Phones can only last so long and my admittedly ancient BlackBerry Curve took one-too-many tumbles and now needs to be replaced. Thanks to recent changes in the cell-phone market, I'm looking to purchase a phone, outright, and get a month-to-month plan for it.
I am very privacy conscious and have, so far, avoided Apple (walled garden - blegh) or Android (tell Google everything). I suspect there are fellow Soylentils who hold a similar perspective. (My current cell provider is US Cellular. I'm open to change, but would like to avoid AT&T and Verizon --- have heard too many horror stories.)
Background: I've been programming computers since the 1970s. I've tried using Apple products, but it seems they are user-friendly to the extent that you want to do what they have already decided is okay. They seem to expose a bare minimum of controls to allow customization. That would frustrate me to no end.
So, that leaves me with Android as the other major alternative. I am leery about giving any more info to Google than necessary -- given a choice, I regularly choose an alternative over a Google product (i.e. DuckDuckGo for search, openstreetmap, etc.)
My thoughts, at the moment, are to get a phone and load cyanogenmod on it. I've read good things about the privacy capabilities it provides; especially fine-grained allow/deny access permissions. Added bonus is ability to apply updates more frequently than a telco-branded phone would provide. I have no experience with rooting/flashing a phone, so I need this process to be as idiot-proof as possible. Also, I'm leery of getting a phone only to see support for it dropped shortly thereafter.
[Continues...]
Must-have: SOLID cellular reception (my apartment seems to have plaster walls - the BB still got great reception), removable battery, removable storage (micro-SD card), WiFi, LTE (USA), good camera, and fine-grained permissions control.
Nice-to-have: hardware keyboard, tethering (i.e. use my phone to get an internet connection that I'd share with my laptop), FM Radio.
REALLY nice to have: Ability to bring up a terminal window and have full CLI ability (e.g. bash) where I could edit/run custom scripts/programs.
Size/specs: I do not want or need a phablet or the latest/greatest processors. I'm reminded of the adage to buy last-year's top-of-the-line model. For some degree of future-proofing, would like to be able to view 1080p content on it.
Other: What did I forget? What things do you wish you knew that you only found out after you got your phone?
My main system runs Win 7 Pro but I could also run a live CD with some Linux distro.
What have your experiences been? Both positive and negative? Please save me from making a mistake that you have already learned from!
I'm looking to replace my phone within the next day or so. I've been impressed with the shared knowledge of this community -- please help!
(Score: 3, Informative) by frojack on Wednesday April 20 2016, @08:43PM
But I've had MANY different model from many different manufacturers and I've never ever not once found any android device that would force wifi back on when it was set to off.
Its highly suspicious.
As is his claim that it will run for weeks as long as all of his data connections are turned off. Screens burn way way more battery than radios. And I don't know a single person owning a smartphone that never looks at it, and for whom week long battery runtimes are important. People who need week long battery, and never have a need to look at a screen don't buy smartphones.
No, you are mistaken. I've always had this sig.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday April 20 2016, @09:09PM
Many people report this:
http://androidforums.com/threads/what-keeps-turning-my-wifi-back-on.754155/ [androidforums.com]
Also, I don't really want a smartphone but that is what came free with the plan. It does come in useful for 2FA though.
(Score: 2) by frojack on Wednesday April 20 2016, @09:48PM
Many people report this:
And all of them get it solved.
The thread is from 2013 for christ sake, and all recent posters were nubes.
http://www.tomsguide.com/us/android-marshmallow-app-permissions,review-3287.html [tomsguide.com]
No, you are mistaken. I've always had this sig.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday April 20 2016, @10:55PM
Either way, I cannot rely on that device to respect the settings I choose.