My top android apps are :
1.Local send for file transfer
2.Bitwarden for password manager
3. Antennapod for my podcast
4.Seal for YouTube download
5.Boost for lemmy
6.Rimusic for YouTube music
7. Poweramp for local music on my phone
8.Lichess for chess
9.protonvpn for vpn
10.fairmail for email
Firefox is absolutely horrendous on mobile. A lot of websites don't render properly, or when scrolling everything jumps around. Browsing Facebook is especially bad. Also UX is a lot worse than competing browsers.
I disagree about the UX but that is probably just my preference. I use Facebook marketplace sometimes and it seems fully functional, no jumping around or whatever. Every now and then I have to use desktop mode but only on like government sites. Maybe it's because I use an ad blocker that I don't notice the problems you report.
This is the 1st time I decided to check about this (I have heard that name before here), after a 1st glance it looks a lot like Boost for Lemmy, and since Boost seems to be the best working client for me at this moment (image and posts load for example is way faster than Summit, Voyager and Eternity), in terms of speed Sync for Lemmy is faster, but it is so broken with my current instance that is not worth to use it anymore.
I sometimes watch IRL streamers from parts of the world I've never been to. I've never been to New York City but due to watching streams from a bike messenger I feel like I know the city quite well.
I use Android as my secondary phone, my primary is an iPhone. Though for the past six months, my use of Android has surpassed iOS as the latter is now only for calls, messages and reading emails. For replying to emails, I use a computer.
I have removed as many Google apps as I could using Canta, as long as the phone is able to boot and function.
The apps, in no particular order (read: the order in which I can recollect):
App
Notes
Droidify
F-Droid client
HeliBoard
General keyboard
Unexpected Keyboard
Programmer’s keyboard
Fossify Calendar, Gallery, Music
Self-explanatory
Voyager
Lemmy client, although not a native Android app
Eternity
Native Android Lemmy client, although not as good as Voyager
Tubular
PeerTube and YouTube client with QoL niceties
Calculator++
Calculator with QoL niceties
Cromite
Chromium based browser with QoL niceties
Termux
Terminal emulator
Rethink DNS + Firewall
To block ads and monitor network activity
Orbot
For accessing TOR
Emacs
Still setting it up on Android, only to browse my Denote repository (which seems the only way I can browse it on any mobile device)
Aurora store
To install Apple Music
Apple Music
To use the music subscription from my primary phone
You need to put a space after the period after your numbers to make a numbered list. Your list is all jumbled up into a paragraph. Doing it the right way also means the numbers you use don't actually matter, which is nice because inserting an item near the top doesn't mean you then have to edit all the numbers under it. They can all be 1. and the list will be numbered correctly.
My list:
Mull (Firefox fork)
Signal
Google Messages
Pi Music Player
Shattered Pixel Dungeon
Thunder for Lemmy
YouTube
Google Camera
Fossify Gallery
KeePassDX
For giggles, view the source of my comment. Oh shit, I broke it by adding a 10th item. At least in Thunder. It doesn't support 1000000000 as a number for an ordered list.
1: GrayJay, Revanced and PipePipe - YouTube
2: Voyager for Lemmy (currently in a hunt for a push notifications client for Lemmy)
3: Tap Tap for back taps (gives you ability to execute certain tasks just by tapping)
4: Shelter for separating work apps
5: RetroArch - retro emulator games
6: ReThink - dns/trackers and adblocking systemwide.
7: ProtonPass - password management
8: **Open link with ** - opening links is specific app
9: OnStream, Stremio and CloudStream - streaming movies/series
10: Loops - reels
11: LocalSend - - transfer
12: LibreTorrent - torrents
13: JINA for sideview panel (some android phones don’t have the side panel)
14: Install with one - install batch of apks with one press (requires shizuku enabled)
15: GMaps WV - Google map
16: Filen - Cloud storage
17: FFshare - file conversion
18: Ente Auth - 2FA
19: Aves Libre - Gallery
20: GCam - Camera
BuzzKill, Gives you total control over your notifications. I use it to auto clear apps that think they need to have a persistent notification like VPNs, Smart Watches, etc.
DuckDuckGo, For their very useful, (In my opinion) app tracking protection proxy that they have built into the app.
GAMEYE, For tracking my physical games collection and my extensive Amiibo collection.
Grayjay & Revanced , For when I want to watch YouTube on mobile.
Image Toolbox, Great for doing a whole bunch of different things. Works especially well for image related tasks, but does more stuff than that too.
LocalSend, Airdrop but cross platform and open source. Really good.
Privacy, An app that links to your bank account and lets you make virtual cards to obfuscate your real debit card. Super useful as well for setting up with subscriptions so you can just turn the individual card off instead of having to go find the subscription cancel option for each service.
p!n, A very simple app that adds a quick actions menu button to pin a notification. I use it to essentially add reminders and notes to my notifications real quick.
rdx, A simple Reddit viewer for when I have to view a Reddit link for any reason. shudders
Shortcut Maker, Super useful app for when I'm not using Niagara Launcher. Let's you make home screen app like shortcuts for a wide variety of things, including going to specific settings, launching specific sets of apps, and way more. Used to be my favorite app before I got into Niagara.
URLCheck, Acts as a middle man after I click a link, telling me a bunch of info about it before letting me pick which browser I want to open it in.
Niagara Launcher, my launcher of choice. Not for everyone, but I have found it makes navigating my phone super fast. I have tried so many different ones, but the fact that the app drawer is always on open on the home screen and I can navigate to each letter quickly made it the best for me.
Anyway yeah, those are some of the ones I use frequently. Sorry for not linking to them, but it would have taken forever lol.
I thought buzzkill was just for sound notification and how do you use Grayjay when you already have a YouTube account?
How can you sync your subscribed list to it?
Considering "top" as meant to be "most used", I'd say:
Voyager, which I'm using right now, a Lemmy client.
Tusky: a Mastodon client.
Mull: Firefox fork.
Firefox (yeah, I have two Firefox installations)
Sketchbook: a drawing app, I even paid for the additional features.
Google translate: when I don't remember how to say something specific in English, or when I want to experiment with multiple languages, especially Latin (and Google translate is the only translator app to have Latin support)
Noto (I was previously using Notesnook): text editor with folder capabilities. I use it to write poetry, free from distractions
Acode: source code text editor. I use it to create Node.js snippets which I run with...
Termux: a kind of a "Linux emulator", it emulates a terminal environment within Android with additional programs compiled to arm architecture. One of those programs is Node.js (both the REPL, the runtime and the npm package manager)
My "Top" apps are what I think are cool, not necessary what the most useful apps are to me.
Briar its a peer to peer communications app that can communicate via wifi, blutooth, or through the internet via Tor. It can form a sort of mesh network with devices in proximity. Hypothetically, with enough users, you could spread information across a long distsnce even with a nationwide shutdown of the internet like some authoritarian countries do.
There's already some public forums on there by connecting to random people around the world via Tor, although, these forums doesn't have much activity now. But it exists and thats so cool. Its like a secret corner of the internet, even more obscure than the "dark web"
Wasted Remember those news about iPhones randomly restarting in police storage lockers? This app does something even better. Amongst many functions, this app can let you set your phone to auto-wipe itself if not unlocked for X amount of time, ranging from 5 minutes to 7 days. (Warning: You may get in legal trouble for using this, if you get arrested and the phone auto-wipes, you could get a "Destruction of Evidence" charge. I am not a lawyer. You might wanna consult a lawyer before using this)
OpenKeychain Just a PGP tool for Android, pretty straightforward. Very cool to have a digital signature right in your pocket to validate your online identity with other internet users. Potentially useful for secret drug tradesahem just kidding lol, don't do drugs, kids. (Seriously, don't)
,> Warning: You may get in legal trouble for using this, if you get arrested and the phone auto-wipes, you could get a "Destruction of Evidence" charge
One could defend itself alleging that they had the app in order to prevent themselves from being blackmailed and/or extorted by robbers which could try to access the phone contents in order to extract information from banking apps, photos, social networks and personal information.
Defending oneself from malicious actors (such as robbers) shouldn't be a crime.
Or alternatively, don't even mention you have such an app and when they ask if you had anything to do with the phone getting wiped, you say "hmm that's odd, it must been some sort of hardware failure, I've heard that [Phone's Manufacturer] have had some issues with quality control, perhaps that's the reason"
You're not lying, you're just suggesting a possible reason: hardware failure. And every manufacturer had quality control issues, it wouldn't be odd for you to have heard about such news, or even just rumors amongst people about a company's quality control issues.