Pine 64

Introduction

Pine64 is a great company and alternative to Raspberry Pi.  I've played with their "2nd gen" original Pinebook 1080p and the first PinePhone.  Thank you, Becca, for getting them for me!

In general, Pine64 make system-on-a-chip (SOC) boards and devices.  They are also very open-source friendly and have a great community.

I haven't played with either lately, so these pages are very out of date.

PinePhone & Distros

Like any good device for open source software, there are Distros that can be installed on to the device.  

I like both the technical idea of JumpDrive as well as the idea keeping images on my computer and not SD cards.  Essentially what JumpDrive does is make the eMMC drive in the PinePhone into a USB mountable drive.  It has enough of an OS to do so.  Then you just use dd like on any other block device / drive copy (see here for dd hints).  Just be very careful to choose the right drive (your phone) and to make sure the image you are writing supports eMMC boot.

PinePhone & Manjaro Plasma

First Things First

About PinePhone

Other Notes - Beta1

Other Notes - Alpha Stage

Pinebook 1080p

Okay, so notes on a Pinebook 1080p is not really about the Pine Phone.  But I don't feel like adjusting these pages right now.  What is the Pinebook?  It is a system-on-chip laptop.  It is a nice device, but really a toy.  But one without games.  ;-)  I can only really do one task with it; don't try streaming, even by itself. At least with the distros I've tried (Manjaro, Neon, Armbian). Local apps, like the repurposed Acer C720 Chromebook, seem to be fine.  I started a review, but it is so old and this technology is "so last year".  I do wish I had a purpose to the laptop.  Maybe someday something will occur to me.

Accessories

I bought this USB cable for power.  I use a powered USB hub and sometimes another computer to power the Pinebook. I also find the track pad sometime difficult, but don't plug it in until after boot.  

Manjaro

I just installed Manjaro with XFCE (on 12/12/2020).  I had been using KDE, but since they decided to break the idea of a rolling-release and it won't update to the latest, I reinstalled with XFCE in the hope of getting better performance.  Don't get me wrong, KDE ran surprisingly well (at least 1.5 years ago).  But I wanted to see if I could do more then just one thing at a time.  

The installation process wasn't too bad.  I had to: 1) dd the XFCE image to an SD card, 2) boot to that, 3) copy the XFCE image to another USB drive, 4) mount that on the Pinebook, and finally 5) dd the XFCE image from the USB to the built in eMMC drive.  I guess they don't see the process as a usual OS installation; they only see running things off an SD Card.  :-(

After jumping through those hoops, how was it?  Well, XFCE was a bit smoother then KDE.  For 100% accuracy, I should put the new KDE on it.  But I'm not that interested.  I also can't say that Chromium or Firefox worked any better on XFCE.  As mentioned above, LibreOffice and Audacious together seem fine.

KDE Neon

The OS loads, at least back in 2018, and one can move around.  But using it with apps gets a bit frustrating because it is slow.  

KDE Neon also auto starts Firefox in the background.  This slows down the system, especially if you want to use Chromium instead.  To stop Firefox from pre-loading delete/move/modify the file below:

Personally, I comment out the exec line inside the file.