You clearly have no idea what postmarketOS does and what we mean with supporting these devices (I am a postmarketOS dev).
These devices are supported in our community and main category because they run a close-to mainline kernel. That means, the latest kernel versions currently available with just a few out of tree patches. That in comparison with Android and Ubuntu Touch which run on downstream kernels.
Almost all Android devices on that list came with kernel 3.4 or 3.10. However, for example the Samsung Galaxy A3 currently uses 5.11.7 on postmarketOS. That is not just “not impressive”, it’s insanely impressive.
We don’t need a core dev to own the device but there needs to be an active community member capable of supporting the device, yes.
Also, these devices are “supported” because they run a close-to mainline kernel, where Android and Ubuntu Touch use almost exclusively (and Android exclusively) outdated downstream kernels. With close-to mainline we mean a recent kernel version (e.g. 5.11.7 for multiple devices in that list) with just a few out of tree patches.
Here’s the full list of supported devices:
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You clearly have no idea what postmarketOS does and what we mean with supporting these devices (I am a postmarketOS dev).
These devices are supported in our community and main category because they run a close-to mainline kernel. That means, the latest kernel versions currently available with just a few out of tree patches. That in comparison with Android and Ubuntu Touch which run on downstream kernels.
Almost all Android devices on that list came with kernel 3.4 or 3.10. However, for example the Samsung Galaxy A3 currently uses 5.11.7 on postmarketOS. That is not just “not impressive”, it’s insanely impressive.
I imagine the problem is that they can’t exactly “officially support” a device, unless an active dev owns that model…
We don’t need a core dev to own the device but there needs to be an active community member capable of supporting the device, yes.
Also, these devices are “supported” because they run a close-to mainline kernel, where Android and Ubuntu Touch use almost exclusively (and Android exclusively) outdated downstream kernels. With close-to mainline we mean a recent kernel version (e.g. 5.11.7 for multiple devices in that list) with just a few out of tree patches.