Ever since I learned about the Fairphone, I keep trying to figure out when they’ll release the Fairphone 5.
Further, I keep wondering whether it’ll be usable easily and realistically by Verizon, since there’s some complications with Fairphone being based in the Netherlands, but I believe generally supported across Europe since so much of their website is in English.
Just about anything I find over on Reddit seems to be outdated, speculating and guessing, or otherwise unreliable.
Anybody know many details about when it might come out, and whether it’ll be supported here in the US??
The last two Fairphones (three if we count the 3+) have been released in September. If they release the fifth one this year, we should know soon enough.
Also, the 3 and 4 have been released two years apart, and the 4 has been released two years ago…
If there were any details out you would have found it.
I have a Fairphone 4 and really like it :)
And you’re US-based, @NotAPenguin ?? Which provider do you use for it? Verizon?
Any issues with US towers and connectivity or setting it up to “talk to” the US infrastructure?
No sorry, not US based so I’m not sure.
I should also ask, how long have you had it (it appears that the release date was just shy of 2 years ago; 30 September 2021), and do you thus far anticipate it continuing usage several years into the future, or does it seem like after 2 years of usage you might be headed towards needing to get another/new phone?
Longevity is another of my main wishes/desires
I’ve had it for about a year now, I’m not feeling any need to upgrade :)
Headphone jack, if the fair phone 5 still doesn’t have a headphone jack, fairphone demonstrates that their user hostile company. Removing the headphone jack while introducing earbuds was removing customer choice to force people to buy earbuds.
I don’t care how repairable the phone is, if it’s designed to remove optionality from me. I’d rather have a phone that gives me more options and is less repairable, then a phone that’s very repairable but not user friendly.
Hell, they’re all about replaceable, user serviceable modules. Make the headphone jack an optional module!