So, I just learned about this the very, very hard way. After buying a second hand S10 and finding american ones can’t be unlocked, traveling 4 hours to buy another one after much research, much annoyances to unlock it (samsung requires you to be online, which I didn’t know) and testing multiple ROMs, I finally read this page more properly https://wiki.lineageos.org/devices/beyond1lte/ which says “known quirks: IMS”. I thought it was just something like dolby sound.

What it means is that it doesn’t suport VoLTE and most currently used phone systems. Samsung made their proprietary mess, unlike most other developers, which means it will probably never have an open source version.

And that applies to ALL modern samsung phones. I had samsung phone before with a custom OS, but didn’t realize because VoLTE wasn’t mandatory back then. Now it is here in Australia, and many countries. So if you ever plan to buy a samsung phone to degoogle it, know that it won’t make phone calls. SMS and mobile data also doesn’t work.

I don’t know how I missed this. It should be talked more often given how popular samsung is. There should always be a warning “YOU WON’T BE ABLE TO MAKE PHONE CALLS IN THE FUTURE IF YOU CONTINUE”.

S10 was the last decent phone ever made (for me). Not too big, SD card, headphone jack (one of the most important things for me), good camera, etc, etc… That’s why I was so persistent to find one to degoogle.

So I’m stuck with my amazingly shitty pixel 5 (and other ones are even worse for me). And considering the possibility of a life without smartphones at all, since this is a losing battle. Mainstream doesn’t care and evil companies have every incentive to kill freedom. It has been getting really bad and it will just get worse. But anyway… this post is not about this.

Be warned, if you care about freedom don’t ever buy samsung again. Not because they are evil (they are), but because you won’t be able to make phone calls on your “phone”.

  • d-RLY?@lemmy.ml
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    6 hours ago

    https://xdaforums.com/t/research-wip-possible-volte-enablement-for-samsung-devices-on-aosp-based-roms.4664947/

    https://github.com/jameskdev/android_samsung_imsservice

    Not sure if the above helps (as the links are from 2024), but might be useful for the S10 if their efforts are usable. I haven’t messed with custom ROMs on anything in a long time and I don’t know the processes for patching mentioned in the links. The last time was not with intent to actually have a working phone and just messing with my S6 just to try installing Lineage OS on something I had no plan of caring about.

    • guismo@aussie.zoneOP
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      55 minutes ago

      Yeah, I saw that. It has a lot of stuff I don’t know what it is. It’s certainly not for my kind of person where I need them to “hold my hands” like with the Lineage documentation, except for Lineage not making it obvious what IMS is, and that shows the level of mistake I can make and how much money and time I can waste where someone more knowledgeable would have avoided.

      Plus, I haven’t seen any success story coming from that, and that from people who knows what they are doing. It’s not worthy to spend god knows how many days or weeks it would take me to properly redo what he did and find out it would not work in my case, if I even get to that point.

      He mentions an apk he changed, so initially I thought it would be just that, an apk to install (magic). But I didn’t find it and I guess that’s just one small step in the massive stuff he did, decompiling things and what not.

      But thanks anyway. It did make me hopeful when I first saw it, but no big deal. When I thought it was just about my effort, I would spend whatever time it takes. But now that I finally understand that it’s samsung really not wanting me to use their phones (like in an abusive relationship, after years of proof of the abusive partner), then I made peace with the idea. Fuck samsung and fuck google. I’ll use pidgeons to communicate before I trust them again.

  • melsaskca@lemmy.ca
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    2 days ago

    These phones should have been a utility to begin with. Like the old land lines. Then there would have at least been a national set of standards developed for the gadget sellers to follow, instead of the wild west it’s become.

    • Xylight‮@lemdro.id
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      it’s been the time for years, I highly doubt that it will ever happen. it’s been a lot of friction to get desktop users to switch, it’s gonna be 5x more difficult, considering mobile users are less tech-savvy and typically do things on their phone (rather than a computer which most people can get away with just a web browser).

      • Dave@lemmy.nz
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        2 days ago

        Surely all or most of those linux PC users also have phones, and people already using linux should be easier to convert?

        The thing that trips me up is that Android forks support most Android phones out of the box (with the obvious exception of GrapheneOS which is a deliberate choice), while Linux Phone OSs each have very short lists of supported models.

        I have four different phone models available to me, from Pixel to Samsung to OnePlus. None are supported by any Linux Phone OS I’ve seen.

        • Xylight‮@lemdro.id
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          2 days ago

          I think the fact that there’s so few Linux desktop users that use Linux phones is a testament to how much friction there is.

          most Linux OS don’t support mainstream phones I think for a few reasons:

          • these phones were built for the vendor’s specific flavor of android, and thus already have the drivers for the proprietary hardware and everything.
          • custom android ROMs are able to reuse proprietary firmware blobs from the manufacturer’s software and it will work fine with Android. On Linux however, you can’t just plug these blobs in, you’d have to rewrite everything to work with plain Linux.
          • Klajan@lemmy.zip
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            2 days ago

            Let’s not forget the biggest issue, mandatory Apps that don’t work.

            I know of a few Banks that require you to use their app for online banking or as 2fa for online banking. Some of these don’t even work while the bootloader is unlocked

  • 100_kg_90_de_belin@feddit.it
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    2 days ago

    Samsung has always been hostile af

    An One UI 8.5 locks down the bootloader

    I’ve always loved Notes and Ultra flagships, but I don’t want to rep such a lousy OEM

    • guismo@aussie.zoneOP
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      They were always hostile, but it was possible. And once you finish the long and stressful fight with samsung for the control of your phone, you are left with a great phone in your hands. Depending who you ask, it was worthy.

      But now they finally made it impossible. They always wanted to do this, and finally succeeded. They “won” the battle.

    • THB@lemmy.world
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      3 days ago

      How’s the phone performing so far and what was your previous phone? I’ve got my eye on Fairphone whenever it’s finally time to upgrade (hopefully not for another few years)

      • ScoffingLizard@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        2 days ago

        S25 Ultra was my last. The Samsung is a nicer phone, but my battery has never died. I got a notice recently in the evening that it was under 20%. Before I went to bed at about 10pm I checked it and it was still 19%. Battery is great without all that bloatware.

        It’s also a good peace of mind. All those trackers are not on my phone. How much did the mediocre hardware bother me? Not really at all. I love it.

  • rumba@lemmy.zip
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    2 days ago

    I had a Note 3, Note 4, S9+, S21u, S24u, My wife/kids have Note 3, s9+, s23u, A series and a tab 4.

    I’ve had Samsung 360 cameras, tv’s, galaxy watches

    It stops here.

    The biggest thing i’m going to miss is a decent camera. I don’t feel like carying around a 5x camera everywhere I go and most of the phones i’m looking at are kinda crap for cameras

    • guismo@aussie.zoneOP
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      2 days ago

      Yup. I bought a camera after google play killing my s21 ultra.

      Paid 800 dollars for the camera. It’s inferior to the old s21 in almost every way, and I could get one for 300 dollars. Inferior as in a camera, not even considering how the s21 is great as a gaming phone, computer, etc. Plus the camera is fragile and bigger, so I never carry it, so it’s never there when I need to capture something nice.

      It’s weird how hardware wise we reached such an amazing point, but the software has enshitified to levels I would never even imagine.

      We have to choose between being a slave of samsung/google or let go of amazing hardware. But they can only afford to make such amazing stuff precisely because of their evil practices. So it will get worse. Hardware will become more amazing, the more evil these companies get.

      • rumba@lemmy.zip
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        2 days ago

        I used to have a Pentax that would fit in an Altoids tin. Absolutely inferior to anything I have now, but I kinda miss it now.

      • JasonDJ@lemmy.zip
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        2 days ago

        My brother in christ, if you cannot control the software, then you never truly had the hardware in the first place.

        • guismo@aussie.zoneOP
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          Yes and no. If you never connect the ultra series to the internet, you still have some great cameras and a great (offline) video game, and even a great gps and other things.

          You don’t have a “phone” as samsung sold. But phones are nowadays much more than that.

          Like the old film cameras. It didn’t matter how the company wanted you to use them. But yeah, it’s still something we should fight against. In may case for instance I need connection, so for the main purpose, being a phone, I don’t have the hardware because I don’t control the software.

    • Jiral@lemmy.org
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      A better link for Jolla is probably their store: https://commerce.jolla.com/

      I have pre-ordered the Jolla Phone and am hoping everything is working out (won’t see it for another 4 months at the very least I suppose). I am very excited getting to know a completely new mobile OS to me and the actual successor of Nokia’s Meego. Like with any alternative system, and to some extend also with degoogled Androids it is advisable to inform oneself first before jumping ship.

  • ericwdhs@discuss.online
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    3 days ago

    Yeah, technology enshittification as a whole has definitely picked up the last few years, and I find myself compromising more and more as the field of reasonable options gets narrower.

    Like you, I used to only go for phones with SD card and headphone jack support. Now, I’m on a (new but not bought from Google) Pixel 9 Fold with GrapheneOS using a DAC adapter to still have wired audio and a more deliberate storage management system to compensate for not having SD cards. (Unlike you, I need a big screen for spreadsheets and such.)

    I purposely bought the newest phone I could within my budget, because I’m planning for Android to be completely unviable the next time I need to upgrade, and I want to give Linux phones as much time to mature as possible before I inevitably migrate.

    It seems offline tech is going to be the last bastion of safety sooner rather than later, so I’m in various stages of migrating my digital life offline. Linux over Windows. Keepass, LibreOffice, Obsidian, etc. + Syncthing over cloud options. Keeping off-site backups with friends and family instead of in the cloud. Keeping local DRM-free media. It’s time-consuming but rewarding. I should have done it all way sooner.

    • guismo@aussie.zoneOP
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      I have been on the offline open source route for many years. I don’t even see it as time consuming. It’s so much better than relying on cloud services that it pays off. I lost count of the situations where needing cloud would have been bad. But maybe I trained myself that way, because I never liked the “cloud” idea, my data out of my control.

      But the hardware to run that and the options to do that will become more and more impossible. At least on mobiles.

      There will come a day when Syncthing won’t work anymore on android, because of “security” (the terrorists could send files to your phone and kill children!).

      • ericwdhs@discuss.online
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        2 days ago

        Funnily enough, I’ve thought of the cloud as “someone else’s computer” from the beginning and shun using it more than everyone else I know, but I was just getting into the space when Gmail and Chrome were the hot new things, each gradual step into the ecosystem didn’t feel like a big concession, and I was too young to know to question the convenience.

        In case it wasn’t clear, reversing those two decades of inertia and tech debt is what I was referring to as the time-consuming bit. So far, what I’ve finished switching over is actually quite nice to use.

        And yes, I dread the day even the fallback options start getting killed off. It’s always one bad law away.

        • guismo@aussie.zoneOP
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          2 days ago

          Kind of similar. Yeah, replacing everything took me a long time too and a lot of research. And I was one of the first gmail users, had dropbox account when no one knew what it was, etc etc, so I was pretty stuck. I was all google when I believed their “do not be evil” lies.

          But I started the move very early too, after Snowden leaked the PRISM crimes. Back then I thought everyone would do the same and try to rely less on the cloud or, at least, stop using american companies. And oh boy, was I wrong…

          If I had waited I imagine it would be a lot more difficult. I always kept my mp3, movies, porn, etc offline, but it was still easy to rely on gmail, youtube, google maps etc.

          Anyway, good on you. You will find it surprising that you ever thought it was difficult after you’ve been detoxed for a while and end up being exposed to google products again. It will make you wonder how anyone actually put up with it.

          • ericwdhs@discuss.online
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            2 days ago

            Thanks! I assume you’re in Australia from your instance. I’m in the US. On top of using American companies just being a given here, let’s just say the coverage of Snowden in 2013 was inadequate in my circles at the time.

            • guismo@aussie.zoneOP
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              1 day ago

              Did they even mention it back then in your country?

              If they did, I imagine the news were more in the line of “a traitor just put our whole country in the hands of terrorists, what can YOU do to keep your children safe?”

              Here in the united states of the south we get a lot of that. “terrorists in the streets protesting against the poor israelis killing people. is YOUR child safe?”. It must be even worse for you.

              Although even the rest of the world didn’t comment much on that. I was in Brazil back then, and there was really not much on the media, even though there were emails of the president of the time shown to be spied by the US. I thought the whole world would go crazy and quickly everyone forgot.

              Hell, not even an orange menace waging war against enemies and allies all the time is enough for people to do something…

              • ericwdhs@discuss.online
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                18 hours ago

                It was mentioned. I remember a “Patriot or Traitor?” headline, so the news was at least charitable enough to throw the first option in. Honestly, it’s probably more that I just wasn’t following the news as much then.

  • wltr@discuss.tchncs.de
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    3 days ago

    Thanks for letting us know. I was thinking of getting a used Galaxy S9 or S10 for a degoogled Lineage OS phone. Now, it looks like the Pixels are the only modern phones that are compatible with this. That’s a pretty sad state of affairs, I’d say.

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    3 days ago

    I am seriously hoping to be able to ditch Android entirely for something like post-market OS, Linux, in the future. And we’ll be taking a look at what phones are supported when buying my next one.

    • guismo@aussie.zoneOP
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      You are lucky. Here not even 3G or 4G works anymore. If it doesn’t have VoLTE it doesn’t work. It started this year.

  • john_t@piefed.ee
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    New hosts/adblock/pihole/adguard filter/rule:

    #GOOGLE===============================  
    0.0.0.0 google.com  
    0.0.0.0 googleusercontent.com  
    0.0.0.0 googleapis.com  
    0.0.0.0 gstatic.com  
    0.0.0.0 android.com  
    0.0.0.0 google-analytics.com  
    0.0.0.0 googlehosted.com  
    0.0.0.0 googletagmanager.com  
    0.0.0.0 googleadservices.com  
    0.0.0.0 pki.goog  
    

    Phone now degoogled.

    • guismo@aussie.zoneOP
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      That won’t get rid of the google/samsung crap constantly running on your phone and trying to phone home.

      I tried on the american s10. Most unnecessary google and samsung stuff is disabled or blocked. The phone hangs on almost everything. Every time you try to open something, do something, it hangs. It becomes unusable. Spyware is an integral part of modern mainstream systems.

    • inari@piefed.zip
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      3 days ago

      Do you use this yourself? I wonder how much stuff breaks if you use it.

      Also YouTube URLs are conspicuously missing…

      • Krauerking@lemy.lol
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        3 days ago

        As someone that has a similar list but not exactly that… A lot. A lot of stuff breaks but! You don’t see ads in shitty mobile games anymore.

        Another thing you find is how many links go through a google analytics or seems to be sponsored

      • john_t@piefed.ee
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        3 days ago

        Indeed it breaks everything. I’ve only it tried it for a couple of days. It’s just an extreme example of degoogling. But if you wish to really degoogle, this would be a small part of the effort. The list is mostly what I picked up of google apps calling home in the background in my phone. I didn’t include youtube because I don’t have the youtube app installed on my phone, so it’s not calling home.

      • ozymandias117@lemmy.world
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        3 days ago

        Not OP, but for me, yeah

        Almost all apps come from F-Droid, with two apps from Aurora that I needed for work

        Why would I sign into a proprietary network for a computing device?