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Izzydroid repo has been a good addition to my F-Droid, a lot of very useful apps: https://android.izzysoft.de/repo

Some great apps I've been using through F-Droid:

* Battery Charge Limit (Stops charging at a desired level) - https://f-droid.org/app/com.slash.batterychargelimit

* Mi Manga Nu (Manga reader) - https://f-droid.org/app/ar.rulosoft.mimanganu [ Stable, usable, without annoying ads - consistently better than manga readers from play store I've tried. ]

* NewPipe (Lightweight YouTube frontend) - https://f-droid.org/app/org.schabi.newpipe

* SeriesGuide (keep track of your favorite TV shows and movies) - https://f-droid.org/app/com.battlelancer.seriesguide

* Slide (Companion app for reddit) - https://f-droid.org/app/me.ccrama.redditslide

* Termux (Terminal emulator with packages) - https://f-droid.org/app/com.termux [sounds cool, haven't had a chance to use this yet. ]

* XDA Labs (XDA Labs: Forums & App Store) - https://f-droid.org/app/com.xda.labs



Thanks for the link to Newpipe! Been looking for something like this ever since YouTube disabled playing videos in background tabs.


You're welcome!

For anyone else who hasn't come across it: Newpipe allows you to (a) watch the video directly in fullscreen (b) download it as video or audio (c) play the audio in the background (d) play it in a small (adjustable) pop-up window that can remain on screen while you browse other apps.

It's still very much in development though. There are random errors that pop up when navigating (not too frequent, but you'll probably see one if you use it for a week or so), and it just recently got the ability to display playlists (you have to manually select the next video after one finishes playing, doesn't have auto-advance feature yet).


There's also the YouTube Downloader for Android, which is not perfect but has served me well: https://dentex.github.io/apps/youtubedownloader/


Just so you know, NewPipe lets you download videos too (although a dedicated app might have a better interface for it)


Another thank-you from me! It also blocks ads!


It doesn't block, it just doesn't implement that particular feature.


* DNS66 for adblocking is pretty cool too


Oh yeah, I totally forgot about DNS66 (works in non-root phones) or AdAway (which is what I use, root required). And also there AFWall+ (and probably others) for firewall duties.


Any idea how does Slide compare with Red Reader, which is another Reddit client in Android ?


The two are quite a bit different.

Slide feels more modern, presents images and videos more prominently and overall, it feels like you're consuming more content. It's also a bit buggier and I found using it to be more strenuous, just because you're going through more content.

RedReader has a much more conservative and simpler navigation scheme, feels more text-focused and more reliable. It's missing some features compared to Slide, for example a "gallery view" for image-focused subreddits or some filtering and customization features, but it also has its own strengths.

For me, RedReader's offline-viewing feature worked a lot better. It (pre-)caches posts while you're reading and then you can just transparently read on when you lose internet. Slide seemed to not cache as much and while it has a separate feature to download entire subreddits' posts at a set time, that never seemed to work reliably for me (again seemed to not cache that much).

Another relatively big detail is that in RedReader, you can vote by sliding a post or comment left/right. In Slide, you have to instead hit a button, which is much harder to do and takes you out of the reading flow.

Sliding is then again reserved in Slide for navigation. For example, you generally slide left to right to go back. That works well, too, makes for a fluid feel, but I find I have to often stop and think for half a second what my slide will do or how I have to slide to do what I want to do. This adds to the strenuous feel, but I can imagine that this becomes really intuitive, if you use the app for a while.

Personally, I actually had both installed most of the time and switched back and forth between them (which also creates problems, like filter lists & settings not being shared).

Most of the time, I spent in RedReader, but that was purely subjective. I liked the simplicity and reliability. I do think that more people would prefer Slide. It seems to follow the design that's currently popular with Reddit apps.

Mind that I've stopped using Reddit about two months ago (when they made up obvious bullshit to excuse not anymore open-sourcing the website code), so that's about how up-to-date I am on these two apps.


Thanks, that was helpful.


Sorry, I haven't used Red Reader. It's better looking than redditisfun and IMO has better UX and customizability than Boost (those two are the other reddit clients I've used).




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