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by cookguyruffles
1844 days ago
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> that's easy For a tiny fraction of the population this might be true, for the rest of the population it definitely isn't true. I'm part of that tiny fraction, and pissed away hours trying to find a LineageOS (or similar) build for my current handset. I don't consider the task easy Even if it were easy, it means giving up access to a huge variety of apps that expect and test for official builds. Anything with DRM for example |
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Right, I was being unreasonably flippant. I was referring indirectly to the bigger problem of the monopoly the Tech Giants have over our telecommunications and the fact that in last 30 or so years that we've gone from maddening over regulation by governments to essentially no oversight whatsoever which allowed the carpetbaggers to squat on and takeover our phones (which once would have been deemed unlawful in many jurisdictions prior to deregulation due to the secrecy of communications laws—it still amazes me how this actually happened without a backlash from governments).
In my opinion, the whole matter is a damn bloody shambles.
...And you're right about LineageOS. When things go wrong finding the right (original) stock ROM can be hard enough let alone finding correct 'official' LineageOS for one's phone in the first instance. I've spent many hours looking for ROMS forked from the official LineageOS because my phone was slightly different (regional differences—modem etc.). This meant that the official version would work but not properly in every aspect. I agree, solving these issues can be very tiresome.
(My 'that's easy' comment comes from the fact that it's now easy for me to root a phone because I've done many in the last few years. It's only easy because I've learned from experience what to do and what phones to avoid. One thing I've definitely learned is that most of the internet advice on how to root phones is crap in that often a general method is stated for many phones and various model numbers are just dumped in to pad the site out—thus much of the advice is either wrong or insufficiently detailed (and often the English is essentially incomprehensible). Moreover, precious few people actually know the important intricacies of the Android OS (as they pertain to different OS versions, phones etc.) such as disk partitioning, why TWRP backup fails on some phones, etc. etc. Furthermore, even advice on the XDA site is often inadequate, or misleading or sometimes even wrong.)
:-(