Yeah I prefer to keep my 2fa offline, like my old app and Aegis do.

This might seem frivolous but is there a recommended way to replicate the Motorola shake flashlight thing? Everywhere I've looked so far, people either complain the options are either not FOSS, drain battery, or just kinda don't work all that well.

Looking around, shake for flashlight looks like a "no"... Either they drain battery, require root, or just kinda don't work well.

I ran across something really weird when setting up my silent.link: dialing *187# caused the GOS launcher to crash. I got logs about it and everything, should I make a new post about this?

    GlytchMeister I ran across something really weird when setting up my silent.link: dialing *187# caused the GOS launcher to crash. I got logs about it and everything, should I make a new post about this?

    You can but my guess is that it's probably an issue with the app that GrapheneOS can't fix.

      Okay I've got silent.link, next is jmp.chat and cheogram

      Conversations.im is free if obtained from codeberg via obtainium, right? I see its paid on the play store but on fdroid all they have is a donation link, so I'm a little confused, but that's the server I've heard of so far that is reliable, so...

        other8026

        OK lemme see if I can find those logs again, it happened on my empty owner profile, just a sec

        New question:

        Cheogram has their own special github lookalike thing and I can't get Obtanium to find a "suitable release." I have heard lots of bad things about F-droid, and a lot of those problems extend to 3rd party f-droid clients, and I would really rather not download the google play store, sandboxed or not. Accrescent is in early alpha, and GOS's Apps repository only has GOS's apps and a few google apps to help set up sandboxed google stuff...

        Can anyone help me figure out Cheogram’s git and make it work with obtanium? Or maybe help me verify that Cheogram isn't set up for an ancient SDK and use Obtanium to pick the right apk from f-droid?

          Also, proton's github says I need either the android studio bundle or the standalone android tools... But those look like they're for emulating android on a desktop... Right? As in in don't actually need them?

          Also also, is anyone familiar with the Sleep Cycle app? It uses the microphone or accelerometer to tell if you're moving around in bed and uses that to figure out when, within a 30 minute period, to start gently waking you up from a shallow sleep, to avoid jolting you awake in the middle of a REM cycle.

          Is there a FOSS and privacy-respecting alternative to this, or am I just going to have to get it from Aurora and install it without network permissions?

          GlytchMeister Conversations.im, ... but that's the server I've heard of so far that is reliable, so...

          You can also configure any other server in the app. I think using Daniel's costs some money. The server is in Germany.

          GlytchMeister

          OK so I think I've figured something important out - .tar.gz files are the source code. I don't think cheogram's git even has an apk, I'd have to... I think the term is "compile" it?

          I wonder if there's a way to do that on the phone itself.

            Also if you want to avoid the Play Store APK, then add

            playstore

            in the box labelled Filter APKs by Regular Expression and make sure to toggle on the Invert regular expression option just underneath the Filter APKs box.

            Thanks!

            New question: I can't figure out how to get Storage Scopes to only allow pictures while actually allowing pictures. When I select the pictures folder, my camera pictures don't show up. When I select Show Hidden Files and select the thumbnails folder, those don't show up, either. I'd rather not have to individually add images to storage scopes.

            Nevermind, those are under DCIM, for some reason.

              GlytchMeister Nevermind, those are under DCIM, for some reason.

              https://www.lifewire.com/why-are-photos-stored-in-a-dcim-folder-2620570

              Why DCIM and Not 'Photos'?
              DCIM stands for Digital Camera Images, which probably helps this folder make a little more sense. Something like Photos or Images would be much more clear and easy to spot, but there is a reason for this decision.

              The consistent naming of the photo storage location for digital cameras as DCIM is defined as part of the DCF (Design Rule for Camera File System) specifications, which has been adopted by so many camera makers that it's practically an industry standard.

              akc3n According to their profile on sourcehut, "The Cheogram Android app allows you to join a worldwide communication network. It especially focuses on features useful to users who want to contact those on other networks as well, such as SMS-enabled phone numbers."

              Is that supposed to mean that through Cheogram you can connect from xmpp to SMS?

                jacobb

                Yes! That's why its so useful for FOSS, security, and Privacy enthusiasts. It doesn't fully avoid the pitfalls of Legacy SMS messaging (and phone calls), but it does put a layer between your phone and SMS, and it makes it so you can send/receive SMS and phone calls without needing a SIM from one of the big telecom networks, which are all unavoidably just gigantic spy systems due to how their core functionality works.

                I'm taking one of a few middle roads by using silent.link to get access to cell tower data so I don't have to get all my texts and calls via WiFi only, which is a huge hassle.

                New question:

                I'm not sure if I just had unrealistic expectations for my battery life, but my battery is draining about 40% over an 8 hour period of... Fairly active use. Mostly internet browsing as I look up a bunch of stuff during downtime at work. Is this a reasonable amount? I notice my Mullvad VPN App is responsible for about half of that battery usage. That... Seems like it makes sense? I don't know. Its still definitely better than my old iPhone 8, which lost 100% of its battery in about 4 hours by the time I finally got around to starting my switch to my pixel 8.

                OTOH, I was always hearing about how much better android battery life was. I don't have mollyFOSS installed (yet) and I haven't signed into NekogramX (yet) since I'm waiting on my XMR to exchange into BTC so I can pay JMP (surmounted by a baseplate of prefamulated amulite) and NekogramX doesn't show up on the battery usage settings page, so I don't think this is a case of "no Google Play Store = Battery Inefficient Notifications," but I definitely don't know enough about what I'm doing to be sure.