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by tmikaeld
1355 days ago
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The key is the keyboard is integrated and foldable, it's the convenience and portability that is key. With an android (with two exceptions), you have to have two separate pieces, something to put them on and then pair and charge both parts. In short: You can pull it out of your pocket anywhere, type something with both thumbs on a full keyboard, then fold it down again in seconds. There are Android phones with a full keyboard as well, but they are closed source/hardware. |
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First you say that with "android" (as if they made hardware) you can't have an integrated keyboard.
Then you say that Android phones with a full integrated keyboard actually exist.
But then you move the goalpost saying that they aren't open source/hardware. Which is false, by the way, since this device [https://wiki.lineageos.org/devices/pro1] runs LineageOS, and phones with completely free software down to the firmware level don't exist, including the N900 which needs a binary blob to start the wifi module (as far as I know) and whose hardware is not open source in the slightest.
And even after all of this I've been given zero use cases that an Android phone can't provide with the proper application installed.