A mobile books tracker written in Flutter that respects your privacy. - GitHub - mateusz-bak/openreads-android: A mobile books tracker written in Flutter that respects your privacy.
They miss some critical features like tracking series and since they only offer integration with Open Library most of your books will have to be added manually.
It's not, and it's run by a private for-profit corporation, but once they re-enable their API it doesn't really matter for the purpose of scraping the data. Open data is open data, and integration is just a hook, not part of the core functionality of the app.
Sounds like an interesting tool! But the negative comments on here make me uncertain. Any more positive experiences? I actually recently thought about how Goodreads is not really what I want and I’m a developer. Not that I truly have time to contribute im afraid though .
I really like the app for my personal reading tracking. Been using it for a couple years, and this year (?) there was a huge update that improved it a lot (better UX/UI and statistics if I'm not mistaken).
It's mostly an app that does what it should, but not more, and gets out the way, which is awesome.
This project was actually my exit way from Goodreads. Unlike another commenter, I found virtually no issue with searching for books in European languages. All the statistics which GR offers are available, and you can easily import your books to the app. And of course, no ads, zero trackers and open source.
The only caveat is the social aspect, since this is an offline tracker.
Edit: If you have any concerns, hop on the matrix community where the dev is active.
I've been using it for a few months now and I think it is great. I can't compare it to Goodreads and others because I have not used them, but it is pretty straight forward to add a book, give a rating and write a review. I like the UI a lot too.
The only problems I have with it is that the API they use is not very good for adding books in my native language and that backup is manual and I don't know if it has integration with Android's automatic backup.
Also, it would be nice to be able to write multiple reviews for the same book, it would be cool to see how much my vision and opinion of a particular title changed over time. I should probably suggest this feature on their github.
This is an offline tracker, so it doesn't compare per se. There were talks about integrating bookwyrm into the app, but as of now there is no public API.
Same issue. Both rely purely on Open Library who have very limited database, so you pretty much have to enter all data manually. That's not an issue if you have 10 or 50 books. But once you reach 1000s it's not viable.
I would love to see this app also get the option to import local epub files as well, because in my short amount of use, I much prefer this UI and layout to MoonReader which I tend to fallback to using for epub's.