So thhat post I wanted to make about my experience with Graphene OS a month ago? Yeah it exists now.
jonathan859.mataroa.blog/blog/…

Please give me feedback because I'm really not convinced in its quality/usefulness.

reshared this

in reply to Jonathan

@Jonathan Nice article. I had very similar experience a few months ago. My only difference is that I'm running this on Pixel 9A.

In order to give some more tips on what to explore next I'd say add @Izzy repo to your f-droid install from apt.izzysoft.de/fdroid/

Then some nice and accessible #opensource apps are:
@AntennaPod
#auroraStore as a google play alternative,
#catima - a privacy respecting app for lojalty cards,
@DAVx⁵ 🔄 - contacts / calendar sync from your own server if you wish to slowly stop using google for that,
#fairEmail - nice very accessible email client,
#makeacopy - for scanning paper documents,
#newpipe - for playing youtube / bandcamp / soundcloud content,
#openKeichain - for signing / encrypting your emails with fairEmail,
#rsaf - for connecting to various cloud storage services including your own smb / ftp / webdav servers,
sms import export,
Speak that! if the talkback notification presentation is not enough,
walkers guide - nice navigation app
Ytdlnis - an yt-dlp frontent.

Perhaps there are more but I have browsed my apps list and recommended what I think is essential.

Jonathan reshared this.

in reply to Peter Vágner

@pvagner @AntennaPod @davx5app we also have some nice client apps for F-Droid repos, which include download stats and show you which apps are (re)built reproducibly by our builders, see the screenshots at izzyondroid.org/ (and head over to izzyondroid.org/quickstart/ for details on them) And if you want to check our download stats with your browser first, head over here: dlstats.izzyondroid.org/ :awesome:
in reply to Peter Vágner

@pvagner Yup, I knew a few of them but not all. A great list for sure. Please correct me if this has already been done, but I was thinking about making an english awesome android accessibility list about good and accessible android apps, similar how @radiorobbe has done it in german, great resource btw. No idea if that already exists, but it seems much more logical to me than having to dig through random accessible android articles which, imo aren't very logical sorted, and neither is the site very responsive at this point.