@josele13 Hey, thanks for bumping this thread -- I'd missed it the first time around last fall.
Big thanks for Ruben for the boot logos! I feel so much cleaner when I boot my OPO now.
@josele13 Hey, thanks for bumping this thread -- I'd missed it the first time around last fall.
Big thanks for Ruben for the boot logos! I feel so much cleaner when I boot my OPO now.
@xekuta747 said in "Desktop" should be background-picture + Icons:
frame
Barring further explanation, I think that's exactly the design goal: to reserve the lower-right ~90% of the screen for pet pictures.
@wq6z8x4u
Sure it has no practical effect, but I updated the splash screen on my OnePlus One, and immediately felt much cleaner!
@totalrando And when you say "optimized," it's optimized for the carrier to be more bandwidth efficient to save them money, at the expense of not being channel agnostic like plain ordinary VOIP (packet-switched voice) would be. So the phone's h/w and s/w has got to dive deeper in the ISO stack for benefit of the phone company, and to the detriment of smaller players like, well, every phone OS other than the Big 2.
It might be a good time for everyone facing a 3G phase-out to consider a plan B, e.g. a VOIP service that provides a local phone number.
Not not, but just kinda not for VOLTE service in USA.
UBports pinephone distro worked poory on VOLTE. Not not-at-all, just not well. My last test was over 2 months ago, so more recent experiences should chime in. Phone audio was best described as "chipmunks". You could make and receive a call, but you might not understand each other.
Sailfish OS on pinephone distro worked with "weird" audio on the other end using VOLTE. According to my wife it was "helium voice". Approximately a 1 month-old experience.
PostmarketOS with Phosh frontend has acceptable voice service on US 4G-only carriers. Usable for voice calls when voice service is working. Unfortunately, VOLTE sometimes drops out, and you can't make or receive calls.
I've recently tried an ATT MVNO and T-Mobile with PMOS. Experience with network dropouts are similar.
LG G Watch Urbane (Bass) with Asteroid OS.
@totalrando HD calling is indeed a marketing thing, as you say. And like you, I find the voice performance on the OPO to be completely satisfactory. It's a perfectly acceptable daily driver, other than MMS annoyances like iPhone people sending pics in weird apple-only formats -- what's with that?
But, try this interesting experiment: Look at the notification tray at the top of the screen while your device is unlocked and idle. You probably see the "L" since you're on 4G/LTE and in a good coverage area. (And if not, try it when you are . . .) Now, make a voice call and watch the network indicator while call is in progress and then immediately after hanging up. (I just call voicemail, but humans are acceptable, too for this test.)
The OPO can use LTE for data, but without VOLTE support in UBPorts, voice calls will still be carried on 2G or 3G (when and where these services still exist).
If you're using the OPO with UBPorts somewhere/sometime that 3G and 4G are coexisting, you can watch it happen: Pull up a web page using mobile data, and you'll see the "L" icon in the status bar on the top. Now, place a voice call and see the "L" replaced with "3G". This is the device falling back to 3G since there's no OS support for VOLTE. End the call and "L" comes back.
T-mobile's announcement of 2G and 3G sunset for their US networks says the T-Mo 3G service ends July 1 2022, and this is the one we care about for the OPO. On that date -- unless you're somewhere T-Mo is still supporting 2G for legacy hardware -- you won't be able to make calls. But depending on where you are, you may get cut off sooner since Big Pink is decommissioning 3G stations as we type and you'll be out of luck . . .
This has already happened to me with an AT&T reseller. 3G service on that network ended Feb 22, but had been degrading before that date. OPO now sits in a drawer unless I need to play Tux Racer.
BTW, UBPorts (and other alternative OSs like Sailfish) will work -- kinda -- for VOLTE-only networks on the Pinephone since that device has VOLTE implemented in hardware in the modem.
@totalsonic Looks like I've got about 12 days left before SFOS and Ubuntu Touch stop working for voice calling due to 3G phaseout by my US MVNO. Last Spring I was hoping one project would have beat the deadline, but that's not gonna happen. Really don't want to use Android.
@applee @Kunai Kodi is available for SFOS, and source is available so porting it to Ubuntu Touch should at least be a possibility.
https://openrepos.net/content/krnlyng/kodi
It's nice, and it supported media formats that the default media player couldn't, as well as being SMB friendly so I could browse my home media collection in bed without waking up the kids by watching a movie in the living room on the repurposed PC kodi box/TV/stereo system. For my use case, a raspberry pi isn't really a good fit.
@MrT10001 I certainly don't mean to sound ungrateful to the porter and their efforts in this space, but I'm ultimately happy in an ironic way that an upgrade to focal wasn't available earlier. I'd already had to retire my OPO from daily use due to the 3G shutdown here, and I think I may just keep it on 16.04 now till the day it dies as a host for the various apps that are unlikely to be rebuilt for Focal and beyond. It's kind of a time machine for checking the Open Store.
And TBH, TuxRacer, TuxDungeon and TuxHunter have some real "waiting for the dentist with child" utility, and I think I'd be kicking myself if I'd unsuspectingly lost those to a distro version upgrade.