I replaced my iPhone with an e-paper Android handset - here's my verdict after a month
I replaced my iPhone with an e-paper Android handset - here's my verdict after a month

www.zdnet.com
I replaced my iPhone with an e-paper Android handset - here's my verdict after a month

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/29303286
If that does android auto, then it looks pretty ideal for me when it’s a little more polished. All the other options reduce the functionality that I actually need to curb the bits I want to be rid of. This looks like it might just downgrade the experience of those bits while still being the useful tool that a smartphone should be
There are some phones with 2 (e-ink and IPS i think) displays in a traditional packaging, if that's up your alley.
I watched a review on this phone earlier today and apparently yes, it does support android auto.
This really would surprises me. The article explicitly mentions it "has a compass", which I also interpret as "it has no gps". And Android Auto to my knowledge relies on the phone for this, not the car. So you can probably start the app and link the car, but I highly doubt it's actually usable?
That really kills any of my interest is the fact that it doesn't even have optimized battery life yet. Like what else would be the point of using eInk then? Also 400 dollar introductory price, apparently 500 later? That's a big ask...