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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: July 21st, 2023

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  • Also, is there any reason to switch to newpipe if ReVanced is serving me well?

    I guess for most people not, but there can be some:

    • privacy: NewPipe doesn’t require you to log on to a Google account (but it so connects to Google servers if you watch YouTube videos). You can, however still follow channels (only locally, obviously)
    • ability to download videos or just audio. An extra is that on ReVanced you can have the download function through a 3rd party app, you can choose from several and NewPipe is one of them.
    • NewPipe can also play content from other sources, like Bandcamp or SoundCloud.

    A reason to not switch would be… the interface is not very ptetty



  • There’s tons to choose from, some that are also found in the Play Store (often with Google proprietary libraries or tracking removed). I would recommend:

    • Aegis authenticator: for 2FA.
    • Antenna Pod: for all your podcasts needs
    • Aves Libre: beautiful gallery app which I personally prefer over the Fossify app that others recommended here (try both and decide for yourself).
    • Binary Eye: QR code scanner.
    • Gauguin: a Sudoku-like game, very entertaining.
    • Heliboard: a great keyboard with support for multilingual typing and glide typing. Completely offline and private.
    • KDE Connect: to wirelessly connect your phone with your computer, transfer files, share the clipboard, control your computer from your phone…
    • KeePassDX (or Bitwarden): password manager. I personally prefer KeePassDX and dealing myself with syncing the database (via synching or KDE Connect), but some people prefer Bitwarden which offers online syncing.
    • KISS (or Kvaesitso): simple search-based launchers. Kvaesitso has more options but also feels a bit heavier.
    • Metro: music player for local files
    • Moshidon: Mastodon client.
    • Mull: web browser based on Firefox with hardened privacy (+uBlock Origin extension)
    • NewPipe: to watch YouTube videos without ads.
    • Organic Maps (or OsmAnd~): offline Maps based on OpenStreetMap. Break free from Google.
    • Syncthing: to synchronise files between devices (Android, computer).
    • Tasks.org: to-do’s.
    • Transistor: listen to the radio. Many stations built-in, and you can add more if you have the streaming URL.
    • Voyager: client for Lemmy.







  • I’ve read that the FairPhone comes with a standard, vanilla Android OS on it, no bloatware. I cannot say if it’s true, but you could have a look at the FairPhone forums and see what people think of the OS.

    I know you don’t want to tinkle with the bootloader et al., but if you’re willing to try a different OS without the hassle: it is posible to buy a FairPhone with /e/OS or iodéOS preinstalled.





  • I love Organic Maps, it is clean, simple, and works for 95% of my needs. The rest of the times I resort to OsmAnd, which is heavier and more complicated but has many more options.

    The house number search can be tricky with OpenStreetMap based apps, unfortunatey, but still better than using Google, in my opinion.

    I used Magic Earth in the past, but it has some wrong information in my city (an important road is marked as closed and it calculates long detours) which is not coming from OpenStreetMap, so I personally don’t trust it.