I'm pleased with the speakerphone speaker--playing music using Lollypop is surprisingly loud and clear. I think this would make an acceptable boombox while walking down the street...
Update: I just received my first inbound spam call! I can't wait until I get one of those scam calls from "Apple support"...
@zemmert Matrix seems to work both with the native Chatty app, and from what I hear, with the Fractal flatpak. I don't have details on specific supported features within those programs though and haven't tested personally.
@vancha Mine still has the lower-capacity 2000mAh battery so its battery life won't be representative of the mass production device and battery.
Overheard someone at the Target return counter returning a gift because they thought it was creepy that it listened to them. There's hope. #privacy
This article acts like robots are ruining the personal touch of handwritten notes, but they are merely replacing human workers. My mom has impeccable penmanship and used to make extra money over the holidays with this kind of work. #automation https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/2019/12/21/art-imperfection-people-are-turning-robots-write-their-handwritten-cards/
TIL that the hot fashion trend in winter wear this year is a coat with Wookie fur on the outside. Star Wars promotion? #chewiecouture
Sebastian from the Purism team shares videos of 16 desktop #games running on the Librem 5 https://dosowisko.net/l5/videos/ pre-order your #Librem5 and carry your #Linux computer in your pocket 😀 https://shop.puri.sm/shop/librem-5/ #LinuxGaming
This is exactly the kind of #privacy problem we are trying to solve with the Librem 5 on multiple fronts, hardware and software.
https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2019/12/19/opinion/location-tracking-cell-phone.html
Important read. Unless more people push harder for #privacy from the companies that collect and sell our data and the govts that buy it, the rest of the world will follow in China's footsteps--the tech (and largely, the will) is already here.
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/12/17/technology/china-surveillance.html
I mean, seriously, how many places out there have engineers who develop an M.2 breakout board to debug their phone and then release the schematics so you can make one for your own phone? It's basically Hogwarts over here @purism -- I'm surrounded by wizards.
I used #3dprinting to make the gift box for my wife's birthday present. It definitely helped add to the mystique.
I've really enjoyed processing our new-and-improved anti-interdiction orders. So far I have to say out of all the glitter nail polish, orange is my favorite (looks so cool against the black case) followed by rainbow. #infosec #tamperevident
@bear454 I think "ruled out" would be too strong, but once I got more information on what was involved I edited it so people wouldn't get the wrong idea in case when we explore it in the future we don't find a way to do it.
We are living in an age where everything from clothing to furniture to technology is cheap and disposable. The assumption is that nothing lasts, so one might as well buy the cheapest thing and throw it away when it inevitably breaks. Nowhere is this more true than the phone market, but it's something we want to change with the Librem 5.
https://puri.sm/posts/librem-5-longevity-solving-the-problem-of-disposable-technology/
@simon The modems do. For the entire phone you certify the device as a whole, and if the hardware changes, you pay to recertify everything again and wait for that process to complete. So it would waste both time and money to certify each batch since the hardware is changing (such as the resistor change in Birch). So instead we will certify the mass-produced device that won't have any more hardware changes.
Technical author, FOSS advocate, public speaker, Linux security & infrastructure geek, author of The Best of Hack and /: Linux Admin Crash Course, Linux Hardening in Hostile Networks and many other books, ex-Linux Journal columnist.