EnsignWashout

joined 2 years ago

Linux Mint is so nice.

I would turn off "Secure Boot" in BIOS before doing the upgrade.

It officially works, but can throw in unnecessary challenges - and Mom probably isn't traveling with national secrets next week anyway.

I played in that party in second edition!

ResultWe did not survive.

[–] EnsignWashout@startrek.website 1 points 1 month ago (1 children)

The phone shows a pin entry, a reboot, and then a welcome screen just like a factory reset has been done. Right?

It does, but it's pretty obvious that something unusual has happened.

The phone boots into Google's "Someone is fucking around" boot screen and waits there for a response.

[–] EnsignWashout@startrek.website 21 points 1 month ago (1 children)

This one really shows Larson's willingness to put the work in to convey a silly joke with only the art details.

That's a pretty good description of what GrapheneOS does with the sandboxed Google services.

I have found that the only apps that don't work well with Samdboxed Google services are ones that work hard to invasively probe their runtime environment.

Thwy usually fall into these three categories:

  • Bank apps that do it "for my safety". Nevermind that a website version exists for attackers to target without the same (dubious, invasive) "protections".
  • Streaming apps that do it "because this paid subscriber might be some kind of dark web pirate and we need to protect our content from being uploaded to the dark web one more time."
  • Apps whose developers are shitty at writing code for memory management. But GrapheneOS has good options to allow these to run, anyway.

That looks like exactly what I'm looking for in my next phone. Thanks.

Do you have access to credit unions?

[–] EnsignWashout@startrek.website 3 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) (2 children)

The GrapheneOs team is quite particular about hardware.

I would gladly purchase a phone that came preloaded with LineageOS.

"Better than we have now." often wins over waiting for perfection.

CoMaps is quite nice.

There are also still companies selling navigation devices that mount in a car windshield, assuming the car doesn't already have one built in.

Pro tip - those navigation devices also often have an accident camera that records if it feels an impact - which is a good idea anyway.

[–] EnsignWashout@startrek.website 7 points 1 month ago (2 children)

GMS apps work fine. The only ones that don't work are ones that act invasively enough to notice they are sandboxed and disable themselves.

Mostly bank apps. Which is irritating, since they all have mobile friendly websites that work fine without needing to know my location and everything else about my phone.

[–] EnsignWashout@startrek.website 10 points 1 month ago (1 children)

Google has made it extremely hard to degoogle.

Just remember that there are no nice reasons why they are working this hard to keep your phone captive.

We can argue about how bad it will get, but there's only worse things coming from this effort.

[–] EnsignWashout@startrek.website 2 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago)

He was quite quick to grab one (a gun) at the end of Dalek, but now he's more critical of them.

For fans of the original series, that moment beautifully spoiled most of the time war plotline before the official reveal. The Doctor has always hated guns, but seeing a living Dalek broke him.

Spoilers for The War Doctor and "Genesis of the Daleks" plots.

The Doctor's greatest sin is starting the time war, (Genesis of the Daleks) when the Gallifreyan's sent him to prevent the Dalek's ever being created. His second greatest sin is failing to get the job done.

We have known since those two 4th Doctor plot points that the Daleks were probably destined to destroy Galifrey. (The War Doctor plotline)

But the doctor picking up a gun so quickly upon seeing a living Dalek - pretty solidly confirmed it had already happened.

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