The square screen, once a curse for watching YouTube, is a blessing for reading logs, code, or terminal output. You see 40 lines of text at a readable font size.
You cannot hand this to your mother and expect her to call you. You cannot reliably use WhatsApp or a modern banking app. The cellular modem is a dice roll.
You are not looking at a grid of icons. You are looking at a desktop-class interface, scaled down. You open (a camera app) and it crashes—no surprise. Instead, you open GNOME Terminal . linux on blackberry passport
The community behind the port deserves immense credit. They have reverse-engineered a proprietary, dead platform to run the most free operating system in existence. The result is a device that feels less like a smartphone and more like a modern reimagining of the Psion Series 5—a pocket computer first, a phone second.
In the graveyard of iconic smartphones, few devices inspire as much cult reverence as the BlackBerry Passport. Launched in 2014, it was a swaggering, defiant square peg in a world of round holes. With its 1:1 aspect ratio, a physical, tactile QWERTY keyboard that doubled as a trackpad, and a hulking, industrial design, the Passport felt less like a phone and more like a miniature piece of heavy machinery. The square screen, once a curse for watching
The physical keyboard becomes your command line. Ctrl + C is intuitive. You can SSH into your home server, check on a Docker container, or write a quick Python script using micro or vim . The trackpad keyboard (swiping your thumb across the physical keys) moves the cursor with surprising precision.
Suddenly, the magic happens.
You plug in USB-C (the Passport actually used USB 2.0 via a non-compliant connector—adapters are required) to an external monitor. With a Bluetooth mouse, you have a crude Linux desktop. Let’s be brutally honest: This is not a daily driver.