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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.








  • The FairPhone comes with stock Android, but you can easily unlock the bootloader and install a different ROM. Some that I know are available for the FairPhone 4 are LineageOS, CalyxOS, iodéOS and /e/OS. With all of these you can achieve a certain level of degoogling and privacy.

    Many people will recommend you GrapheneOS, which is unfortunately only available on Google Pixel devices.