Physical changes are also welcome, so things like skins, cases, screen protections etc… are fine to discuss.
For me, in this order:
- Wi-Fi calling: it was very surprising that this was not on by default, and enabling it helped a bit with the battery life on my Pixel 7a;
- Try custom launchers: I was happy with the phone but the very first annoying thing is the damn Google search bar and how there was no way to just hide it like any other widget. So I ended up installing KISS Launcher (it’s FOSS and still maintained);
- Bite the bullet and install GrapheneOS: you get more security, sandboxed Play Services, a more fine-grained permissions system and you can still install the default Pixel apps from the Play Store while cutting off their internet access, and most importantly you get rid of the Google bar (also enabled Wi-Fi calling as previously done).
I very much like CalyxOS, it’s fast and polished, using microG (an open source clone of Google play services) so all your apps work, but your battery lasts longer since everything ribs locally if you like.
Anything in particular that works better with CalyxOS + microG than with GrapheneOS + sandboxed Play Services?
There’s a lot but not total function parity. Android auto is one I wish worked, but I have a motorcycle, so don’t really care.
You’ve just gotta hope the sandboxing is effective. I’d rather just have something open source fool the apps into thinking it’s Google, vs having a low-level malware written by very smart Google engineers, constantly checking the perimeter of the sandbox for an open door…
You still have proprietary firmware running on your phone that you have to trust, and afaik it has internet access
I doubt Google would bother to add malware for the three people using Graphene
Sure beats having Google play and its associated services ala graphene. Open source MicroG for me, thanks.
You don’t get around the baseband problem with either choice of calyx or graphene, the modem is closed-source.