Basically the title

  • UnfortunateShort@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    I think you’re forgetting where Linux was the most successful by far: Servers and Android. Server guys do what they want, if you tell them they can only use software you allow them to, they will laugh at you and buy their data center elsewhere. Android has had locked bootloaders forever (I actually think even my very first phone had one).

    So maybe development would have been harder? I mean, we don’t have looked bootloaders on desktop even today, not really locked at least, so it’s hard to tell. Linux’s main audience would not have cared I think.

    • BearOfaTime@lemm.ee
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      1 month ago

      Early Android (circa 2009) didn’t have locked bootloaders.

      Google wanted people to experiment, which was basically free research for them. Pixel’s today are unlocked when purchased from Google.

      Even my earliest Verizon phones weren’t bootloader locked - they didn’t start doing that for a few years (my last Verizon phone in 2012 wasn’t bootloader locked). And Verizon is arguably the worst vendor when it comes to bootloader locked phones.

      • umbrella
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        1 month ago

        locked bootloaders are still a thing mostly on the US.

        over here having them locked is the exception, not the norm.

        • MonkderVierte
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          1 month ago

          What? At least two years ago, all had locked bootloaders and half of the vendors wouldn’t let you unlock it. “Here” being central europe.

          • umbrella
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            1 month ago

            here in south america they don’t seem to be locking most of them.

            granted, not all phones have an active developer porting an os to it.

            • MonkderVierte
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              1 month ago

              Mean, so it’s a regional thing. But why do they lock in US and Europe?

              • umbrella
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                1 month ago

                i know us carriers dont like bootloader unlocking. not sure about europe.