I think if there wasn't an open-source trend in this community, pinephone wouldn't have much reason to be.
Anyway, I didn't know about this compliance problem, maybe I'll try it anyway if I had the chance.
p.s. So we have to install our distros on fat32 filesystem?
p.p.s https://www.silabs.com/documents/public/...AN0030.pdf page 2
"SD cards are plain block devices and do not in any way imply any specific partition layout or file systemthus partition schemes other than MBR partitioning and the FAT file systems can be used. Under Unix-like operating systems such as Linux or FreeBSD, SD cards can be formatted using, for example, theUFS, EXT3 or the ReiserFS file systems; under Mac OS X, SD cards can be partitioned as GUID devicesand formatted with the HFS+ file system. Under Windows and some Unix systems, SD cards can beformatted using the NTFS and on later versions exFAT file system. However most consumer productswill expect MBR partitioning and FAT16/FAT32 filesystem"
I don't know, it's the first information I've found. I don't know the source reliability.
Anyway, I didn't know about this compliance problem, maybe I'll try it anyway if I had the chance.
p.s. So we have to install our distros on fat32 filesystem?
p.p.s https://www.silabs.com/documents/public/...AN0030.pdf page 2
"SD cards are plain block devices and do not in any way imply any specific partition layout or file systemthus partition schemes other than MBR partitioning and the FAT file systems can be used. Under Unix-like operating systems such as Linux or FreeBSD, SD cards can be formatted using, for example, theUFS, EXT3 or the ReiserFS file systems; under Mac OS X, SD cards can be partitioned as GUID devicesand formatted with the HFS+ file system. Under Windows and some Unix systems, SD cards can beformatted using the NTFS and on later versions exFAT file system. However most consumer productswill expect MBR partitioning and FAT16/FAT32 filesystem"
I don't know, it's the first information I've found. I don't know the source reliability.