I think we have a misunderstanding - I know a good portion of the Fairphone team personally, I am very convinced of their altruistic motivations and good work ethics - and they wouldn’t sabotage LineageOS.
However, they have not been prioritizing FOSS chips, because the fair trade is the core design criterion. But I am a bit frustrated that they also didn’t prioritize maintainability for the FP1 (no more SW updates after < 5 years I think) and FP2 (spare parts were no longer available by the time my USB module started to fall apart).
And unfortunately, they are also not focusing on having a proper Linux (postmarketOS) with a docking station on the Fairphones.
So I just meant they might be hiding the lack of support as of the release date for alternative OSes. The company and the people are decent :) And they have at least one who used to work in the postmarketOS community that they hired specifically for alternate OS support, if I am not mistaken.
That sounds really impressive. I agree that it is slightly hard to accept that they are not doing all the good, but good enough is still way better than bad, like most other manufacture.
I love that they have people working on postmarketOS on their teams. I hope they will be the change we need to see in the linux phone space.
They are definitely a good company with a very nice work environment & a cool headquarters in Amsterdam :) The people working there, from boss to interns are all the kind of people you’d enjoy having a beer with. However, for the time being, they are too small to have more than one model of a phone in parallel, so they go with a single product line, and upgrade it in each generation. If you are interested in their plans for the future w.r.t. linux phones, I would recommend registering on their community forums and asking - there’s a bunch of volunteers there (the Fairphone angels) who will be happy to give you a good summary of whatever previous statements the company has made :)
Also, as part of the community, you might get a chance to visit the HQ, if you ever manage to come to Amsterdam in summer - they used to have an annual FP community meet-up (this is how I got to meet a bunch of people there), which was mainly postponed due to the pandemic. Not sure what the status is now.
I think we have a misunderstanding - I know a good portion of the Fairphone team personally, I am very convinced of their altruistic motivations and good work ethics - and they wouldn’t sabotage LineageOS. However, they have not been prioritizing FOSS chips, because the fair trade is the core design criterion. But I am a bit frustrated that they also didn’t prioritize maintainability for the FP1 (no more SW updates after < 5 years I think) and FP2 (spare parts were no longer available by the time my USB module started to fall apart). And unfortunately, they are also not focusing on having a proper Linux (postmarketOS) with a docking station on the Fairphones.
So I just meant they might be hiding the lack of support as of the release date for alternative OSes. The company and the people are decent :) And they have at least one who used to work in the postmarketOS community that they hired specifically for alternate OS support, if I am not mistaken.
That sounds really impressive. I agree that it is slightly hard to accept that they are not doing all the good, but good enough is still way better than bad, like most other manufacture.
I love that they have people working on postmarketOS on their teams. I hope they will be the change we need to see in the linux phone space.
They are definitely a good company with a very nice work environment & a cool headquarters in Amsterdam :) The people working there, from boss to interns are all the kind of people you’d enjoy having a beer with. However, for the time being, they are too small to have more than one model of a phone in parallel, so they go with a single product line, and upgrade it in each generation. If you are interested in their plans for the future w.r.t. linux phones, I would recommend registering on their community forums and asking - there’s a bunch of volunteers there (the Fairphone angels) who will be happy to give you a good summary of whatever previous statements the company has made :) Also, as part of the community, you might get a chance to visit the HQ, if you ever manage to come to Amsterdam in summer - they used to have an annual FP community meet-up (this is how I got to meet a bunch of people there), which was mainly postponed due to the pandemic. Not sure what the status is now.