We’ll be traveling for between two and three weeks. This will be my longest trip with only a small ish backpack, but I have done a week before.
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I’m hoping to get by on around three to four days of clothes, but it would be fun to try no-bag sometime.
I had no idea about the aquaplexes, that’s so nice. I’ll add wet wipes to my list. That seems like a very good comfort item with many possible use cases.
Thank you also for reminding me about ticket validation in Italy. I need to make a list of dos and don’ts for each country.
OH, bikes! That would be so much fun.
Thank you for all of your ideas! I will remember the ziploc bag. I’ve usually only done that for planes, but it is undoubtedly practical and less space consuming for other kinds of trips too.
Luckily we already share most toiletries, but I’ll suggest making a shared list and remove any duplicates.
While your model may not be supported now, it may be in the future. I would join some of the communities that make custom roms and operating systems and lurk a bit to see if someone is doing a port to your phone and are near the stage where they need testers.
Look at deGoogle guides to see what you can do to make your phone safer in the mean time. Every little bit can help you be more secure.
The Waydroid container runs Lineage, a degoogled android based os. Many apps require Google play services to run, or they do other checks that fail in that environement. Most stuff from F-droid will run.
Signal does not have a native UT app at the moment, but some use Matrix bridges to send and receive messages. Others run it in Waydroid, or do experiments with the cli version. The first works very well, but you need to find/make a bridge host that you trust.
Oh, it feels very nice to use! Most of my troubles these days stem from me experimenting and running the devel version of the os. I can go days between serious issues, and the issues that do appear are never deal breakers as they don’t tend to affect basic phone functionality. It feels great and it is way too much fun.
uKale@lemmy.worldto
Linux Phones@lemmy.ml•What actively maintained main daily driver options do we even have nowadays?
1·4 months agoLook into Ubuntu Touch on one of the newer supported phones. It uses Halium though, so I’m not sure it fits your definition of True Linux.
It checks all of your bullet points, but make sure the model you are considering actually has VoLTE enabled for the port.
Have a look at my other answer in this thread! If you are a tinkerer with a bit of patience, UT could be a good OS for you.
I would love to try Mobian and PostmarketOS too, I bet that there are some really good ports out there.
Why I love it:
- I love the UI. Quick, intuitive and good looking.
- Basic functions are good. The phone works well as a phone, with calls (including VoLTE for a number of newer models now), SMS, MMS, wifi hotspot ++ working
- The amount of native apps is pleasing to me. Of course, you won’t get the usual proprietary big tech developed apps, but other basics are there.
- The flexibility is awesome. You can install apps from the Open Store built especially for UT, Snaps (not all of which are meant for small screens with touch input, but you get to try it and decide for yourself if you can make it work), nix packages, installing stuff in libertine containers, AND Android apps in a Waydroid container.
- The community is extremely helpful and diverse.
- The two previous points, community + flexibility, helps whenever you miss one of the larger apps. Miss Telegram? Meet the native app Teleports! Miss Signal? The community can give you several options. WhatsApp? Of course some generous soul has made a UT adapted web app that you can use in stead.
- I finally feel free. I own my device, and the software I run on it doesn’t feel invading or dishonest.
What is sometimes difficult:
- I need to be honest about the browser situation. The default browser has a nice UI, but it is very outdated. There is a lot of improvements going on behind the scenes, but the new version is not ready for launch yet. The alternatives are UT adapted versions of Librewolf and Firefox, but they are both in an alpha state.
- VoLTE only works for some of the supported phones, and it is still considered experimental.
- Banking and ID verification apps have almost no UT native solutions, and running them in Waydroid is very hit and miss.
- General stability. There are more bugs and crashes here than in Android/iOS.
I daily drive Ubuntu touch and like it very much, but I can see how that would be hard in certain situations. Keep doing some research, and pick one that seems to fit your needs to try it out! Only you can decide if it is good enough for your particular circumstances.
uKale@lemmy.worldto
Linux@programming.dev•What's your "I switched to Linux because..." Story?
7·4 months agoI grew up with my brother throwing used computer parts on my bed whenever he upgraded something, in case I wanted to reuse them. He also gave me a copy of Windows 98, and later XP that I reused every time I did a major hw upgrade. But one day the XP CD-rom was just too old, but I was too young to start working and had no money, and so Linux came into my life.
It will affect most of the world in a few years. Lurk around in the forum, and you’ll find some posts about which phones and carriers work well in the US. (I assume that’s where Chicagoland is?) VoLTE is enabled on an experimental basis for several phones running UT now.
uKale@lemmy.worldto
Linux Phones@lemmy.ca•Ubuntu Touch Mobile Linux OS Is Now Finally Based on Ubuntu 24.04 LTSEnglish
4·4 months agoI’m no porting expert, but to me there seems like they pick mostly well documented phones that already has a history of being worked on by other tinkerers like Lineage, Mobian, PMOS. They also tend to be cheap ish to buy used or they come from a company with a good history with open bootloaders, like the Fairphones.
uKale@lemmy.worldto
Linux Phones@lemmy.ca•Ubuntu Touch Mobile Linux OS Is Now Finally Based on Ubuntu 24.04 LTSEnglish
10·4 months agoThe porting of devices is done by volunteers owning the devices and not being afraid to brick them, which leads to a pretty weird list of supported devices.
I wouldn’t do Ubuntu Touch on the P3a if you’re in an area where VoLTE is required. It seems this model is too old to get the treatment it needs.
Ubuntu Touch doesn’t officially support it yet, but it is working reliably for several phones now.
I daily drive Ubuntu Touch on a Fairphone 5. It’s not without quirks, but I like the experience. Many practical and nice native apps, Android app support through Waydroid, banking and things that would require Google Play verification I solve through the browser. Fairly good battery life, VoLTE is solved for the FP5 and some other models (which has been an issue with many Linux phones) and the community is very active solving issues and helping each other day and night.
I’m very open to this option, if I can find a supplier near me.




I guess I’ll be traveling with a baggie of white stuff, then! I’ll bring some from home, as well as a line for air drying. Thank you for the link, I had completely forgotten about inflatable hangers.