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hpr_transcripts/hpr3246.txt
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Episode: 3246
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Title: HPR3246: LXCast: freeing the Fairphone 3 (and many other phones)
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3246/hpr3246.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-24 19:37:50
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio episode 3246 for Monday 11th on January 2021.
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Today's show is entitled, LXCast, Freeing the Fairphone Free, and Many Other Fones,
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not, and is part of the series podcast recommendations. It is posted by 2B Frank,
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and is about 29 minutes long, and carries a clean flag.
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The summary is, we look at how to get a free smartphone operating system on the Fairphone Free,
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and many other phones.
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This episode of HPR is brought to you by AnanasThost.com.
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Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HPR15. That's HPR15.
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Better web hosting that's honest and fair at AnanasThost.com.
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Thanks for watching!
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Hi everybody, my name is Ken Fallon,
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and you're listening to another episode of Hacker Public Radio.
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Today, a podcast recommendation for you.
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LXCast from our good friend, 2B Frank, new podcast in English,
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open source, freedom, tech. What's not to love?
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Welcome to LXCast number 3. My name is 2B Frank, and in this episode,
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we will be talking about freeing the Fairphone Free and Many Other Fones,
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introducing a great free operating system called E for the FP3, and many others that you can install,
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or that you can purchase already pre-installed phones with, which is a very good option.
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So let's get right into it to learn more.
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Okay, so last time I talked about the Fairphone when it had just come out, that's about a bit more
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than a year ago. I think the Fairphone 3 is sustainable, easily repairable, and long-lasting,
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fair trade phone. If you want to learn more about that, have a look at LXCast number 2 here on the
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page in the show notes, or at lxcast.net. The Fairphone came out in 2019, I think, in October,
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I think, your shift, and it had only stock Android number 9 back then with the full Google apps
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installs that you can't really uninstall, which means Google is regularly looking over your shoulder
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when you use the phone, and that is really not great for privacy-aware users.
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If you want to install an alternative operating system on your phone,
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back then there wasn't really an option that was stable, really usable.
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In the meantime, at least two solutions have emerged. One is Lineage OS, the free Android,
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with the G apps removed. I should put the link in the show notes, but that is not the one I'm going
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to talk about mainly today. Today we're talking about the E-Project. It's a D-Google operating system
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also based on Android, and it is actually a fork of Lineage OS, and you can find more about it
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under the email address, hdgps, double.double-slash, e.foundation. Yeah, naming a problem just with a letter
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e and slash before it, and slash afterwards actually poses one or two problems when you look for it
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online, but if you look at e.foundation, then you will find the actual website. It will be in the
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show notes anyway.
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So why would you want to install a different operating system on your phone? Well, on the e-page,
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they say smartphones quietly transformed into surveillance devices, sharing our personal data
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with the highest bidder or with government agencies to predict and influence our actions.
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On their website, they actually quote study from a professor Douglas C. Schmidt, professor of
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computer science at Vanderbilt University, and it's a very in-depth study, basically saying that
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how much Google is using the Android phone and actually the Chrome browser that is pre-installed
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on the Android phone to collect a large amount of data on every user. Just the quick quote from
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that study, Android sends periodic updates to Google service, including device type, cell
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service carrier name, crash reports, and information about apps installed on the phone. It also
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notifies Google whenever any app is accessed on the phone. So it collects a whole of a lot of
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data and will share a lot of unique identifiers of your phone with Google servers. And the
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study in a graphic on their site, they say that based on that study, when active phone with
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G apps, contacts, Google servers about 90 times an hour, and when inactive about 40 times an hour,
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as compared to an iPhone, which still does that, but a lot less actually, well, when active an
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iPhone contacts 55 times an hour Apple servers. So that's a good reason to actually get rid of
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most of the Google apps on your phone and be a bit more serene, I would say. I put this article
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in another article in the show notes because definitely worth the read. It might be even worth
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being a separate episode because it is so fundamental and many users, I've often compared
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this to a total, so many users just buy the phone as is and use it as is and then don't change anything
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and don't really want to think about how much of their privacy is going out of the internet
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without the knowing or without and wanting to know without Google telling them. So what does the
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e-project offer to get rid of this? They have announced a partnership with their phone
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for the Fairphone 3. That is great. That means you can buy Fairphones now from the eFoundation pre-installed
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with the D Google system, which has a replacement of many apps and just a little more about the EOS.
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It's open source, it's pro privacy and fully D Google or Google services have been removed
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and replaced with micro-g services. Basically micro-g is an open source implementation
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of Google apps without the spying parts that report to Google. Micro-g replaces Google's
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libraries with purely open source implementations without hooks to Google services, they say.
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They promise no data scanning or location tracking 24-7 until you install apps that are less privacy
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aware, I would say. But more on that later, you can check built-in track as in apps before installing,
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store or backup your data in your private space instead of Google Drive for cloud storage,
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you get E's own cloud, which is based on the open source next cloud. So who's behind it?
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The man behind the e-project is Gael Duval, who is a big name, I think, in the open source community.
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Back in the day, in the 90s, I think, in late 90s, early 2000s, he started Mandrake Linux,
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which was one of the first really user-friendly, easily installable Linux operating system versions
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that made it popular. He then was the head of an online cloud service, I think, called Ulteo.
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I'm not sure if it exists anymore. I'm adding an article here in the show notes from Gael Duval
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himself, who basically outlines the basics of what, when he started the project in 2017,
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back then it was a crowdfunding campaign by a Kickstarter and another platform, I think,
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and what his vision is, his article is called EOS redefines the mobile operating system paradigm
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for a more sustainable world. It's definitely worth a read, and it's a very interesting personality,
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no doubt. Now, you can buy a Fairphone 3 because we're focusing on the Fairphone 3 here,
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and the Fairphone 3 Plus with E pre-installed at their shop at the website. The Fairphone 3 Plus
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is a little more sophisticated version with a better camera module, I think, but otherwise it's
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identical to the original Fairphone from a year or a half ago, and every time it's about like
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30, 30 euros more than the stock Fairphone when you buy the version that has E pre-installed,
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but that's definitely worth the price, plus you get regular updates. Just another word,
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you have some more offers on the website, you can buy, for example, a slightly older Galaxy S8
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or S9 which are refurbished and pre-installed with the E system, but I've recently seen a review
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in a Joan magazine that there are a few quirks and it doesn't work quite as well, whereas I have to
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say on the Fairphone 3, it works just like pretty much flawless. I haven't had any trouble with
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whatsoever, I can definitely absolutely recommend it, and there's another phone to come that's a
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Gigasets GS290 that I don't know much about, I think it's Gigasets Siemens, German brand which
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doesn't mean that much anymore since all our phones are built and made in China these days.
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Now, there's also the option to install the EOS on your phone, be it if you already have a
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Fairphone, this works for the Fairphone 3 and the Fairphone 2 as well, I think. You can also
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install EOS on an existing phone and there are over 110 devices supported at the time of writing of
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this, from Aces to Google to OnePlus, I actually tried this with an older OnePlus X phone I had in
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my drawer and it worked just fine and it works really well and it's a great way to mostly
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for these phones that are three, four years old, the manufacturers don't update them anymore
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and you have an obsolete version of Android which is actually a security risk if you're permanently
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online. So installing EOS on that is a definite option. There's a list on the website with a
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device that's supported, each time you get the instructions of how to do it, security precautions,
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you should always make a backup of the data you have on that phone, on the SD card or somewhere else
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to be sure if anything goes wrong. So have a look at that, I'll include the list of the devices they
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support for now in the show notes. Now back to the Fairphone 3 as I said I had the stock version
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of the Fairphone 3 and actually spent about almost a year giving away like my address book and stuff
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to Google without actually, without actually wanting to do that but there's so many automatic backup
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and sync options in Android that are more and more difficult to turn off, the vocal assistants and all
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that. I was going to say crap which can be helpful but they're permanently listening and I don't
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trust them and I am ready to not have that speech to text version of a program
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not having that option of dictating text for text messages and everything in order to be a little
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more secure and not have someone listening to me permanently. For me it involved on the standard
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replacing the standard Android was backing up my data, I used ADB for that which is the Android
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debug bridge which is so you hook your up your telephone to a computer with Linux or Windows or I
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think you can even do it on Mac and then you access your phone from there and you can actually
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flash some new system on it, you can do complete backup and you have various other options.
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I shall do a different episode or a blog post on ADB later on because it's a bit more
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stuff to say about that that can fit in this episode. The EOS also has its own app store with ratings
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which sometimes it looks like no one has rated the apps yet but what you can definitely look at
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is the privacy evaluations by an entity called Exodus Privacy and you should try it for WhatsApp
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or Zoom for their apps, I don't recommend installing them on your phone and if you look into the
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app into the Exodus Privacy site or in the app store of the EOS you see why because they pretty much
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have a demand every permission there is almost to have access to your phone, to your contact list,
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to your camera, to your microphone. Now for some applications like Zoom or WhatsApp that is definitely
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at sometimes useful and sometimes necessary to access your microphone in a camera but once they
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have it what else do they do with it even when you're not using the app you don't know. Anyway back
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to the app store so this is the EOS app store they've written their own app store, it's a replacement
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for the Google Play store and it focuses mainly on open source apps that are privacy-friendly
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and definitely more the way to go than installing if you look for some texture speech or OCR which
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optically character recognition which has searched recently you find everything in the Google Play store
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and you have no clear idea whether these apps are sending you ads or reading all your address
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books and your phone status and all that or not. In the app store from EOS you can have a look at
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what permissions they actually ask for and how privacy secure they are. Now I also installed
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another app store called FDroid which is another excellent open source app store that focuses
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on open source software and which I've used for years which I'm a bit surprised by the way that
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they haven't used as a standard app store in EOS because it's right down there early and I did
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that because I use a use a FDroid in parallel because some apps you don't find in the EOS
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app store. In our days for work or for whatever reason or to stay in touch with your friends if
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you need an app then you can find on neither the app store or the the FDroid app store there's
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an app called Aurora store which allows you to install Google Apps without having a Google account
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that is an option. What other features are there a typical for the EOS there's the E launcher
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which reminds me a lot of the Samsung launcher and I didn't find it great but then in Android and
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with these app stores it's not difficult to replace it. I would recommend the simple launcher
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or one or two others which I will put in the show notes. What else is great about the EOS
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and I don't think lineage OS does that is you get regular over the air updates for the systems
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as you do with a normal Android at some point system modifies you there's a new version available
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and you can reinstall update the system. Now sometimes you should wait a couple of days
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or a week when you see a new update before actually fleshing it because a friend of mine told me
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he had some people have had problems because there were one or two bugs in in the new system update
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I have never experienced anything like that for me the system updates just worked fine and there's
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a reasonable selection of apps in in the EOS for example magic earth program called magic earth
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replaces google maps because google maps the downside is it is a very good app I have to say
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but the downside is google knows all the time where you are where you're going and how you're going
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and that is a bit worrying too so magic earth doesn't track you as far as we know
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and you got offline maps you don't have to have internet coverage to to be using the map you
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download them when you're in a Wi-Fi or when you're in a spot where you have a decent internet
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connection and then you use them there's a standard email client the excellent open camera app
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as the photo app there's a gallery there's contacts pretty much what we know from standard Android
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there's the liberal office viewer to view Microsoft office docs and stuff like that you can only
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view them you can edit them unfortunately in liberal office viewer but at least it's a fully
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open sourcing app there are SMS apps and a few more I recommend adding if you want to go
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open source applications and replace most of your commercial applications adding antenna pod
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for podcasts as an antenna and pod fair email which for me is the best email client on Android
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it has a lot of settings that might put off some uses if you were worried by too many options
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and you could use another client that's called simple email phenic which is the Firefox version
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open source Firefox version on the app store the app store signal messenger if you want a secure
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messenger certainly makes sense and there's a few others like simple calendar from the same guys who
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who do simple email which does just what it says and it's open source and it doesn't necessarily
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think your calendar with Google servers if you don't want that which I definitely don't and then
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there's an app called new pipe that I would recommend for watching YouTube without being tracked
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so are there any downsides to installing EOS or buying a phone with EOS well I can only
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talk about the install version of EOS on the fair phone but I think it's identical to what you're
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going to purchase I can't see any for me as I said everything worked just fine out of the box
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except for maybe a banking app I had to use which sometimes I have to restart to to get the
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confirmation if I'm doing online banking I'm usually doing this on my computer and this is an
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additional security step which you have to validate on your phone as I said sometimes it doesn't come
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up immediately then you have to to to end the app and restart it and then it always works
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that's not such a big trouble really to go through a few caveats recently the backup via ADB the
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Android debug bridge on the fair phone seems to be broken you can't do that way anymore but that
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is not the fault of the EOS that is something that has happened occurred in Android and between Android
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and ADB I'm not quite sure why one of the downsides is the recovery there's a recovery partition
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on every Android phone and back in the days there used to be the possibility to flash a new
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recovery that means rewrite that standard recovery partition and from there you have a program
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that's called for example TWRP that allows you to flash the main image of the main system or
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make backups of your data partitions and play them back but you can do it with a different
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method basically you start a program called TWRC on your computer via ADB and then it should be
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able to make a backup so that's basically concludes our tour of the EOS on the Fairphone 3
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in conclusion what would I say I think it's a brilliant project it's the most comprehensive yet
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for a real free Android alternative and I think it's perfect if you want to buy an already
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free Fairphone 3 pre-installed no hassle not having to worry about rewriting your phone or anything
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and it's also a way to combine a fair repairable sustainable phone with an operating system that is
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free where you're not being tracked the perfect match as far as I know one more mention
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the project is an open source project and it calls for donations it offers membership models
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where you can actually donate a certain sum per month or per year and you get several benefits
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from that um that's pretty much it
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okay that's all for this time on elixcast keep it open source and don't give them your data
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and these times of pandemic and Brexit don't pay the ferryman until it gets you to the other side
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take care bye
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you
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you've been listening to hecka public radio at hecka public radio dot org we are a community podcast
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