

I bought my ADATA Lancer Blade DDR5 6000 MHz CL30 back in May for 95 eur.
I checked December 6 the prices were around 300 eur. Now I check again and it’s 500 eur. This is so cooked. I heard SSD’s are about to get expensive also. I’m so lucky I did a full upgrade that will last me for a long time, i was even considering whether to upgrade then or wait until winter.


Terry Davis was right…
Edit: For anyone that don’t know : https://youtu.be/3HD43lvNvCA?t=2084 He was mentally unwell but he called it !


Thanks for taking the time to share


I don’t think so. From what I gathered, the only thing Play Services can see on GrapheneOS is the list of other apps you have installed. That’s it. They can’t see anything else unless you grant access to it. You’re not giving Google root access to your phone, you’re just installing an app that happens to be made by Google, and it’s locked down like everything else.
Edit: https://youtu.be/YB01HHFitFA?t=625 I just saw this video apparently apps can still communicate with each other so you might want to isolate if that’s something you’re worried about.
Edit 2 : Another relevant link https://discuss.grapheneos.org/d/28558-google-can-still-see-my-app-activity-on-grapheneos/2


The threat level for google play services is different in graphene as it runs in what they call an “appbox,” which basically means Google Play is just another app that’s sandboxed like everything else.


One thing I haven’t understood properly I feel is how notifications work. They talked there’s basically 3 ways of sending notifications on android. FCM (googles system) , websockets, unifiedpush. Most apps use FCM so you need play services installed to get notifications, right?
How does that work through profiles though? Some commenter in this thread said you can forward them from another profile if that profile is running in the background? But if I have google play services installed on profile B but not profile A? Do I have to install them on every profile?
I may not fully understand how profiles work yet.


Yeah, as they said most banking apps now work, however, Google Pay doesn’t.
There are alternatives to it like curve pay but I haven’t done the research whether they’re trustworthy enough. EU company I think.


Yeah I apologize, I incorrectly assumed that GrapheneOS’s BFU state is more secure and requires you to enter your passphrase by default and not PIN and that this is not available on stock android which some people pointed out it is.
On a related note though, Graphene does have an interesting feature where if phone hasn’t been unlocked for some time it will force reboot to get into that BFU state. Metroplex sets it to 8 hours.
I think they also have some aggressive USB port control, but I haven’t looked into it. Where you can only charge phone in BFU state or something like that. Haven’t had time to read into it : https://grapheneos.org/features#usb-c-port-and-pogo-pins-control


Thanks for the in-depth answer, I think I will try installing Graphene today.
This can not only be turned off entirely in settings, but you can actually modify it on a per-network basis!
Oh nice ! Makes it way more useful then as I saw forum threads of people saying there’s no point in randomizing on your home network and may cause issues.
GrapheneOS’s airplane mode disables the cellular radio entirely, whereas some OEMs don’t do that on their phones, even when you turn on airplane mode, meaning your cell provider could still triangulate your position regardless of if you have airplane mode on or off.
Did not know that, fascinating! Even Airplane mode is upgraded :D
Yeah I noticed the main AUR package was last updated in June 2024. Thought they abandoned it but the GitHub shows the last release was around the same time. Downloaded sioyek-git instead and it works great.
I think I’m sticking with Sioyek. It checks enough boxes for what I need from a pdf viewer. Well documented, no performance issues, and it supports epub too.
The command line tools, portals, ruler for reading, keyboard text selection, searchable highlights, easy file opening, marking. Really vim-like. Need to customize some keybinds but otherwise don’t see a reason to look elsewhere for now.
Oh Sioyek looks interesting. Also the blog is great !
I personally want something more minimal.


I didn’t like it either on first play-through but I will try it again soon !


A bit of a tangent but I wonder if this is becoming more common these days. The “shut-in” phenomena, japanese call them hikikomori. News headlines say it is but i wonder how well they represent reality.
I do wonder despite the flaws of the old system, was there something genuine lost?
You had to actually “hunt” down what you wanted to watch, make discoveries, build context and knowledge to what you want to watch / listen to. IMO the “hunt” is part of the joy in the same way as perhaps building a PC is a big part of the whole gaming enjoyment and at the end of it you can sit down and fully emerse yourself into the art. Now? You are presented with an almost infinite choice of what to get spoon-fed and I feel it de-incentivizes everything. The distinction between music and noise isn’t about the physical properties of sound. Instead, it depends on how we perceive and assign meaning to what we hear. My point is, it’s harder to create that meaning these days.
They did touch upon this in the video. Seems like the new streaming model creates a passive, scrolling consumer rather than an engaged enthusiast where “art” becomes just disposable content pushed by algorithms.
Also, streaming pushes you to over-consume on stuff, which causes the same problems.