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by jeroenhd
1884 days ago
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I was always intrigued by the concept, but never really wanted to buy such a device for one simple reason: performance. Mobile phones, especially back then, don't exactly have great performance characteristics for desktop use. The Atrix has a 1GHz processor and 1GB of RAM, those were low specs for a cheap laptop even back then. The same problem still exists on the PinePhone and Ubuntu's attempt, and Microsoft's failed attempt to use Qualcom chips as mobile workstations have so far all failed. When it comes to powerful yet power-efficient chips, Apple simply has no real competitor. Sure, AMD and Intel can outperform the M1, in some cases even at similar power draws, but Apple has mastered the base and idle power draw and caching that give their devices such a great battery life during simple, normal use. With the processor unification, Apple may be able to provide a decent experience if they can think of a system that won't kill the battery (external battery the phone switches to?) and can cool the processor sufficiently while it's in a dock. Apple seems more than capable of solving those problems, if they'd want to. I'm 100% sure I won't buy an iPhoneBook because I strongly dislike Apple's operating systems and the way the company itself operates, but if Apple fans will buy the product, competitors should soon follow with a device I'd find acceptable to use. Maybe, by then, the Linux smartphone ecosystem has grown to the point where it's actually usable for day-to-day operations (unlike the Librem/Pinephone/pmOS in their current state). |
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Why not just power the device off the lightning (hopefully Usb-c soon) cable used for docking? That's how all docks work now. When you're charging a single cell (most phones) you draw power from the charger, with the battery helping out during bursts if needed. No need to invent anything.