• Unlock bootloader (depending on vendor, you have to do an online verification),
  • flash a recovery.img,
  • load into recovery mode (which, depending on the phone, might need extra work)
  • wipe some caches,
  • select new os/rom image,
  • pray it doesn’t brick your phone.

You’d think someone would’ve learned a thing or two from the easy graphical installations linux and even windows have been offering since the late 2000s.

  • FinishingDutch@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I honestly don’t think I’ve ever heard an average user say: ‘I like my phone’s hardware, I just wish it had a different OS.’

    Phones by and large are seen as a locked system: you specifically choose to buy Android or iOS and stick with that.

    There’s really no incentive for companies to make different OS installs easy. I’d say there’s plenty of reasons not to: do you really want to give the average user that much power to fuck up their phone? I assume there’s also some security implications if they made it too easy to fiddle with.

    So yeah, it’s difficult because you’re fiddling with something that wasn’t meant to be an end-user thing in the first place.

    Don’t get me wrong, I’d love it if they made phones much more open in terms of hardware and software, but the big guys aren’t going to do it.

    • Rikudou_Sage@lemmings.world
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      1 year ago

      That doesn’t really make sense. Every paragraph, except the 2nd, also applies to PCs, yet you can install a different OS.

      The reason is quite simple: more money from users.

      • Impronoucabl@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        PCs aren’t phones -They have different expectations and histories.

        Would you ever consider buying individual parts, and building your own gaming phone?

        The end result is still the same: Less consumer power,.