Fairphone

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Fairphone is a Dutch electronics manufacturer that designs and produces smartphones. It aims to lower environmental footprint through minimizing the use of conflict minerals in its devices, maintaining fair labor conditions for its workforce and suppliers, and allowing users to maintain their own devices.

founded 2 years ago
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submitted 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) by vurr@lemmy.today to c/fairphone@hardware.watch
 
 

Anyone else had any problems with the USB-C port on the Fairphone 4? It seems to need replacing about once a year. Is there a fix for it? I read on a forum that there is a slight gap that causes the port to move slightly with usage, causing it to wear out quicky. Otherwise, I'm very happy with my Fairphone 4; I just replaced the battery, back cover, and USB-C port this week. The only other complaint I have, is the battery: it's low capacity and was pretty much unusable after 2.5 years of usage. Probably still the best phone I've owned, even with all it's flaws, and I plan on using it for another 4-5 years at least. Have to stockpile on USB-C ports or wedge a piece of plastic in the gap.

Off-topic: bought a flip case with card holders for 35€, but it was originally 50€?! What sort of math is that? It takes 3-5€ to make it. But it was the only one that was available and now I don't have to carry around a wallet at least.

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I am trying to get one in the USA, but it is way more expensive than in the EU, and amlost twice the cost of the parts alone as listed in ifixit.

Are these all the components I need or am I missing something?

  • Fairphone 6 Ultra-Wide Camera
  • Fairphone 6 Screw Set
  • Fairphone 6 Battery
  • Fairphone 6 Display
  • Fairphone 6 Top Unit
  • Fairphone 6 Main Camera
  • Fairphone 6 Front Camera
  • Fairphone 6 Upper Back Cover
  • Fairphone 6 Lower Back Cover
  • Fairphone 6 USB-C Port
  • Fairphone 6 Loudspeaker
  • Fairphone 6 Earpiece
  • Fairphone 6 SIM Tray

Thanks

OQB @IAmNorRealTakeYourMeds@lemmy.world

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submitted 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) by cm0002@lemmings.world to c/fairphone@hardware.watch
 
 

Spare Parts in the USA!

@murena >@technology

Murena sells spare parts for the Fairbuds & Fairbuds XL in the USA now. But they removed the one and only spare part listed for the Fairphone 6 (I don't remember what the part was). Was it ever even in stock? Why don't they give us more transparency on these things?

#FairPhone #FairPhone6 #FairBuds #FairBudsXL #Murena #Repair

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It's not a bootloop per-se because the restart comes after the phone has booted but it keeps doing it so it's somewhat similar. If you see this update, perhaps hold off for a bit.

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Finally finished the case! Editing took longer than expected, finding time in between, work, being a parent and the rest of life is not the easiest. But luckily I used to play Tetris as a child.

For some reason saturation of the red colours went up, or it looks like it, after rendering the project. Haven't had that happen when editing and rendering in blender but I used Kdenlive for this project. If any of you have any idea what it could be I would love to know, cause I like the workflow of Kdenlive.

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FP5.VT28.C.042

Release date: 21 July 2025
Android version: 15
Security patch level: June 2025

Changes:

The Fairphone 5 is getting an upgrade to Android 15! This update brings enhanced security and privacy features to protect you and your device, along with some other improvements.

  • 🔒 Private Space
    Create a separate private space with an additional layer of authentication to keep sensitive apps, like social, dating or banking apps, away from prying eyes.

  • 🔑 Passkeys integration
    Passkeys was first introduced by Google in Android 14 and is now available on Fairphone, including the recent updates as part of Android 15 which supports one-tap sign in.

  • 🥷 Theft Protection
    Theft Protection is a hub for proactive security features and tips that help keep your devices and data more secure by deterring theft and providing quick recovery in the event of a stolen device.

  • ✨ Small Quality of Life Improvements:

    • New 4x5 grid option for home screen
    • Option to increase contrast
    • Disable sending device name wifi
    • Partial Screen Recording
    • Interactive control center Bluetooth panel
    • App Archiving
    • Set your default wallet app
    • You can now remove the search bar from your homescreen to get additional space to place icons
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Author: @disevani@lemmy.world

As promised, here's my full review of the Fairphone Gen 6. It is going to be a little longer than i expected...

Let me start by explaining why i chose this device. Well, i just really like Fairphone as a company. Fair to the workers, fair materials, repaireable phone with long support and doing a collab with Murena, making it easier than ever to experience a "deGoogled" mobile device right out of the box.

Which leads me right to the very first steps: opening the box and setting up. For the ones who have seen Fairphones own videos, there's indeed nothing else in the box other than the phone, sim tray tool and some documentation. After probably the easiest and fastest Android setup i've ever experienced, you're welcomed into the phone's default launcher:

Bliss Launcher. You do whatever you want right from this moment. No more second setup to decline once more everything Google's trying to push through. No more endless updates, notifications about features, etc. It's just you and a small bunch of preinstalled apps.

  • App Lounge
  • Calculator
  • Calendar
  • Clock
  • Files
  • Gallery
  • Recorder
  • Maps
  • Music
  • Mail
  • Browser
  • Notes
  • Tasks
  • Contacts
  • Phone Dialer
  • Messages
  • Camera

The homescreen only shows your app icons, and when you scroll to the right, you'll open a Google Discover-like page where your widgets are located. Sadly, the widgets can't switch positions, so you have to remove all of them and then select them in the order you want. Once they are in place, you can change their size and that's it. Edit; swiping down in either your homescreen or screen with widgets gives your a search option.

All the basics covered, nothing more, nothing less. Pretty much all default apps work well, although i installed my go-to apps and put the others in the "no uss" folder, because you can't uninstall preinstalled apps.

One app did not work well is the email app. It wouldn't delete the emails i manually deleted and instead showed me the email as an new incoming mail with notification and all. After installing Thunderbird i wanted to log out in the app, but it even refused to do that... I end up disabling it as much i could and put it in the "no use folder" also.

There's another app i think that needs improvement, the default camera app: A fork of the well known OpenCamera. This leads me right to a good moment to talk about the phone's camera setup.

Of course you can find (much) better cameras in this price point, but cameras are not the main reason to buy this phone. However, i think the cameras are more than fine, for me at least. Moving objects/subjects are captured well, the focus gets the job done, photos and videos have a good amount of detail in them, colors look good. In low light they might struggle a bit, especially in dark environments where there are moving/changing light sources. The camera can't seem to find the right amount of ISO and the correct shutterspeed in these situations. This will result in some difficulties for "point and shoot" moments, not being able to focus properly and showing the good amount of brightness. One thing i think is most annoying, is not being able to zoom in or zoom out. I don't know if this is because of my settings or if the app/phone really can't do this, but it is something that should be present by default. That being said, the cameras are good enough. I even think they might be or get better with updates or other camera apps, but i guess we will see as we go.

You can download and install app by using e/os's app store, the App Lounge. The App Lounge heavily relies on Google Play Services API, as well as the ones needed for F-droid, etc. Read this link to understand a bit better how it works;

https://doc.e.foundation/support-topics/app_lounge#how-does-it-works

You can sign in as guest or login with you Google account to get acces to your paid apps. While it would be nice to filter search results, the app store performs well, including Privacy Scores for each app, which i think is a nice detail. I was able to install pretty much everything i wanted, including most of the requested apps in my previous post. There was just one app so far that i couldn't download, the Sofi Banking app.

Good time to talk about banking and wireless payment options, because here's the biggest problem people who want to deGoogle will come across.

While i can count myself lucky, because my banking, paying and investment apps (Rabobank, Paypal and Degiro) all work without any issues (even after days of usage, not a single issue), there are apps that simply won't work, such as said Sofi Banking app. What did not work was;

  • doing some* in-app purchases, for example: buying Minecoins in Minecraft
  • Google Pay/Wallet. I was able to install it, but it wouldn't load after that. Paying wireless, at least where i live since pretty much all banks moved to Google/Apple pay, is a no-go.
  • perhaps your banking apps...

...Because, like @Tapionpoika mentioned in a reply in my previous post, some apps will require Google Billing API, something that isn't included in MicroG. There are probably ways to spoof this, but for me the whole point was to 'deGoogle'. So, if you looking for a device that runs any deGoogle'd OS, make sure to take time browsing the internet to see what other people are saying about the apps you really want or need. I know that this was not what you hoped to read here today, so i'm sorry for that.

  • And like i said in my previous post, feel free to ask me to try out installing and running your banking app, or any other app! Maybe then you can find out if Murena will work for you!

And why i put the '*' after 'some' is because not all in-app purchases require Google Billing API. Example, i was able to order food in Uber Eats, because the app simply send me to my banking app to pay. If your payment needs to go through Google you can almost be sure it won't work, without spoofing the API that is. I have yet to figure out a good way to find out which apps are using these API's.

When it comes to other apps, such as Whatsapp, Signal, Brave/Firefox, Digid (for the Dutchies under us...), pretty much every other app i've installed on other phones, all work fine! I have yet to find apps that won't work. I'll update this post when i find apps that won't work. And again, feel free to ask me to try out apps!

Now i'm going to talk about hardware for a bit. I'm going to compare this to the Fairphone 5 i used to own and my previous phone, Nothing Phone 2a.

When it comes to CPU performance, the FP Gen 6 is actually snappier than i would've expected. While the performance compared to the NP 2a isn't really noticeable, which feels weird to say because of the 300 euro difference, the Gen 6 feels miles ahead of the Fairphone 5. I've had no lag, all apps and the UI run smooth, and even Minecraft runs unexpectedly well. The SD 7s Gen 3 also seems to be very efficient and not a hothead at all, which again compared to the FP5, is a massive step ahead. I expect this CPU to perform well for at least 5 more years to come.

The amount of RAM is more than fine for my usage, which at most would be a couple of chat apps, Voyager and a browser with just a handful of tabs opened. As I'm preparing the review in Standard Notes, my go-to note taking app, the phone has 4.8gb RAM free. Plenty of room available.

Where this phone absolutely DESTROYES the Fairphone 5, is battery life and thermal performance. In my first full day of usage, with a mix of Wifi and Mobile Data and installing and trying out a lot of apps, i didn't end up below 30% battery at the end of the dat, and that after almost 7 hours of screen-on time! On a normal day, such as yesterday, the battery reached about 68% at the end of the day with a screen-on time of ~3 hours. With normal to high usage, the temps didn't get past about 35°c. However, and this is something to keep in mind if you are using your phone hooked on a charger a lot, the phone got pretty warm when using it while hooked up to a 30Watt charger. I was just browsing the UI and Voyager, and the temps already reached about 45°c. So, if you plan to use you phone as a navigation device, hooked on a charger in a hot car, the temps might go beyond that. I would not worry too much tho, just keep it in mind (and maybe check to see if other user are experiencing problems).

The phone charges pretty quick. The "50% in 25 minutes" actually sound about right. Sadly Murena did not give us to charge it slower (so i'd produce less heat, being better for the battery) and also the 'charge to 80%' is not present. Hope they will add these things in the future.

There was some worry about the USB-C being only 2.0. I tried hooking it up on a external monitor using a USB hub and HDMI, but that did what i was expecting: nothing. That's kinda a bummer, althought i would not use that myself anyway. Charge speeds and data transfer are fine and that's what matters most to me.

Speakers sound's fine, with a good amount of lower tones. They aren't really loud, but they are enjoyable enough to watch videos with. They are better then the FP5's speakers, but i think my Nothing Phone 2a has a little better speakers (with a little less lower tones tho).

Vibration is much, much better then the FP 5's! They are smooth enough for haptic feedback, but strong enough to not miss any calls. Much improvement here!

The devices itself holds much more comfortable than any other smartphone i've used in at least the last 5 years. The 6,3 inch comes closer to what i think is a nice screen size (which would be a maximum of 5,8"), the edges aren't sharp anymore (FP5 had very sharp edges), the weight has been improved compared to the FP5 (lighter, although i do not really care myself).

The Fairphone's extra button, for Fairphone's Moments, does not do anything other than lock or unlock the microphone and camera acces. Would love to see Moments come to Murena as well, or at least some customizable options for that button; they can't be changed to something else.

Button placement is kinda annoying sometimes. To press the powerbutton, you kinda squeeze your phone, and with the volume button being on the exact other side, this phone is good at taking accidental screenshots. In the powerbutton you'll find the fingerprint sensor. It works very well! The only thing is... when i press the powerbutton to turn off my screen and leave my finger a little to long on the button, the fingerprint scanner will unlock and open my device again. That can be somewhat annoying. I takes a little time to get used to these things, but overall i think Fairphone almost completely nailed the phone's design (except for not including the 3.5mm jack, but it might be time to finally start to accept this...).

There was a question about changing band frequencies manually without rooting. Sadly, i have found no way to do this. This only thing you can change when it comes to networks, is changing your prefered network type(s). So, like turning of 5G, etc. Big list to choose from (see my previous post). I chose to only turn off 5G, since i don't notice or need higher speeds, which might be good for battery life as well.

Bugs, glitches, etc: pretty much nothing. There are some slight visual bugs tho. Opening a map on your homescreen blurs the surroundings. When you open an app in the map, and instead of pressing home you press the back button, the map re-appears but the blur will be gone. Also, when i have the "show taps" setting enabled in developers settings, the display's refresh rate will not smooth anymore (significant lag, going to at least 60fps). I will make sure to forward this to Murena. That's about it actually...

Now i'm going to say a couple of things i like, and maybe give u some tips about the device.

1- Change the animation speed right away. Do this by Settings-> About Phone-> tapping Build Number 7 times. Now you've unlocked Developers Mode. Go back to Settings -> System -> Developer mode. There change all 3 animation speeds to 0.5. Now your phone feels much faster! (also make sure 120hrz is turned on in you display settings).

2- As someone who really hates the Rotation Suggestion Popup everytime the device is slightly turned when auto rotate is off, e/os has a simple, maybe unintended, fix. Slide down the quicksettings and hold Auto Rotate. In these settings, set rotate to 90 and turn on auto rotate. Now, your phone won't rotate AND don't give you the popup anymore. Downside: you have to change this settings when you do want to rotate your screen...

3- Turning off or change notificationpanel icons. A neat little feature to let everything look the exact way you want. I only have the Clock enabled, everything looks more minimalistic! You can even change the shapes of the icons, for the battery you choose a whole other icon as well.

4- For the ones who really need wireless payment options, Fairphone has a cardholder that can replace your phone's back. It might sound a bit silly, but this might be a simple solution to your problem, if you card can be used wireless that is... It's understandable if you don't like this, but hey, mentioning it as a possible solution wouldn't hurt!

Can i recommend this phone? Absolutely! But please, and i can't say this more careful enough, make sure to look up the app compatibility of the apps you really need in a deGoogle'd OS! Otherwise, the regular version made do well enough for you, or, if you're just like me, just get the Murena and be okay if you need to find alternatives if necessary.

So, that's my take on the Fairphone Gen 6. I hope i was able to provide information you was looking for. I'll update my post if i forget to mention things, made typos, or if i need to update something else. And let me know if i can add more, or simply if you have questions! Have a good one!

Edit: i forgot to mention that once logged into Google, your contacts, agenda, etc, will work perfectly fine in all default apps. This make the step towards using e/os even a little bit smaller. Personally, i'm slowly migrating to Proton since they are providing a good amount of alternatives as well!

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Has anyone found cases for the Fairphone 6 yet?

The official one still isn't released and the others I've seen listed online are only available for pre-order

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Android Authority Reviewed the FairPhone

I have a few gripes, though. They got the location of the SD slot wrong, and they advertised swapping the battery for an instant charge (which FairPhone says is not recommended.)

Also, I'm tired of people advertising FairPhone as the phone for tree huggers. It's efficacious, respectful, & economic. It's for sensible people.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qAB2aTvmry8 #FairPhone #FairPhone6

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Fairphone (Gen. 6) Will Ship in the USA in August

IMHO, this alone makes the new model worthwhile. I can't believe they didn't mention this in the announcement video.

https://mastodon.social/@murena/114744626595171706 #FairPhone #FairPhone6

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OC by @WastedRadiance@urbanists.social

I got an Email from Fairphone that gives credence to the recent leaks.

#FairPhone #FairPhone6

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Mal eben das Display des #Fairphone 4 gewechselt
Runtergefallen

Reparatur einfach, nur ein Schraubendreher wird benötigt
Erklärvideo braucht mit Einführung 4 Minuten. Genau so lange dauert der Wechsel in der Realität

Auch darum habe ich mir ein #fp4 geholt.

Im Video fehlt der Hinweis den Schutzaufkleber von der Frontkamera vor dem Einbau zu entfernen.

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The successor to the Fairphone 5 will be officially unveiled on June 25, 2025, as NieuweMobiel has learned. WinFuture has already published an initial image showing the mid-range smartphone in Horizon Black.

Alternatively, the Fairphone 6 will also be available in Cloud White and Forest Green. At least one variant is reportedly equipped with 8 GB of RAM and 256 GB of flash storage. The design has been greatly modernized, with the screen bezels being significantly narrower than on the Fairphone 5, while the frame will be flat. One of the buttons is designed in a contrasting color, which could be the slider that detaches the back from the body.

The back is said to consist of two halves in different colors. Cameras include a main camera and an ultra-wide-angle camera, but no telephoto camera. The focus of the Fairphone 6 is said to be on making repairs as easy as possible. Components such as the two rear cameras, the selfie camera, the speakers, the USB-C port, the display and the battery are reportedly modular, making replacement by end users relatively straightforward. Spare parts will be sold directly to consumers.

The modular, split back allows users to get creative with color combinations. WinFuture speculates that the frame of the Fairphone 6 will be made of plastic instead of metal, as no antenna bands are visible. The base model of the Fairphone 6 is expected to launch for a suggested retail price of €549.

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