My pixel 7 is shitting the bed and I am considering upgrading and just installing graphene immediately on the new phone as part of my degoogling journey.
Is there anything I need to know about this? I work in IT, so I’m tech savvy. This is my first time installing graphene, however.
I’d be upgrading to a pixel 10 probably.
My carrier is verizon
I’d suggest getting directly from google store and make sure it’s unlocked. I think direct from Verizon/Verizon varient can sometimes have locked bootloaders.
It’s really as simple as 4 mouse clicks with the Web GUI installer. Actually easier than re-flashing Vannila Android 16.
On my Linux install, I used Ungoogled Chromium since it supports USB passthrough and Firefox doesn’t.
Checkout Obtanium for getting Apps/Updates direct from source like Github.
Aurora Store for Google Play mirror for apps that perhaps are troublesome working from the Default included Mirror.
Accrescent Mirror is also installable, right from inside Graphene’s “App Store” app. And there’s also always F-Droid.
I still use the Google Phone/Messages app from the default Google Play Mirror since I can’t live without Spam Blocking.
The Graphene Mirror strips out all the Google Gemini/AICore/Personal Compute crud. Though Visual Voicemail/RCS doesn’t work on Mint Mobile for me, but I live without those.
I was unable to use Chromium. I forget why, but I snagged real Chrome after hitting errors and my Google search telling me the issue.
I then immediately removed real Chrome.
Worked for me with chromium no problem in the past. Even with vanadium. You can use your phone to flash another phone. Cool.
I think it might have been related to being on Linux. I’m not using flatpack or snap, but it was just something that wasn’t supported. I wish I remember what it was.
Do NOT buy a phone from Verizon or Verizon MVNOs like Spectrum. They can be carrier unlocked but the bootloaders are permanently locked and there is no way to unlock them. Their sales reps will tell you they can be completely unlocked but that’s not the case.
US Mobile’s Pixel prices are good and they can be unlocked (carrier and bootloader) after 60 days. It is one MVNO that doesn’t bootloader lock phones when you choose Verizon service.
Amazon’s Google store (in addition to Google direct) has bootloader unlocked phones but they are pretty expensive most of the time.
I thought all pixels where unlocked.
I buy used/refurbished phones a generation or so out-of-date, and recently upgraded from a Pixel 7 to a Pixel 8. Amazon sells “unlocked” phones, but does not distinguish between carrier-unlocked and OEM (bootloader)-unlocked. Whatever phone you get, you’ll want to immediately do the “enabling OEM unlocking” step (enable Developer Options and make sure that “OEM unlocking” exists as an option and isn’t grayed out) before the return period expires.
It took me two tries to get an actually-unlockable phone this time around, and I’ve still got the unsuitable one sitting here on my desk waiting to get packed and shipped back to Amazon.
Also, I’ve been actually screwed by it a year or so ago, when I got a Pixel 7 for my dad, with the idea of preserving the option to install something like GrapheneOS or LineageOS at a later date. When that later date came (after the return window had closed), we discovered that his “unlocked” phone wasn’t actually OEM-unlockable and now he’s stuck on the stock ROM.
I bought a used pixel and did my 1st grapheneOS install just a while back. I used to flash phones with OG images like Aesop many years ago. Honestly, the Graphene install was a few clicks and so easy I was sure I messed it up… But it was really that easy.
Just follow the how to and you’ll have no problems as long as your pixel isn’t OEM locked.
if you can, buy an unlocked phone. Some carriers like to mess with things that might prevent you installing Graphene. I haven’t heard any recent specifics if Version is a problem or not.
Export app configurations for any app that lets you, it speeds setting up the device a lot.
Assume no data will properly be transfered (as a precaution), so have backups of everything you care about. (I forget if Graphene even has a transfer feature?)
Graphene’s stock software leaves a lot to be desired. I like the Fossify apps for phone, contacts and files. For texting, I stick with google messages, its the only one I know of that works right with everything. For camera, I love Open Camera. For the Home launcher, I like lawnchair.
There’s many options for app stores; ideally you pick and one or two, having more than needed adds complexity. I stick to fdroid, play store and graphene’s “store”. Graphene’s app store pretty much only has their core apps and what’s needed for compatibility with the play store.
Installing Grapheneos has been fantastic for the last several months since I made the jump. It quite literally took longer for the phone to update Google’s Android out of the box than for me to rip that shit out and install Grapheneos lol.
I’ll say the best thing about it is the flexibility to your level of security needs. You can completely run it exactly as you would a normal Android phone, or you could go balls to the wall and have separate user accounts for different services and only use non-google play store apps. I personally chose not to have separate user accounts because while they will show notifications, it doesn’t allow (at least not that I could figure out) you to show the content of said notifications. It was immediately annoying as I don’t want to sign into another account just to find out it was a notification I didn’t care about.



