LibrePlanet: Conference/2010/Hacking/Free phones workshop

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Please remember that this event is focused on free software, not open source. We have a set of guidelines for speakers, but we ask everyone to be mindful of the power of words and the importance of framing the issues being discussed and worked on in the best possible terms.

Register now

Everyone who attends gets a free t-shirt too

The following is a dump from our previous free phones event in September.

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We will go over the following:

General overview of free / partially free smartphones available in the US market

List of free/mostly-free phones:

Note: On some phones, Android can be replaced by Replicant:

See Talk:Future Phone Freedom Workshop#Are they trying to screw you? for why this might be a good thing to do.

Moral Abstraction Devices[1]:

  • Novatel's MiFi 2200 portable EV-DO router

To be released soon:

Criteria to be counted:

  • available for purchase
  • ability to make phone calls
  • ability to let users develop software for it
  • not required to void phone warranty to benefit (in some way) from freedoms provided. Eg. sure you can install Debian on an iPhone, but that doesn't mean the iPhone counts.

Usability vs. Freedom

OpenMoko is completely free, but not really usable. Usability should be graded as follows:

  1. can be used as a phone reliably (includes address book)
  2. can be used for common smartphone tasks, such as calendaring and web browsing
  3. can synchronize with external services
  4. ...

Developer freedom

Ability to develop on the phone using a free development environment. (I think all of them can be developed using only free software. [look into Android]).

Stack freedom

Go over, for each phone, what parts of the phone stack are [not] free. Maybe a chart to show all of the phones in comparison (there's bound to be something online that compares this already; if not, let's make it).

Hackability freedom

Ok, so you want to "root" your phone (if it is not already rooted). What can you do with that power? How hard is it to gain this access?

What cool things has this given to users? (I suspect there are a lot of interesting hacks in the OpenMoko world)

Community

Is there a community around the phone? How healthy / vibrant is it?

https://www.noisebridge.net/wiki/Noisedroid

Carrier freedom

If the phone is locked to a carrier, what is that carrier's attitude toward exercising your SW freedom and what are the potential repercussions of going against their stated desires?

Going forward toward a usable, free phone

What parts of the SW stack are missing to make each platform entirely free and usable?

Comparison Table

Freerunner
(Openmoko)
G1, G1 ADP, MyTouch
(Android)
Prē
(WebOS)
N900
(Maemo 5)
iPhone
US Carriers AT&T, T-Mobile AT&T, T-Mobile Sprint AT&T, T-Mobile AT&T
Usability (ugh, meh, woo, yay!) meh woo woo unk yay!
License Free software proprietary and apache2 for userland; GPLv2 for linux proprietary and various free for userland; GPLv2 for linux proprietary and various free for userland; GPLv2 for linux all proprietary
Base applications free (varied) free apart google apps mixed mixed nonfree
Purchasable yes yes (contract subsidy) yes (contract subsidy) yes yes (contract subsidy)
Ability to install custom OS yes yes (exploit or downgrade) yes [2] yes[3] maybe (exploit only; actively discouraged)
Radio Firmwares(GPS, GSM, Wifi) nonfree, nonfree, free[4] All nonfree[5] All nonfree unk, unk, nonfree[6] All nonfree
OS GNU/Linux Android/Linux GNU/Linux GNU/Linux nonfree
GUI layer free (varied) free (Android) nonfree (WebOS)[7] free (Maemo) nonfree
SDK free mix[8] nonfree free[9] nonfree
SDK runs on Free Software yes yes yes yes no
Hacking voids warranty? no yes unk unk yes
App store none non free but hackers are working to get SlideMe 1.0 usable (beware later versions are not gpl) nonfree by default; free version available[10] unk nonfree

See also

References

  1. nonfree but lets you use non-phone mobile devices as phones via voip
  2. SHR already compiled, first call made - installed OS is OpenEmbedded variant
  3. It remains to be seen if/how subsidized versions will be locked down - if indeed they appear at all.
  4. John Sullivan, Operations Manager at the FSF writes: I was correct -- there is no linux-loaded proprietary firmware for the wifi. There is of course proprietary firmware in flash on the chip, but it is not upgradeable. See for example this mailing list post - "---2 The 2nd best option would be that all software on the main CPU is Free Software, and other firmwares are not user-upgradeable, do not have to be loaded at boot time, and can thus be considered to be part of the 'circuit' of that chip, a black box. Some people find this option laughable, as it looks like someone not wanting to know the truth, but for a number of reasons the FSF and Richard Stallman believe this is the right way to protect freedom. GTA02 is at this level, let's call it the 'FSF level' :-)". The proprietary firmware on the chip has been a source of problems (because for example it is compiled with debug options on), so that's presumably why people are saying otherwise. root@om-gta02 /lib/modules/2.6.29-rc3 $ find . -name *.bin doesn't return anything, fwiw.
  5. There are 4 CPU,The Arm9 CPU controls the modem+gps(mDSP),the audio(aDSP),and the mDSP and the aDSP are all non-free,the application CPU is an arm9,not much is known about the msm architecture
  6. GSM/GPS firmwares may be stored in rom, however, they are almost certainly upgradable
  7. Can also run directfb GUI without WebOS GUI, however no one has written tslib module for touchscreen yet so limited usefullness
  8. Official SDK requires nonfree Sun Java,can be liberated if you compile your own and use a patch
  9. Toolchain is all free, to run the device emulator you need nonfree Nokia binaries.
  10. You do not need to access the GNU/Linux command line or "root your Pre" to install or use Preware (which is the GPLv2 app store client). However you install it with "WebOS Quick Install", which is nonfree software, under a provision that allows "WebOS applications that are in-testing, which under section 4.2 of the Palm SDK License Agreement allows for such unapproved applications to be installed on Palm devices" [1]