Sailfish OS Roadmap
I didn't see anyone mentioning it earlier, so I'll do it:
Jolla has introduced two pages with the status of SailfishOS development: Sailfish OS Roadmap General information about upcoming features and products. Development Roadmap Detailed plans on Sailfish OS development, by category, month by month. It includes information about the status of each feature (not implemented/implemented/released). Here is the page saved into the Archive.org Wayback machine. If you notice any changes, please save it again, so we can follow the progress. There are some very interesting plans ahead. Some examples that were the most interesting to me:
There are some very exciting plans, but I am a bit sceptical about these two: (*) - I don't think it's wise to go the Flattr way, as it will probably mean no cut for Jolla from running the store. (**) - I hoped split screen view within an app would be ready for the tablet launch, as it is the only imaginable way how to seamlessly adapt phone apps to the tablet form (attached page on phone, visible on tablet). Enjoy the reading :) PS: I hate making new threads, but I couldn't find any appropriate thread for such an long-time info (no "update 11/12/13..." thread would do). |
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Just hope they have some room for bug fixing !
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Everybody is clamoring for paid app support, but I think there is very little money to be made over it, at least in the short term. I did not know about flattr, but it could work for current developers, and I suppose it is cheap to implement a flattr micropayment in the store. I hope Jolla will not want a split of the donations, though, that would not be very "unlike". |
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this is a great addition from jolla to increase the transparency and show the community what their plants and what they are working on :)
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I'm sure all will be revealed once it goes live, as the terms for developers will need to be clearly stated. |
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It wasn't said, but I would expect completed to mean passed testing and signed off. Anyway, the roadmap has been updated from "last Tuesday's" update meeting, so worth revisiting. Also, in the same email, the expected functionality for the next release has been listed... |
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I also added the page to the Archive.org wayback machine, so we can follow the progress and easily see what has changed from the last time (the next time it changes anyway). EDIT: Edited the first post accordingly. Shout-out to everyone: Please save the page on the Wayback machine again once you notice any changes. |
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2) How can it possibly ever hope to be a sustainable model if Jolla don't take a cut? I'd be very worried if they didn't take a cut. It'd pretty much be signalling that they don't expect active Sailfish users or app development to grow at any time in the forseeable future, and therefore any revenue from it would be useless; a tacit admission of defeat. Most developers who might be willing to test the waters would see it as a very bad sign. Besides, what reason would Jolla ever have to help, facilitate or support Sailfish ports to Android phones if they're never going to make a cent from it? 3) Implementing Flattr support (or similar systems) is insanely easy. Like some of the other features on the roadmap, how did this not happen sooner? |
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I've managed this on Ubuntu using pulseaudio-dlna and it works really well. Even more useful on a handheld device though. I'm sure it's already possible, but having it integrated nicely into the system would be ideal. |
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I do not see apps revenue could possibly cover the cost of developing the infrastructure for that; and if money is the motivation for developing an application for SailfishOS, the developer will be sorely disappointed as for the return of investment. I wrote a few applications, for my own use and satisfaction; it still is a pain to get them released, as many needed components are forbidden. That is where Jolla should focus, to remove roadblocks from the current willing community of developers. For those, the donation system could be a source of satisfaction, rather than of steady income. Quote:
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With the pre-release of 1.1.6, the roadmap has been updated to indicate which items from it are included. There may be othere updates to the map as well, but I've not been tracking it.
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Maybe this thread is correct place to put this.
Did you notice this comment from blog? https://blog.jolla.com/2016-community-program-roundup/ " James Noori on January 4, 2017 at 2:39 pm Speaking of, being open source has been, and is on our plans for 2017. I can’t assure you when you shall expect it but we are planning to do it little by little and make a proper road to fully open source ASAP. I’m not in charge of this but I’m following the discussion as closely as I can and I will share more info when I have some. Cheers to a finely planned road-to-open-source in 2017!" Lets see! :) |
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Funny but I'm personally not 100% happy about this.
If an originally closed source system goes into open is usually a sign of weakness. Not that this is inherently bad, but can mean that the company/team is desperately trying to find a solution, they are giving up original strategies. Just as examples: M$ going with linux for Azure Blender going OS after bankruptcy 0.A.D. (strategy game) Of course this might not be bad, still interresting to wach. |
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I see it as an attempt to appease the most militant community members shouting their "Open it! Open it!" mantra till their throats got sore, as if opening it would actually make any real difference. (I agree that yielding to a pressure like that is a sign of weakness in its own right.)
I personally foresee very little effect. The majority of Sailfish has been open since day one. Has either Sailfish or Jolla benefited from or suffered because of that? I admit I do not have the numbers to hand but I suspect the real (that is, not just perceived) effect, good or bad, has been quite minimal. |
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As for opening the closed core apps which some people yearn for (like email and calendar) I don't really see any need for that either. Consider that the sailfih browser is all open now, has anybody here made any relevant contributions to it, hmm? Thought so. |
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They're no longer emphasising the pitch to consumers, or the phone companies that supply them, but rather aiming to supply nations with a strategic interest in not being under the ambit of the American tech giants. I guess that could reduce the fear of being undercut by (probably Chinese) clones, and move their focus towards creating a transparent and reliable common core - Sailfish properly so called - perhaps with custom (closed source?) layers on top for different markets... |
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Don't know if this is the right thread to post this but there is an open letter from Jolla CEO about Sailfish situation in year 2017: https://blog.jolla.com/letter-jolla-ceo/
Nothing too worrying or exciting there, I think. |
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nothing B.I.G. on the horizon; business as usual. We'll see what MWC brings! |
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RE: MWC
"expect to hear some new exciting announcements during the week" A way for Europeans to officially obtain devices again without hoping on AquaFish passing customs? A new device? A new partnership with Nokia or another big name or FairPhone2 official (although I'd expect FP3 to be available by the time this happens, IF it does)? Dalvik available in store for ported devices? As far as I'm concerned, any of the above would be good news for Jolla and end users. |
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I think it is worrying that they keep referring to these emerging markets, whereas "Europe" (and "North America") isn't mentioned anywhere. What exactly has this business strategy given them so far? A failed contract with some South African nobody provider, a failed contract with an Indian webshop, a failed contract for a piece of crap phone with an Indian nobody provider with likely the worst customer service in the galaxy and because of that a whole bunch of angry illiterate and gullible Indians spamming the comments on the Jolla store and spamming TJC. A winning strategy, clearly.
Meanwhile, in the places of the world where people are actually interested in their products, there is nothing. I will be using my Jolla phone for the next ten years unless it breaks down, but what are others supposed to do? Unofficial ports are not exactly an option because your support depends on the porter's personal interests, you don't have Android support, you don't have Exchange support and you don't have access to the Jolla store. After more than three years, the Jolla store is still a complete joke with no way to pay for applications other than indirectly through flattr, with no way to properly filter or to view more than three screenshots, with no quality control whatsoever, with nowhere near the amount of applications available on OpenRepos due to extremely misguided restrictions, with no web interface, to put it short: with nothing to offer. And yet, without this store available, the only way for a port user to install things is by using OpenRepos. But surely selling Sailfish in China, where even a baby already has five different phones, will solve all problems. I am as far as one could be from being a business mastermind, and yet Jolla's management is even farther. I'll take those claims about "further open sourcing" with more grains of salt than there are in the Dead Sea (maybe a good emerging market?). They've been repeated over the past three years, always "coming soon!" or "more info in the next months!", and except from the browser and documents applications years ago, nothing has changed. |
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I am a bit more optimistic as:
- this is now clear that some community device will be made available (was already hinted at FOSDEM). This was not that clear from last months communication. And it will change the game for those who cannot engage in SFOS as there is no (official) hardware to buy or only quite old and used ones (J1). Of course let's see the details when they arrive. - this seems to me the first time they engage themselves (officially) to open source most remaining part of the OS. - a China deal seems reachable now. For the rest, there are confirmations of what we know: - SFOS remains dedicated to be independent even if rather dependent on Russian funding (if open sourced, then we can trust them even more) - a Russian team will deliver some codes back to SFOS core. - the money is still tight but no dead valley in the short-term - community remains important to them Looking forward to MWC :) |
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I hope for a new device with not that big dimensions.
My aquafish lies in the drawer since august - I just can't switch to that brick from my lovely small N9. |
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Some functionality came up in the translations, mainly "Sailfish Device Manager" (I thought that would only end up in russian corporate extensions) and VPN related.
Some more or less interesting ones I stumbled upon: Settings:
Most likely I've missed some (and I'm not sure all of them are even new), but it's nice to see some things progressing. What do you folks think about remote administration if it lands in vanilla SFOS? Useful tool for security in corporate environments or just the first in a row of possibly hard-to-track backdoors? (Feeding the trolls a bit, I know.) |
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That's quite good, I've wanted such features for quite while
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Well I'm all for a backdoor. If the device management is required by my company it should only affect data affiliated with that. Somewhat like BB does it I hope. Work Environment under Device Manangement and User Environment separate from that. I cannot accept a device management policy on my phone that has remote wipe and whatnot capability that also affects user data. It is unacceptable as a tradeoff to gain corporate interest for SFOS in my opinion.
It all boils down to the implementation. I used MSExchange on my N9 and Jolla and my company required by policy to be able to remotely wipe my phone because back then it was not 'sandboxed' Luckily on N9 and Jolla you could fake that capability and still deny the functionality. That is of course against the usage agreement for corporate mail but well... screw the IT that has such measly measures to ensure their data to stay safe. I would hope on SFOS we get an environment based solution. Maybe some other user than nemo. Separate clipboards etc. One can dream |
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I really wish people at least tried to see things from the other side before they blurted out their holy truths. Imagine you were the company owner. Would you risk your company's trade secrets by allowing your employees to use insecure devices, without encryption and remote management including wipe? If you did and they left the phone on the train, you would have only yourself to blame. Different hardware for work and pleasure is the obvious answer. |
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About Sailfish Device Manager
https://together.jolla.com/question/...post-id-158623 |
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It would be easy with filesystem-level encryption, like encfs or ecryptfs. Still I'd prefer blockdev-level.
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This thread is dead for no reason..:mad:
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I didn't want to start a new thread but wasn't sure where else to put this. I am a potential new user and have a few "does Sailfish do _____?" questions. Hope that's okay.
1) Is there a web site somewhere with a detailed overview of exactly what features Sailfish offers? I'm not talking about simple videos on swiping or using the camera. I have managed to figure out things like it not including a JVM or a radio app, and not offering downloadable maps, but 2) What sorts of tethering are supported? Bluetooth? Wired? If wired tethering is supported, what drivers package does it use on the computer side? Maybe the same as Android? 3) Does Sailfish include "office" software, i.e. for reading .doc, .docx, .rtf, .xls, .xlsx, and .csv files...plus .odt and .ods since it's Linux? I expect there is a .pdf reader. Is this all native code? 4) What's the current state of the API for blocking calls? I've been getting lots more robo calls lately (is the rest of the world also plagued?) and wish for something better than Blackballer on my E73, which can only process known phone numbers. 5) In previous talk of roadmaps, was there any mention of using the last Symbian feature set as guidance? If so, I would hope all of the above is coming soon. Thanks! |
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On 3rd party repos (basically openrepos.net) : - For FM radio, I heard about PirateFM, works on some phones with FM Qualcomm receivers. Kimmoli has written it for the OnePlus-X. Users have reported using it succesfully on Jolla C phones. Currently according to Jolla, the FM driver for the Sony Xperia X isn't enabled in Sailfish X. - For Web radio, I personally use AllRadio, it serves all my needs. It's also available on the official Jolla shop. Quote:
But there's the wonderful "OSM Scout Server" (developped by Rinigus on this same forum). It's available on 3rd party repositories. It is also available on the official Jolla app shop, but due to some current policies, some function on the app shop version might be disabled (If I remember correctly : applications on the Jolla shop cannot run in the background, so the daemon mode might be disabled. You'll have to ask Rinigus). Anyway newer version usually come faster on the openrepos than on the official shop. This OSM Scout is a local map server. Basically, it's like having your own Google Maps server installed locally on your phone. It can be used by applications such as Poor Maps (simple 2D map displayer), WhoGo Maps (the new best app for maps on Sailfish) or used as a map back-end in unrelated applications like Laufhelden (a sports tracker Sailfish application. it can use OSM Scout to display a minimap along your sport tracking. Extremely useful when you do sports out of cell coverage or abroad out of roaming). Quote:
- You can either select that weird MTP thingy that Windows uses to share files. - Or you can show up as a network device (Sailfish call it "Developer mode") and then do whatever pleases you (e.g.: SSH into your phone) (You can also not show up and just charge). Regarding tethering : - the official interface out of the box only offers Wifi Connection sharing. - By using the network access ("Dev mode" of the USB connector) you could basically do whatever you want. I'm sure there should be some nice user-friendly interface on some repository to help you set it up, but I haven't investigated. I'm more a command line guy, so I basically have 2 approaches : - either I SSH to the phone using the "dynamic proxy" option ("-D" option) of ssh to setup a SOCKS proxy and only set the proxy in a couple of desktop application (e.g.: proxy in Firefox using FoxyProxy for easier switching) to save bandwidth. - or a manually setup NAT forwarding using ip tables. I've never attempted bluetooth networking on Sailfish. Quote:
On the official Jolla app shop, you'll find "Documents", an official native document reader for Sailfish. If you install the Android compatibility layer, then you can go crazy with whatever floats your boat. e.g.: The official Aptoid of Sailfish features things like Microsoft Office, Polaris Office, WPS Office, ... but only the Viewer from LibreOffice (?) You can get even more out of other Aptoids, or even from Google Play (if you install Google Services) or Yalp (if you install MicroG, respectively). Though, regarding Android, keep in mind that : - current android layer is Myriad's Alien-Dalvik Because it's an implementation of the android dalvik "kind-of-JVM JIT", it's stuck at Android 4.0 Kitkat. you wont be able to get Lollipop-only apps running. - Sailfish OS 3.x will, according to Jolla's blog, bring android improvements, but they can't say much yet. (probably NDAs with the various companies they are investigating). Quote:
Info blurb about the first - phonehook - mentions supporting wildcards, and seems to be still used (and htus working ?) in 2018. In general : - Out of the box, the phone is pretty much naked (on purpose, to be light and minimalist) - On the official Jolla store, you can quickly find a couple of official Jolla application covering most of the basic needs. - There's a community of 3rd parties devs, spread between the official Jolla app shop and mostly OpenRepos as a 3rd party repo. - It's a full blown GNU/Linux under the hood. You can pretty much do anything. - Sometimes, it might require some efforts (tracking the best 3rd party app from some community dev on a 3rd party repo). - Sometimes, it might require getting your hands dirty and eventually type a few stuff on the command line (SSH or fingerterm). Depending on your needs, its pretty much usable as a daily driver. (Still: - check if you have some unusual needs. In your case : check if you can find a decent Office android app to edit while on the go as this is something that you seem to need. - check if that stupid android app that you bank *absolutely insist you have to use* in order to log works (or public transportation e-ticket, etc.) Some are outright available on the sailfish aptoid, some require installing Google Services, some might even require an additional java library) |
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Thanks for all the great information!!!!
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Enviado desde mi H3123 mediante Tapatalk |
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