2017-01-13 9:11 GMT+01:00 Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton lkcl@lkcl.net:
crowd-funded eco-conscious hardware: https://www.crowdsupply.com/eoma68
On Fri, Jan 13, 2017 at 7:55 AM, mike.valk@gmail.com mike.valk@gmail.com wrote:
2017-01-13 4:56 GMT+01:00 Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton lkcl@lkcl.net:
crowd-funded eco-conscious hardware: https://www.crowdsupply.com/eoma68
On Thu, Jan 12, 2017 at 8:13 PM, Wolfgang Romey hier@wolfgangromey.de wrote:
I think my FairPhone 2, which I own for a month, is some kind of a modular smartphone.
it's not: they lied.
If they're intentions were honest it's not a lie. It's just being naive.
no, it's called lying. or, at best, deceptive marketing.
But all most parts are, user, replaceable. Which indeed does not make it modular, but serviceable.
correct.
if it was a truly modular design, the parts would snap or slide-lock apart in some fashion, there would be a hardware and software standard published, and the parts would be re-useble in future designs and they would have PUBLISHED SOME INDICATION OF THEIR EXISTENCE already.
so it's total horseshit and they know it. they're not stupid: they had enough people on their forums talk about dave hakkan's phonebloks concept for them to have heard the word "modular" enough times.
The biggest issue is that they've tied the modem and SIM directly to the rest of the system. It's a cheap decision. Which most manufactures have
done
unfortunately. [1]
i told them that it's easy to get hold of a cheap 3G modem containing a qualcomm MSM chipset. they ceased communication shortly afterwards.
You're being to brief here. I don't understand.
They are using a Qualcomm MSM (Snapdragon 801) chip for their "Fairphone 2".
Which in my opnion is both good and bad. Good: - Open source kernels without NDA - Opensource display drivers: Freedreno Bad: - Modem and SIM are remote programmable and have direct, unswitched, uncontrolled access to power and RAM. So very bad for your privacy. - Little effort in up-streaming their modifications to the Linux Kernel - No free unbricking software.
How bad for your privacy? One rogue cell transceiver (ca. 800$) and complete control over your phone forever.
But that is true for almost all phones.
l.
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