What is the state of the art on the REALLY cheap stuff .....(or, can I really do this stuff for free like they promised ??)
I went to the FreedomPOP well and got a $29 bucket of very stinky water, which I worked on and over (and over again) until I had a functional (not good, a functional somewhat rain-barrel bad sounding) phone that would make calls and texts (no voicemail) that cost me ZERO $$$ ongoing, supposedly forever) -- but I do get a gig of tower data each month and a phone with "so so" sub-par voice reception all for a one time investment of $29 (and a large amount of bitching having to be done at various FreedomPOP folks that has to be repeated every month or so when they try to welsh on the deal).
Next, Google Fi --- I spent $249 up front for a 5x Nexus phone with 32 gigs of memory. The Fi service is flawless at $30 a month (and I get back $9 every month in unused data reimbursement). Best phone and service I have ever had, bar none. It really is good stuff
but it isn't free, it costs $30 a month less the monthly data rebate.
Google Fi believes strongly in WiFi, and the phone can work off of WiFi just dandy. Google Fi also lets you put your call making tower service on vacation for up to 3 months at a lick if you should hit a place in your life where you don't need tower service (or to make or take tower calls).
Google wants you to be able to ditch your towers, they think towers SUCK. Google intends to offer full internet and phone service to you and your home by long distance wireless before very long, and that will be nice when it finally gets here.
When that comes, you'll need a new phone, I suspect. Cost split between your house and your phones might actually be close to reasonable, too.
So I cut my tower stuff off and use the 5x as a mobile computer terminal at my bedside table, and I carry the rain barrel FreedomPOP phone for the like 1-2 calls a month I actually do make.
Either one of my phones can ride up on the handlebars of my bike as my GPS. Google has made the off line Google Maps GPS trick work really really well off of stored maps, and they now let you store your maps off line on removable SD card media.
I am currently paying out nothing monthly for having both a tablet and a phone and a bike GPS, with an acquisition cost of $229 for the entire package.
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The Really Cheap Gaming PC is still getting better, too. I have finished re-doing my really cheap (separate gaming video card) Linux box with a Win 10 Steam based gaming partition, I can load Steam games both on the Linux side and the Windows side, with "MS restricted games" like Tomb Raider only working on the Windows partition side of things.
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I have begun working now on the SUPER cheap (totally free) Android PC project, which is any out of date machine (laptop or box) that can be told to boot from a USB drive. The USB thumb drive contains Jide Android for x86 and has the rest of the drive (over 5 gigs empty) is enough to hold your entire Jide PC world so you can carry it all with you and run it off of any hunk of computing hardware that allows USB booting.
Please remember, these same tricks would work with Linux and most smaller distros, but Android x86 is so very small and light that ANY old Intel processor that can bios boot off a USB stick is way overkill type strong for processor, memory and speed which tends to make Jide Remix run like a scalded dog on this grade of Wintel throw away equipment.
To make this project "more real" performance-wise I am using a really cheap ($5) 8 gigabyte USB 2.0 drive instead of the faster 3.0 grade of USB drive -- actually I was sorta thinking "Art Web style" equipment for something he could be mailed and he could just plug it in and use it after going into his bios just once to set up USB booting order.
Not that many old crap style Wintel boxes and laptops support USB 3.0 anyway.
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Was able to download and install the Jide Remix OS for x86 software on the 8 gig cheapie USB stick.
Upon reboot, my Linux box (old Dell 780 off lease business machine) attempted to boot and got most of the way through the boot process before faulting out (Remix OS was not expecting the separate AMD video card instead of the built-in Intel graphics, I suspect).
Went over to my Win 10 machine and attempted a cold boot on that machine and Win 10 immediately DESTROYED the software on the stick completely -- MS does not approve of Linux or Jide OS or anything else touching "their" machine.
I think Win 10 treated it like a trojan or virus attack.
I will wait until Jide comes out with the next iteration and give it another try.