OESF Portables Forum
Model Specific Forums => Gemini PDA => Gemini PDA - General Discussion => Topic started by: apink on August 08, 2021, 09:39:07 pm
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I am just stumbling across the gemini and like what I see. I am interested in knowing how long it will last under daily use. In particular, I have had clam shells in the past and the hinges and/or screen ribbons often fail. Is it common for a gemini used daily to last for several years without this kind of failure?
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Hi apink and welcome back!
I have moved your post in a new thread for better visibility. I have bought my Gemini a couple of years ago, and I never had any problem with the hinge or the screen, even if I have accidentally dropped my device on the floor a couple of times. I only had once to bend the hinge cover since it was getting loose. Since the PCB is located behind the screen, there's only a small cable in the hinge connecting the battery with the screen and PCB, so there's no ribbon cable being bent every time the screen is closed. I have read though about some people having issues with the hinge, i.e. cracks in the plastic holders, I have not observed them on my unit:
https://www.oesf.org/forum/index.php?topic=35825.0
Varti
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Thank you Varti. That is good to know. Thank you also for moving this to get more visibility.
I gues that a second way to ask my question would be poll-like. If you use your gemini on a fairly regular basis (daily or almost daily), how long have you been using it with only minor adjustments and/or how long before its functionality broke down and forced you to get another device?
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I bought my Gemini very early on and used it as my daily driver until I got the Cosmo. My only complaint about the Gem was its slight screen bounce while typing, which I fixed by duct-taping a piece of trimmed coat hanger on the machine' back as it lay in the hinge's slot. I still don't understand the physics of its success, but it works for years and the tape is hidden.
I use the Gem now as a pure Linux machine, and anecdotally, the Gem is much more robust than my Cosmo, whose hardware has fallen apart, piece by piece.
Jake
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I have a similar experience as jakfish. While my x25 Gemini is a somewhat crude first generation product, the typing experience isn't the best (not sure if later batches are any different), and the lack of a proper rear camera meant I kept carrying my old phone around too, my Gemini worked well during the nearly two years I used it frequently.
Since then, it has, still in good order, been in storage, as I am now using a Cosmo, which came from the factory with tiny hairline cracks around a few of the magnets, and parts of the middle hinge has spontaneously fallen off, though neither has affected its usability. While I can't say for sure that the Cosmo is less durable than the Gemini, I can, at least, say that the Cosmo does not appear to be any more robust than the Gemini.
Both are clamshell devices and, as such, a bit more delicate than monoblock phones. As the small quantities means the Planet phones must be fairly cheaply made, by a third party, there are some quality issues with both, so whether you get a good one or not, seems to depend a bit more on luck than it would, were you to go with a major brand.
As the latest (last?) Gemini firmware available is from May 2019, I would, due to the lack of Android security updates, currently only recommend the Gemini for Linux use.
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Thank you jakfish and Daniel. Your information is helpful.