![]() NotePost (Google Keep alternative), TerranQuest (similar to Pokemon Go) & moreĪpps built in the Nit programming languageĬlient for Twitter, Facebook & more last updated 2/2017 Unofficial snapshot builds of microG, DroidGuard and more Offizial repo of monerujo (Monero Wallet) Official Repository for all applications, including Quasseldroid developersĪpps for penetration testing and forensicsįOSS apps of the koyu.space global network The Invisible Internet Project (anonymizing network) Liberario and BlitzmailĬolorful little collection of mostly non-FOSS apps Some privacy related apps like Orbot and ChatSecureį-Droid Maintainer Torsten Grote‘s Testing repo for e.g. Preview and stable versions of Funkwhale (Fediverse audio-streaming platform)įree and cloudless replacement for your gadget vendors’ closed source Android applications: Gadgetbridge apk from ), plus Kiwi, Signal, Wire …ĭecentralized Chat App, compatible with Riot/Matrix Signal (TextSecure) builds (not updated since )īuilds of WebSocket-based fork of Signal (TextSecure) renamed to LibreSignal. Small apps like Wetter and LibreTranslatorĬorona Contact Tracing Germany (the fully-F/LOSS app based on CWA) Codeberg repoĬ:geo, Geo-Caching for Android ( details on the repo) Older versions of apps from the main repo. Also note that „cross-updates“ between the main F-Droid repo and other sources is not possible, as F-Droid builds and signs the. So please don´t integrate them blindly – but check the corresponding background first. ![]() Some are explicitly declared for test builds or experimental versions. Use these repositories at your own risk: not all of them hold „stable builds“ intended for use in „productive environments“. Feel free to contact me if you think there’s an error in the list – or if you happen to know more of them Now the point is: what other repositories do exist? I try to close that gap here, giving you a list of repositories I’ve found so far. If you’re already using the F-Droid app you might have noticed it serves multiple repositories, with a few of them already pre-configured. Number of apps meanwhile has increased to over 2,000 on their main repo, and still all of them are available free of charge – being open-source after all. I’ve already introduced F-Droid with my article Android Markets: How safe are alternative sources? – and gave a more detailed walk-through in my article series F-Droid: The privacy-friendly alternative to Google Play Store.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |