This thread is dedicated to discussing and recommending free, libre and open source mobile apps apps distributed with copyleft licenses.
Most of such apps are available on F-Droid, an app store for FOSS apps.
That being said, I currently use some of the following FOSS apps on my phone (all from F-Droid unless mentioned):
Most of such apps are available on F-Droid, an app store for FOSS apps.
That being said, I currently use some of the following FOSS apps on my phone (all from F-Droid unless mentioned):
- HeliBoard - A keyboard app for Android, forked from OpenBoard, which itself was forked from the AOSP keyboard. 100% offline and good word suggestions when typing. Swipe support is available but via another app though I don't use the swipe feature.
- Syncthing - A free file syncing app that allows syncing to any number of devices. Just configure a directory and any files you copy into those will get synced to all devices that you permit to sync with. Completely P2P and end to end encrypted.
- Seal - A video downloader that uses yt-dlp in the background. Just page the video link and the app automatically detects the video and gives options for downloading based on video quality or even only audio.
- K9 mail - A mail client. This will soon become Thunderbird Mobile.
- NewPipe - (via GitHub) A completely non-Google Youtube app. Does not support login or writing comments, but you can save your subscriptions locally and subscription updates lists all latest videos and not personalized updates like youtube does. Also acts as a client for peertube, soundcloud and bandcamp.
- Joplin - A free notes app. Supports syncing data with Dropbox, OneDrive, Nextcloud, AWS S3 or normal file system among others.
- KDE Connect - A great app for integrating your phone with your PC. Supports browsing and copying files wirelessly, reading and sending SMS and managing calls from your PC, remote controlling your PC from phone, etc. Functionality can be extended via plugins.
- Translate You - A completely non-Google translator that translates text using LibreTranslate and DeepL among others in the backend.
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