Your choice of cell phone OS

You, as people who know the difference between Linux and FreeBSD, what cell phone do you choose?

Is it an Apple because it's a BSD derivative? But then it's proprietary, meaning you can't quite do what you want to do with it.

Or is it Linux because it's at least open source and you can do what you want to do with it?

Or is it something else?
 
Actually Android with all google apps disabled. Use only F-Droid store and Aurora for some rare apps (like my bank).
Used AOSP with my previous phone but actual one do not offer root.
 
I use Android Pixel phones.

Although the practical reasons why I chose Android over IOS have been disappearing one after another over the years. I might pick an iPhone next cycle.

I am impressed by how resistant IOS is against rooting. Wouldn't have thought that is would be possible to keep people out to this degree.
 
I use GrapheneOs as recommended in this blog (sorry is in german)
Phone is a Pixel 9 Pro XL
 
You, as people who know the difference between Linux and FreeBSD, what cell phone do you choose?
I happen to use an Android phone, to be exact a Pixel. More on that below. It has nothing to do with the difference between Linux and FreeBSD.

Is it an Apple because it's a BSD derivative?
The notion that iOS is a BSD derivative is nearly completely incorrect. It does include some components from BSD, but the bulk of the OS is Mach, and the user space and application layer is completely separate.

Or is it Linux because it's at least open source ...
BSD as at least as much open source as Linux is. Android is mostly not open source; only a very limited version of it has been released.

... and you can do what you want to do with it?
I very much hope that people CAN'T do what they want with the OS on my phone. I trust Apple and Google much more to deliver a functioning and secure system than I trust random volunteer developers.

I use Android Pixel phones.
Same here. I actually started using the Google-built Nexus phone many years ago, long before I became associated with Google. Which is funny, because at the time it was nearly exclusively used by Google employees.

But: In the last 10 years, I've been slowly becoming more unhappy with Android, and with Pixel. The user-inimical attitude of the development teams for the software is clearly visible: it is a phone built by SWEs for SWEs, and stability, quality and usability are secondary. Of my two close family members, one swears by their iPhone, the other grudgingly continues to use an Android Pixel, and I expect that an iPhone for me will be found under the Christmas tree.

Better integration between my daily driver laptop and desktop (all MacOS) and the phone is not terribly important; there the only remaining real hassle is having two separate contact lists.

I am impressed by how resistant IOS is against rooting. Wouldn't have thought that is would be possible to keep people out to this degree.
That's the other highly important factor in choosing a portable device. By construction, it travels in public with me, and can relatively easily get lost or stolen. Given how vital the phone is for 2FA, that might be disastrous. That's why one also has to be careful in choosing a carrier (not just phone hardware/software provider) that is very responsive to requests for locking, and has good fraud/theft detection systems.
 
Android is mostly not open source
Woot woot? Android is open source. The vendor stuff isn't so much, but not Android itself.
I trust Apple and Google
Yeah, well, you should check out the source code in question. Oh, wait, oops, can't do that with Apple. And Google, well...can't just trust blindly a large corp.
an iPhone for me will be found under the Christmas tree.
You'll love the design and the UX design and the media capabilities. But it is a company with a bite out of apple as their logo (original sin and loss of innocence).
 
I use a OnePlus 6, LineageOS 22.2, and no Google apps currently; it works :D

I ran that kind of set-up with Gapps for years around Gingerbread/Jellybean era, but got tired of messing with my phone weekly with custom ROMs and went iOS. 6S+ was my first iPhone and it got the longest support from Apple for iOS I'm aware of for any phone, and iOS was clean! I needed custom ROMs on Android to get rid of insecure bloat, but iOS doesn't have any out-the-box. Even had unbranded native OS support for my email provider and its contact/calendar hookups (not like Android -> Gmail -> hook stuff up through Gmail OTB or 3rd-party DAVx).

My OP6 doesn't have LOS 23 builds (heard it was kernel 4 vs 6), but I'm thinking of replacing it with an iPhone. I barely use a cell outside of calls/texts/map/music so anything that sits on a dock without being annoying while being secure is probably fine. I have a 1st-gen SE I'd almost use now for basics if it had more than 16GB storage :p
 
If you don't have Google apps (including the market) on Android, what do you use for navigation?

OSMand? Sideloaded Google maps?
Yeah OsmAnd!

It seems a little trickier to pull up locations casually (seems more accurate to provide a street address for navigation vs trying to select something like the nearest Walmart), but actual navigation seems fine. I haven't looked too much into voice for nav yet but don't really like the out-the-box voice with eSpeak (robotic/scratchy; eSpeak has different voices but not sure if I should go through a long list and pick the best-sounding or just use a different/more modern voice app).
 
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