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Why don't cell phones have BIOS?
(lemmy.eco.br)
This is a most excellent place for technology news and articles.
And the manufacturers very much want to keep it that way.
They do not want you to be able to make those changes, and intentionallyput roadblocks in your way.
Unified Extensible Firmware Interface isn't how we spell planned obsolescence and that doesn't add up to infinite profit sooooo yeah.
Can't have you replacing the OS on that thing. Adding security patches and a new battery on that. Just wouldn't be fair to us billionaires and our R&D department. We have to justify all this labor somehow.
You can replace the OS on most Android devices.
Specifically- devices made by Google have been unlocked allowing replacement of the software.
You still have to put together a working kernel and drivers, environment, etc.
Not much stopping folks from doing that though.
GrapheneOS, Ubuntu, and others have made headway for some devices.
Each device potentially uses different hardware implementation and features.
Graphene is targeting only google pixel devices.
Ubuntu touch and Ubuntu phone have been picked up by I think postmarketOS
I think AOSP is the best bet for the largest majority of Android users.
Kernel dev is a fun hobby.
Or, maybe writing firmware and code that doesn't make money is the opposite of profit.
Where is the incentive to write code that reduces security and costs money they won't recover ?