What he really means is “we want our 30% cut”
Linux & Azure cloud engineer. Sometimes a wolf, or a fuzzy dragon.
What he really means is “we want our 30% cut”
The quest already runs android, so in theory all the support is already there for Vulkan and OpenGL since it runs a regular-ish Snapdragon phone SoC.
Who is going to pay Dell, HP, Acer, etc to install Linux?
Just because MS can throw billions at these OEMs doesn’t make that “Linux’s burden”.
See also Dell & Lenovo sell laptops with Ubuntu.
So, exactly the same as windows.
Can you even order windows on a CD anymore?
FYI downloads are good for 30 days, not 3.
Why did google kill [product]?
Insert anything from the ever-growing google graveyard.
Sony Xperia works fine on Verizon and is even whitelisted for VoLTE.
Just FYI Sony Xperias have call screening as well as headphone jacks.
In total sales across all OEMs yes, but not individual devices.
There’s a LOT of medication apps already available, seems like a lot of work to create one from scratch, no?
This may be a really basic question, but the regular android clock app can set recurring alarms already right? What is the added value of using home assistant externally?
The bands are going to be region-specific. Some areas use some bands, others don’t. Just depends where you live and the nearby towers.
In the early days (2016 ish) Verizon had very limited LTE coverage, but now I haven’t had any issues traveling anymore with unsupported bands.
Everything works except wifi calling which Verizon only allows whitelisted IMEIs to do. VoLTE, visual voicemail, etc all work fine.
I’ve never tried mmWave 5G (no coverage where I live), but regular 5G works fine.
Can confirm here, am on Verizon and they 100% support fully-GSM devices assuming the LTE bands line up.
(I’ve had Oneplus 6T, 7T, and Sony Xperia 5 ii on Verizon, all of which are not CDMA compatible)
I’m not aware of any carriers in the US that still support CDMA. Verizon and Sprint were the big two, and neither supports CDMA anymore.
You’re probably thinking about homerf, which was the competitor to WiFi. I don’t think Bluetooth was ever marketed as an alternative to WiFi.