Some of mine are grayjay, kotatsu, expenses, voyager, feeder, mull and syncthing
to name a few I like:
- Read You, brilliant RSS reader. Now syncs with Freshrss. Inspired by Reeder on iOS
- Voice, audiobook player. I use it in fact to listen to audio from youtube videos (downloaded with Newpipe). For audiobooks (and podcasts) I use
- Audiobookshelf (needs server)
- FUTO keyboard with decent on device voice recognition! (exists as a standalone)
- 8Vim, weird keyboard I really like
- Fairemail has been my trusty email client for years. Don’t be spooked by its many options, once accounts configured the UI doesnt show unecessary stuff IMO. Some unique and useful features.
But if you want something simpler there’s K9, now Thunderbird. Although I still experience the issue with emails not arriving on time with this newer version - KeepassDX, great password manager, good UI, keeps improving.
You may distribute the software or any part of its source code only if you do so free of charge for non-commercial purposes.
isn’t that open source?
All of the above managed through Obtainium, directly from the source.
- Bitwarden (Google Play link)
- Eternity for Lemmy (Google Play link)
- HordeNG (taken down from Google play, but if was basically just a wrapper for a web app which you can install easily from the browser anyway - https://horde-ng.org)
- Baby Journal (also a web app wrapper, available as a web app at https://baby-journal.app)
- probably others from Google Play I don’t use that often and don’t remember whether they are open source or not
Three of those are made by me, but I also use them often (that’s why I created them in the first place).
- Seal: Allows me to download YouTube videos, Instagram reels, etc. It’s a simple and pretty front end for yt-dlp.
- Fossify Calendar: Finally kicked Google Calendar to the curb. No fuss calendar app.
- AVNC: Allows me to remotely control my laptop from my phone. Requires installation of VNC software on the laptop (I’m using TightVNC).
- Binary Eye: Barcode/QR code scanner with history.
- Loop Habit Tracker: Helps me keep track of habits – eg. going to the gym X times a week.
- Island: Allows me to create a clone of app. Useful for apps that don’t support multi-accounts.
- Simple Time Tracker: I use it to keep track of how long I spend playing a game, since I like documenting the info for HowLongToBeat.com
Other than these, K9 Mail and NewPipe.
It sucks that Syncthing is discontinuing its android app
It would be up near the top of my list.
There’s syncthing-fork that I hope will continue to be maintained (especially as they committed a guide on how to switch from the official app 2hrs ago). I’ve used it already before the depreciation of the official app and it’s working reliably.
It looks like Play Store releases are planned to be stopped, so it’s probably best to install it either directly from the GitHub releases (for this, Obtanium is also a great tool for finding and updating apps from lotta sources), or with F-Droid.
Termux + syncthing cli + tasker
But this is not a solution for those that you do family tech support for.