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authorPaul Buetow <paul@buetow.org>2023-01-24 10:36:26 +0200
committerPaul Buetow <paul@buetow.org>2023-01-24 10:36:26 +0200
commit56febbe3312676cbbf8d3753d6172a03c8002ec9 (patch)
treeeba70fdc822e018c4c0118a4b65ea86ba4ae176b /gemfeed
parent8cfa4ef0bba8503661cf6ec645c187c57c8e1b04 (diff)
typo
Diffstat (limited to 'gemfeed')
-rw-r--r--gemfeed/2023-01-23-why-grapheneos-rox.gmi2
1 files changed, 1 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/gemfeed/2023-01-23-why-grapheneos-rox.gmi b/gemfeed/2023-01-23-why-grapheneos-rox.gmi
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--- a/gemfeed/2023-01-23-why-grapheneos-rox.gmi
+++ b/gemfeed/2023-01-23-why-grapheneos-rox.gmi
@@ -124,7 +124,7 @@ A pure Linux phone, e.g. with Ubuntu Touch installed, e.g. on a PinePhone, Fairp
But here, Google Play would not be sandboxed; you could not configure individual network permissions and storage scopes like in GrapheneOS. Pure Linux-compatible phones usually come with a crappy camera, and the battery life is generally pretty bad (only a few hours). Also, no big tech company pushes the development of Linux phones. Everything relies on hobbyists, whereas multiple big tech companies put a lot of effort into the Android project, and a lot of code also goes into the Android Open-Source project.
-Currently, pure Linux phones are only a nice toy to tinker with but are still not ready (will they ever?) to be the daily driver. SailfishOS may be an exception; I played around with it in the past. It is pretty usable, but it's not an option for me as it is partly a proprietary operating system.
+Currently, pure Linux phones are only a nice toy to tinker with but are still not ready (will they ever?) to be the daily driver. SailfishOS may be an exception; I played around with it in the past. It is pretty usable, but it's not an option for me as it is partial a proprietary operating system.
=> https://sailfishos.org SailfishOS