Comment by zaggynl

8 hours ago

What does full-stack mean here? Phone is fully produced in Europe? Software and online storage fully provided by European company?

edit: I want this phone, I have reserved a slot in the coming batch.

Just posing as an average Joe here, someone who does not host their own storage, calendar, contacts, phone tracking, remote wipe, the "free" features Google and Apple are known for on their phones.

Usually 'full stack' just means software. Here it means a true Linux phone (Sailfish OS) plus Android compatibility with sandboxing. The C2 model is made in Turkey from Asian parts. The new phone is manufactured in Asia, but the final assembly, QA, and software flashing are done in Finland.

This isn't for people with a consumer mindset. It’s for people who want a Linux computer in their pocket, more privacy, and still want to run some Android apps.

The previous Jolla C2 phone was built by Reeder in Turkey - they don't seem to say anything about the new phone

  • https://forum.sailfishos.org/t/jolla-c2-out-of-stock/27573/5

    Let us clarify here as it is very different indeed.

    The Jolla C2 Community Phone is done in collaboration with Reeder, who is the HW vendor. This means Reeder sources the components, plans the production and does the manufacturing in Turkey. Jolla provides the complete software stack (Sailfish OS) which is installed by Reeder in the manufacturing.

    In the new Jolla Phone everything is different. Jolla is the vendor, has designed the product itself, done the component sourcing and pays directly to the component vendors. We control the pipeline. Further, we have secured our position for the initial memory batch with advance purchase.

    Also, to be clear: Reeder has no involvement in the new Jolla Phone.

    Thank you for asking, very good points to clarify!

When I first read the headline I thought all hardware components are European as well. Seems like it's referring to the software stack only.

Apparently "full-stack alternative" means "layered on top of Android" these days, as Jolla does with libhybris.

  • From what I understand it's the opposite, an android compatibility thing layered on top of a linux base.

    • It's both; the one I mentioned is for system drivers, the one you're talking about is for running applications (which you can also do on a regular non-Halium GNU/Linux using e.g. Waydroid).

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