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The PinePhone is a smartphone developed by Hong Kong–based computer manufacturer Pine64, designed to provide users with full control over the device. This is achieved through the utilization of mainline Linux-based mobile operating systems, assembly of the phone using screws, and facilitating simplified disassembly for repairs and upgrades. [ 5 ]
Arch Linux ARM based Manjaro is focusing on PinePhone hardware. [14] WebOS (LG Electronics) was initially available only under a proprietary license but the source code was later released under a free permissive license by HP. Open WebOS will not run on all WebOS devices. LuneOS is Halium based fork of WebOS. [15]
As of 2019, Pine64 is working on a Linux smartphone, PinePhone, using a quad-core ARM Cortex-A53 64-Bit System on a chip (SoC). The aim is for the phone to be compatible with any mainline Linux kernel and to "support existing and well established Linux-on-Phone projects", as a community-developed smartphone. [ 30 ]
Efforts to replace it are in beta, but may never be legal to ship, [citation needed] same as original PinePhone. [1] open-source boot software [2] proprietary schematics published [6] User-replaceable battery, 5-year production run. Phillips-head screws. [6] I2C pogo pins, back mods can be added. Cannot be upgraded beyond USB 2.0. Bootable from ...
The PinePhone Pro is a smartphone developed by Hong Kong–based computer manufacturer Pine64. The phone is the successor to the PinePhone released in 2020. The default operating system is Sailfish OS [ 2 ] (previously Manjaro ARM , with Plasma Mobile as the user interface ). [ 3 ]
An artist's rendering of the Librem 5 phone. The Librem 5 features an i.MX 8M Quad Core processor with an integrated GPU which supports OpenGL 3.0, OpenGL ES 3.1, Vulkan 1.0 and OpenCL 1.2 with default drivers; [27] however, since the driver used is the open source Etnaviv driver, it currently only supports OpenGL 2.1 and OpenGL ES 2.0.
From January 2008 to December 2012, if you bought shares in companies when Alain J.P. Belda joined the board, and sold them when he left, you would have a -53.5 percent return on your investment, compared to a -2.8 percent return from the S&P 500.
In May 2020, Pine64 announced the PineTab tablet at a starting price of $99, [4] alongside an optional detachable backlit keyboard. [ 5 ] [ 4 ] Pre-orders began shortly after the announcement. [ 6 ] Devices were first shipped to developers and early adopters, though shipping was delayed until September 2020 for consumers. [ 7 ]