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The PinePhone starts shipping — a Linux-powered smartphone for $ 150, Ars Technica

The PinePhone starts shipping — a Linux-powered smartphone for $ 150, Ars Technica


    

      When Android isn’t Linux-y enough –

             

For now it’s for developers only, and you’ll need to flash your own OS.

      

      

           

      

                

                                    **********************                                                            The front and back of the PinePhone.                                                                                                                         

                                      

                                                                  This photo has side views.                                                                                                             

                  

                                      
        ********************
                                                                  A real picture of the PinePhone in its shipping box.                                                                                                                          

                                      

      ************                                                            The PinePhone with the back peeled off.                                                                                                                          

                                      

      **************                                                            Here you can see the six gold pogo pins at the top, along with the six dip switches.                                                                                                                          

                                      

                                                                  A factory full of PinePhones.                                                                                                                          

                                       (***********************

                                                                  This crazy adapter will let you debug the PinePhone through the headphone jack.                                                                                                                          

                                      

                                                                  The Psion Series 5mx, which Pine 64 wants to use as inspiration for its keyboard case.                                                                                                                          

                                      

                                                                  Just for fun, here’s the PineTime.                                                                                                                          

                                       (***********************

                                                                  And the PineTab. This is a tablet with a removable keyboard.                                                                                                            Pine****************************************************************************************** has announcedthat it is finally shipping the PinePhone, a smartphone that takes the rare step outside the Android / iOS duopoly and is designed to run mainline Linux distributions. The PinePhone starts shipping January in the “Braveheart” developer edition.

      This initial “Braveheart” batch of devices is meant for “developer and early adopter” users, according to the (Pine) ************************************************************************************************************ Store

      It’s hard to mention PinePhone without mentioning that

      ********************************** Linux smartphone, thePurism Librem 5

      . They could both end up running the same software one day, but the two companies are taking totally different approaches to hardware. Purism has a hardline requirement for the hardware: it needs to be as open and freedom-focused as possible, which means the company couldn’t use the typical supply chain that exists for Android phones. Purism has only a limited amount of open source-compatible vendors to choose from, and it uses M.2 socketed chips for the closed-source Wi-Fi / Bluetooth and Cell modem. The result is a device that is very thick ( (mm), hot, and expensive, at $ (***************************************************************************************************. The PinePhone is less averse to binary blobs and is a lot closer to a normal smartphone. It’s a more reasonable thickness (9mm) and a more reasonable price: $ 551.

        The PinePhone is powered by. an Allwinner A (SoC, which features four Cortex A) ************************************************************************************************************ (CPUs at 1.2GHz, built on a pretty ancient) ****************************************************************************************************************** nm process. This is the same chip the company uses on the PINE A single board computer, a Raspberry Pi competitor. There are 2GB of RAM, a Mali – (GPU,) ******************************************************************************************************************** (GB of storage, and a) ************************************************************************************** mAh battery. The rear camera is 5MP, the front camera is 2MP, the display is a (x) **************************************************************************************************** IPS LCD, and the battery is removable. There’s a headphone jack, a USB-C port, and support for a MicroSD slot, which you can actually boot operating systems off of. The cellular modem is a large separate chip that is soldered onto the motherboard: a (Quectel EG) ****************************************************************************************************************** (G.) *************

      ********************(******************************

      , and (GPIO, “and for Now, the company is still working on the design. The company says it is “making a keyboard heavily inspired by (Psion Series 5) ************* (keyboards from the s. We hope to not only replicated [sic] the usability of the Psion Series 5 keyboard but also the tactile feel it is known for. “

      The Psion 5 was a clamshell PDA that ran the EPOC operating system (which was later renamed “Symbian OS”) and was powered by 2 AA batteries. Smartphone keyboards from the Moto Droid era would use a single sheet

      that each sat on top of a membrane switch.Also under the removable back is a set of six dip switches that act as privacy kill switches. Users can kill the Modem / GPS, Wi-Fi / Bluetooth, microphone, rear camera, and front camera. The last one, which isn’t a privacy feature, is a switch for the headphone jack. The headphone jack switch toggles from the normal mode of operation to a (UART) (Universal asynchronous receiver -transmitter) port. With this wild-looking (male-3.5mm-to-male-USB-A wire) , you can get a serial connection out of the PinePhone and do some debugging.With the phone shipping, Pine********************************************************************** (Read More) (****************************************************************

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