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BariumBlue | 6 months ago
But I think most folks interested enough in the concept are also rich enough to afford a phone and a laptop, and if you want a keyboard for your phone you might as well just use a laptop.
I still think conceptually it's the right direction for tech that our devices should be so flexible, but it's hard enough in practice that it's not generally done.
BriggyDwiggs42|6 months ago
codedokode|6 months ago
Small screen - cannot fit many controls or code. Small keys - cannot type fast. No touchpad - cannot do precise clicks, therefore cannot have many controls on the screen. Try imagining something like editing lots of small notes in a music editor with your fingers...
saidinesh5|6 months ago
Earlier this year, I was actually tried to replace my bulky 16" MBP with a Pixel 9 for work. Android's desktop mode just wasn't there.. Maybe I will try it again next year...
All I really need was a browser and a drop down terminal anyway.
persolb|6 months ago
Now that everything corporate is forced into the cloud, using a VM doesn’t carry all the extra downsides it used to.
and the bonus is that, when the workday is done, I have a machine I actually own and can use without breaking policy.
solardev|6 months ago
woodrowbarlow|6 months ago
rchaud|6 months ago
semi-extrinsic|6 months ago
unknown|6 months ago
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catlikesshrimp|6 months ago
https://www.newegg.com/p/0GA-03F8-00011
WorldPeas|6 months ago
jolmg|6 months ago
Laptops are bulky; phone and keyboard can fit in one's pocket. I also dislike the idea of carrying around a device that's not under my control. It's not about wanting my phone to behave like a laptop because I can't afford a laptop. It's about getting to have control over my phone the same way I have control over the laptop.
For example, when I try to screenshot and the OS says I'm not allowed to by the app, on my own device, I die a little inside. The very idea that an OS would obey an app over the user is really messed up. It's really wrong. It's like a guest saying their guest sets the rules in your own house.
Also the weird, arbitrary limitations. On Android you can split screen and show 2 apps vertically at limited, specific heights. On the Pinephone with i3/sway, you can divide the screen with as many windows as you want, in whatever orientations you want, with as many workspaces as you want. You can set the scaling to whatever you want, have interfaces be as big or small as you want. Limits aren't arbitrary.
> I still think conceptually it's the right direction for tech that our devices should be so flexible, but it's hard enough in practice that it's not generally done.
The difficulty isn't in getting desktop stuff to work on the phone. The difficulty is getting phone stuff to work on the phone.
unknown|6 months ago
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unknown|6 months ago
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