In theory this should help against child or prison labor.

        Additionally, they aim to pay everyone in the chain a living wage. Which is also more expensive than just using foxxcon to produce as cheap as possible and telling them to “just add more suicide prevention nets”.

        This is a good thing, but makes cost go up quite a bit I would assume. Additionally, the SoC is probably more expensive than the Snapdragon equivalent, as it is build “for industrial uses”, which normally commands a premium.

    • rroa@reddthat.com
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      1 year ago

      Is there any sense in installing a custom ROM on the phone to get rid of the software issues?

      Custom ROM will help with some issues, but not all. If the issue is in a proprietary blob, like the random screen dimming issue that’s plagued FP4 for months now, you’d still be stuck with the issue.

  • bitwolf@lemmy.one
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    1 year ago

    GSMarena reports displayport support in the USB.

    Can anyone confirm this? The site doesn’t mention it and it’s a game changing feature imo.

    • IdleSheep@lemdro.id
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      1 year ago

      No, what they did was pick an SoC called QCM6490 which is used for embedded and industrial applications, and Qualcomm officially supports those for 8 years, unlike the snapdragon SoCs. According to gsmarena it should have performance similar to a snapdragon 778G.

  • rroa@reddthat.com
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    1 year ago

    Kudos on Fairphone for offering 8 years of software updates.

    As an owner of FP4, my biggest gripes with the FP4 are the software updates. Bugs keep languishing for months before they are acknowledged and then months pass before the bugs are fixed. Three annoying issues with my FP4 that I deal with on a daily basis:

    • Screen dimming bug. First reported in Feb and the earliest possible fix is in October. My phone is useless when I’m out and about and the level of urgency implied by FP4 for this issue baffles me.
    • NFC stops working randomly
    • 5 GHz hotspot was broken for months and only fixed recently

    I don’t care much about Android 13 as long as I get timely security patches. What I want is a bug free experience and that’s something FP4 fails to deliver.

    An annoying hardware decision is the SIM card can’t be hot swapped. Not sure why this wasn’t addressed with FP5.

  • gelberhut@lemdro.id
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    1 year ago

    Smartphones technology progress is slowed down recently, but still, do you think that this phone will be usable in 8 years?

    • notepass@feddit.de
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      1 year ago

      If you are used to it, probably. I know that my pixel 4a is slowing down after 3 years. But I am just used to the speed, so it is okay for me.

    • Starfighter@discuss.tchncs.de
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      1 year ago

      I suspect that if you were to cut the screen at the rounded edges, the sensor island and the onscreen nav buttons you’ll be left with a 16:9 screen.

      In other words its a 16:9 screen with some margin for curves and controls.