Same. I use my phones for many years — I'm still using the Pixel 3 — so the easily replaceable battery is really appealing, but I don't know if I can deal with the inevitably underwhelming camera.
Let's hope they don't sign their root of trust with publicly available Google development private keys this time and fix their other shit so you can actually get some semblance of security on their phones!
I think not having a headphone jack goes against their whole sustainability and repairability values. Wireless earbuds are just about the least repairable or sustainable electronics available, you'd think they would want to encourage the use of wired earbuds.
I mean you can still use a usb-c to headphone jack adapter and continue to use wired headphones. Though that would not work when the device is charging. I suppose it is a trade off that would need to be made.
This wasn't really that big of a surprise. The development cycle indicated that it would most likely come out this September. Their page also says it will stop giving a 5-year warranty for FairPhone 4 starting with September.
With that said, I'd give this one a go if it was more secure. However, until Graphene OS doesn't tip their toes into this, I'm not jumping ships yet. Would love to, though! I really like the initiative.
Also though, they should launch outside EU. Theres a huge internationally now for repairable devices.
I could see a Fairphone 5 do crazy numbers in the US