Enlarge / This is a Pinephone with the back removed—note the replaceable battery and the privacy kill-switches for modem, Wi-Fi, mic, and cameras.Pine64

Yesterday, Pine64 announced the end of the PinePhone UBPorts Community Edition campaign—but more importantly, the company declared the beginning of the postmarketOS Community Edition campaign. The base version of the new run of PinePhones shares the same $149 price point and the same basic technical specs as the original developer edition—but there's also a new, upgraded "Convergence Package" available at $199.

Before anyone gets too excited, we need to make something clear—these devices, while attractively priced, should be considered beta gadgets for tinkerers to experiment and play with. They are not yet fully functional phones, and in their current development status, they are unlikely to be anyone's full-time daily-usage smartphone. The apps don't all work yet—including making calls—and battery life still leaves a lot to be desired.

Convergence package

In June, postmarketOS' Martijn Braam demonstrated the new PinePhone dock.

The Convergence Package ups the specs of the PinePhone from 2GiB RAM to 3GIB while the internal storage jumps from 16GB eMMC to 32GB eMMC. The package also adds a USB-C dock for the phone; the dock can charge the phone as well as offering two USB2 ports, a 100Mbps Ethernet port, and an HDMI port.

There's nothing slick about this dock—it connects to the phone by way of a simple cable rather than a docking connector, its Ethernet port is old-school 100Mbps, and its USB type A ports are USB2 only. With that said, it's an interesting step towards true convergence, allowing a mostly portable pocket-sized device to transform itself into a reasonable approximation of a "desktop" with a single connection.

The functionality of the external monitor looks sharply limited in postmarketOS developer Martijn Braam's demonstration video from June—but everything's still under very heavy development. We expect to have our hands on a PinePhone with a Convergence Package sometime in August, and we'll update you with the current state of affairs then.

PinePhone operating systems

If you're not completely up to speed on alternative phone operating systems, UBPorts maintains and continues to develop the Ubuntu Touch operating system that Canonical abandoned in 2017. The original developer edition of the PinePhone that Ron reviewed in January required users to flash their own operating system, but the later Community Edition featured preflashed Ubuntu Touch, and all profits from sales of that CE were donated to UBPorts foundation to help fund ongoing maintenance and development.

The new postmarketOS Community Edition similarly comes preflashed with postmarketOS, a beta smartphone operating system which aims to look and feel like "a real Linux distribution." Another important claim to fame for postmarketOS is its modular design—most smartphone operating systems rely on separate monolithic images for each separate device they can run on, but postmarketOS instead uses a universal operating system image, with (ideally) a single device package which covers the specific hardware needs of a given phone.

If neither Ubuntu Touch nor postmarketOS float your boat, you might want to keep an eye on GloDroid—a vanilla AOSP (Android Open Source Project) operating system which targets Allwinner-based devices like the PinePhone, PineTab, and Raspberry Pi 4. For now, this, too, is a beta project—although pre-built system images for several devicesRead More – Source

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