this post was submitted on 05 Feb 2025
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You can compile whatever you want into the firmware and load it on the device.
The server is configurable, by loading new firmware. It's just like flashing an ESP32, which you could also build your own TRMNL out of.
In other words, those are not real issues.
But i have no desire to compile and maintain a fork of software just to set a URL and auth token. And again, this is a license to modify the firmware, so they could at some point decide to revoke the license to modify the firmware or stop publishing security updates on their git repo to allow for merging into the fork I have to maintain. Probably won't if they are reputable and don't get acquired, but still a risk. It's just not worth it for me for any open product I purchase.
You should probably stop complaining about FOSS if you don't understand how it works.
So? Then don't, but don't claim the $20 is your issue. Firmware is easy, you just don't want to learn it.
Nope. They need approval from all contributors to change, and even if they got that, anyone could fork from the time of the current license. This is how FOSS works. Lemmy itself could do the same thing.
What open products are you purchasing that you think don't follow this pattern?
I said from the beginning it's a deal breaker for me. You're the one trying to convince me it's not the issue I think it is.
And I'm not talking about the license to modify the firmware software itself. I'm talking about the EULA of the device itself. Pretty much any device you own that has any kind of software on it is not owned by you outright to modify as you wish. This website doesn't show the agreement, but if it has a paid feature to unlock, it has to have one somewhere.
https://usetrmnl.com/terms
Pretty standard stuff.
That's for use of the website. Not the device.