The 'wrapper' around each of the individual halo engines is in unreal and is arguably the wost thing about the collection from a reliability standpoint.
That said, they'd definitely be able to find people suited for the work, provided said people agent already scared away by stories of the work culture at 343i / MS
I see. I admit I sorely missed the app startup at boot control permission (app ops) toggle when it was removed from the Android permissions framework, but the new power and background software management framework eliminates the need for it.
Also damn, you have a modern xperia? Hardware wise they are massively appealing to me. They have nearly all of the HW amenities I can think of (SD card slot, headphone jack, dedicated FP reader / button, notification LED, no camera cutout).
If they supported bootloader relocking with sself signed keys, they'd be the perfect phone for me.
I made the admittedly difficult discussion to move to a Pixel so I could use some of the most private and secure software possible on android with little effort or thought behind it.
I sorely miss my headphone jack but at least I feel like I can depend on this tiny computer to not fuck me over with unfettered personal data collection (and save a lot of power in doing so, I suppose).
Adaway was what I used prior to ublock origin on Firefox. The network access toggles can be found directly in ROMs like Calyx Grapene, Lineage, Divest, though I'm not sure if they're widely seen elsewhere.
I know the process you're referring you WRT gadgetbridge. I used to do the same thing until I switched to a pinetime.
I'm not familiar with permission manager X. Does that deviate from the android permissions framework in some way?
The 'wrapper' around each of the individual halo engines is in unreal and is arguably the wost thing about the collection from a reliability standpoint.
That said, they'd definitely be able to find people suited for the work, provided said people agent already scared away by stories of the work culture at 343i / MS