still deciding to fully degoogle with GOS or muddling through with what I have (proprietary, data grabbing and bloated).

To understand the question, compare with my main hardware with debian on it: a regular notebook I bought in 2016 and I’ve used heavily for all kinds of stuff: working, writing papers, downloading and playing media including AV1, editing audio, torrenting…

One of the best investments I ever made, considering what I paid and how prices nowadays are. Debian offers regular upgrades and I don’t have to check if my hardware is going to support the software on a level comparable with android devices (GOS only runs on pixels, other open-source, privacy focused Android operating systems have similar hardware restrictions).

I want this kind of ROI for the device I buy and the software I use, but I don’t know if that’s possible:

GOS drops support for older pixels but I don’t know how many years any particular device is supported by GOS: 3 years? not enough. There’s no way I’m buying a new pixel every 3 years. I’d even consider 6 years restrictive.

  • OhVenus_Baby@lemmy.ml
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    5 months ago

    Just an FYI for those who think like this. I DID TOO.

    Your cellular chip and network carrier will often phase out your frequency bands 2 to 3 years before the 7 year mark. Thus your service (internet/data) will not work long before your device loses updates. You will get fed up with your device and buy another pixel roughly every 3 generations to keep with reliable internet connectivity.

    • Feitan@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      Not a pixel owner but I have a one plus 7 (so 6 years old phone) and I don’t experience any problem with internet or data. Why would the frequency band change so often ?

    • ProdigalFrog@slrpnk.net
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      5 months ago

      This has not been my experience, at least on a 4G device. My internet/data still work fine on a 5 year old device.

    • who@feddit.org
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      5 months ago

      Nope. 8 years after release, mine still has network service and still works well.