Linux on mobile

Discussion in 'all things UNIX' started by SKA, Nov 5, 2017.

  1. SKA

    SKA Registered Member

  2. oliverjia

    oliverjia Registered Member

    Each flavor of the OS has its dedicated and optimized use on certain devices. What's the point loading a heavy desktop OS onto a mobile device where many OS features are useless for the certain device?
    It'll be due for failure.
     
  3. reasonablePrivacy

    reasonablePrivacy Registered Member

    It's written in the article:
     
  4. oliverjia

    oliverjia Registered Member

    But a mobile phone is supposed to be "away from desktop" most of the time. So no point running a heavy OS when you only need a desktop experience occasionally. Plus, real desktop/laptops are dirt cheap these days - you can by a perfectly working HP/DELL/LENOVO laptop with third-gen core i5 and 8GB RAM on ebay for only around $100 and it'll be way more powerful than a smart phone.
     
  5. reasonablePrivacy

    reasonablePrivacy Registered Member

    I don't think Gnu/Linux desktop OSes are much heavier than Android OS. I would say some Gnu/Linux distros can be a lot lighter than Android OS. It's the same kernel (with some Google patches, but overall they are negligibly changing overall kernel). There is no virtualization. Just add some C/C++ libraries from Gnu & company systems and it's Gnu/Linux. Well, some integration between systems you need to add too. It only needs some more space on flash, but not that much.
     
  6. mirimir

    mirimir Registered Member

    For me, privacy seems the main advantage. Google/Android and Apple are both horrible, in their own ways.

    But even with Linux, there's still the bloody black-box radio, which (in almost all phones) isn't isolated from the OS, and can't really be turned off.
     
  7. RockLobster

    RockLobster Registered Member

    Yes and when you add to that the fake cell phone tower exploit, there's no telling what kind of access an adversary has.
    I wouldn't mind betting it makes PC exploits pale to insignificance by comparison.
     
  8. reasonablePrivacy

    reasonablePrivacy Registered Member

    I wonder is it hard to physically remove GSM antennas.
     
  9. RockLobster

    RockLobster Registered Member

    If you dont need the phone features you may as well get an android tablet instead, the OS is the same.
     
  10. guest

    guest Guest

    Samsung's Linux on DeX app enters private beta
    November 9, 2018
    https://www.techspot.com/news/77345-samsung-linux-dex-app-enters-private-beta.html
     
  11. guest

    guest Guest

    Samsung discontinues ‘Linux on DeX’ program, removing support w/ Android 10
    October 18, 2019
    https://9to5google.com/2019/10/18/s...on-dex-program-removing-support-w-android-10/
     
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