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Episode: 3483
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Title: HPR3483: Pinephone64 review
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3483/hpr3483.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 00:15:24
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---
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This is Haka Public Radio Episode 3483 for Wednesday 8th of December 2021, today's show
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is entitled, I'm Phone 64 Remew, it is the 50th show of Sigflub, and is about I'm
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in it's long, and carries a clean flag. The summer is Sigflub, Gotter Python, and wants to talk about it.
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Greetings, nerds. This is another edition of Haka Public Radio. My name is Sigflub,
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and in this riveting edition, I'm going to talk about the Pine Phone 64, which is a Linux phone that was gifted to me some while ago.
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I ordered it in September, and it came in November, so it took a while, but it's been fun using it and whatnot.
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The first thing that you realize, once you have it, once you get it, is that the back comes off to expose the battery and whatnot.
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Let me just take the back off here. There's a place to put your SIM card, there's a place to put your SD card, it's kind of in the same place,
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but then you have these dip switches in back, and those switches are enabled or disabled different aspects of the phone,
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like having the camera on or the wireless on and whatnot, which is a really convenient thing to be able to disable things
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hardware-wise instead of just software. So the very first thing you do is you take the battery out, because the battery has a piece of plastic
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separating the pins to the phone so the battery doesn't discharge while it's in stock or whatever, so yeah, the first thing you do is take the battery out,
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and take that little thing out, and pop back on like that, and it's very serviceable. You'll notice there's a lot of just sort of regular screws,
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like Phillips screws and whatnot, which is good. The boot, so you boot it, and it boots into this weird version of plasma over Menjaro,
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the distribution in it is Menjaro, and so it was me learning Pac-Man, right, which is the application manager, I guess, for Menjaro, which I really like Pac-Man.
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It's kind of cool, but it does come with, I'll tell you what it comes with in the box, it comes with a USB-C to USB-A cable, which is convenient,
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and then this little docky thing, not a docky thing, this whole thing that plugs in with the USB-C to your phone, has either nuts, HDMI, and two USB-A plugs,
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and that thing is how that's really useful, and so it comes with that, I can't believe it comes with that. This whole thing is $200.
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So it's not prohibitively expensive, which is good. So I put it up, I believe it's up plasma slash Menjaro, and then I connect to it by the ethernet using that adapter that I was talking about,
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and from there, and Pac-Man, and whatnot, and I didn't have a SIM card for this yet.
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So I was like, well, what can I get running on this? So I eventually got GDM running Ice Window Manager, which is pretty cool.
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Kind of been practical, it's not like a phone, it's more like a desktop, right?
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And so I searched around for things that are more phone things, and I found Ubuntu Touch, which is very, very pretty.
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I got a SIM card for it, and I downloaded Ubuntu Touch. I should comment in the boot sequence. It does have an SD card slot.
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What happens is, it first boots the phone, the memory phone, the phone, if there is no SD card, and if there's no external USB drive.
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If there's an external USB drive, it boots that first, and if that's not there, it boots the SD card, which is convenient, because you can have an SD card that doesn't exist.
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The SD card that doesn't overwrite what's on the phone, so things go terribly, terribly wrong. You can boot from the phone, from the phone memory.
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Yeah, so I got Ubuntu Touch, which is, again, very pretty, and Tupata doesn't work. It makes phones phone calls sometimes, and receives and sends text sometimes, which is very inconvenient for a phone.
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I switched back to Minjaro, because I have a SIM card now, so I was going to see how that handles the calls.
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And it's pretty well. It has a pretty well. It's very laggy, but the thing is when I call someone, when I call my other phone, the audio is awful.
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It's like unsigned audio, on a signed carrier. Like, it's just, and so that's pretty bad.
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And so, yeah, calling on its sucks. I found, eventually found Fosh, which I believe is Phone Show, over Mobian, this distribution of Debian, called Mobian, which is pretty good.
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So, I flashed that to a card, or DD'd it to a card, rather, to put in the phone. And the very first thing you want to do is run an APT upgrade to upgrade everything to its current state.
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And that takes so while. So, but you can call, like, once that was done, I can make calls that can receive calls. It was not flaky, like Ubuntu Touch, and whatnot.
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And some like, I don't like the default ringtones. There is no, there's no settings in the settings for a ringtone. So, I had to change that manually.
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I believe the location of the ringtone is user share.
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Something, something, user shares, it's, it's, it's, if you Google for it, you'll find it. It's just a director, which has Ogmorbis files for all the, the audio that's, that plugging in, plugging out, getting a call, getting a text, that kind of audio.
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So, you can just replace those with whatever you want.
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Overall, it's, it's pretty good. It charges really fast, but it also discharges really fast. So, I have to, I have to charge it every day.
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I don't really use it too much, but I have in my pocket. And by the end of the day, it's, it's completely drained. I have to charge it every, every night.
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And the thing with the wash over Mobyum is, let me open the phone here.
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If you go to settings, you go to display, displays, you can change the resolution or the scale rather of the phone from 100% to 200%.
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Excuse me, to 200%. The native resolution on the phone is 720 by 1440. So, the 200% is pretty good. And it's not, it's, it looks like it's scale, not scale. It looks like it's interpolated.
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What I believe is the, the changing of the resolution or the scale rather, changes the wavelength and overweld is axorg. So, everything looks nice.
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It doesn't look really pixelated or anything like that, which is, which is pretty good. And let's see here.
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What else to have to talk about this, this phone? Here, how about this? Call me. My code number is 952-564.
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And that's my, that's my Linux phone. So, thank you everyone for listening and take care. Bye-bye.
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This kindly provided by an honesthost.com, the internet archive and our sync.net. Unless otherwise stated, today's show is released under Creative Commons, Attribution, ShareLike, 3.0 license.
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