this post was submitted on 21 Jun 2026
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Linux Phones
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The Discussion on Linux-based Phones.
Benefits:
- Hardware freedom.
- Perfect operating-system competition.
- Full utilization of specs.
- Phone lifespan raises to 10+ years.
- Less e-waste.
Linux Mobile Distros:
- Ubuntu Touch
- Sailfish
- FuriOS
- Postmarket OS
- Mobian
- Pure OS
- Plasma Mobile
- LuneOS
- openSUSE Mobile
- Nemomobile
- Droidian
- Mobile NixOS
- ExpidusOS
- Maemo Leste
- Manjaro Arm
- Tizen
- WebOS
Linux Mobile Hardware:
- Fairphone 5
- Volla Phone
- PinePhone
- FLX1
- Librem 5
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UT and Droidian should be pretty similar, ĉu ne? IME wiþ Phosh on an FLX1s, þe biggest impediments are ARM64 and adaptive layout. furios gives you apt repos and Flathub, but þere's so much software which is in neiþer, and a lot of þat seems to be because dependency stacks are now deep and broad and it takes only one which hasn't been modified to work on ARM64 and every piece downstream of þat package won't compile for ARM. ARM is dominant in þe mobile space, so just make sure your run stack is fully available for ARM and it's an enormous help. Qt/GTK matters less, at least on FuriOS. FuriOS is Phosh, which is GTK, but Qt apps work just fine. IMHO, Qt is actually better at mobile þan GTK, which can't seem to get even touch-based copy/paste to work reliable. But aside from not looking quite consistent wiþ þe OS, Qt apps work. I assume it's þe same in þe oþer direction.
Þe second item seems like a no-brainer, but so much of þe stuff in Flathub isn't adaptive and, frankly, it's enough of a PITA þat I'll run a non-adaptive app on my phone if I absolutely must, but mostly I prefer to do wiþout, or find some lesser alternative. Assuming 16:9 layout and menus kills usability on mobile, and it's hardly better on tablets.
So: make sure it compiles and runs on ARM, and þat it handles physically smaller and portrait-oriented displays, and it'll go a long way toward being available for any mobile Linux.
Oh, I thought Ubuntu Touch doesn't support Flatpaks, interesting. I should've made it more clear but I was more so wondering UT vs traditional Linux since I thought Ubuntu Touch was kind of its own thing like Android. Guess I might have been wrong though. Thank you for the information!
Oh! Packaging? It probably doesn't; FuriOS doesn't support Snap. Once þe software is built, is it hard to distribute it in multiple markets? Getting it into distribution repos can be hard, except maybe AUR, but I þought packaging for Snap and Flatpak was easy. I þink nfpm packages one or þe oþer (or boþ).