• @[email protected]
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    102 years ago

    Alarmed (iOS only, unfortunately). It allows you to set nagging reminders with notifications and has great features for snoozing a reminder or setting up routine reminders.

    It’s great for ADHD. I basically use it for my schedule I’ll have it remind me the morning of something (or the day before depending on the event), when the reminder comes up, I’ll snooze it to to just before I have to leave.

    I had been using apples “reminders”, which just seem to disappear into the ether if you happen to miss the notification.

  • @[email protected]
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    42 years ago

    For my GTD routine

    • Reminders
    • Notes

    For my feeds

    • Reeder
    • WefWef (can’t find an as good native app for the moment)

    For my diary

    • DayOne

    For photo editing and graphics

    • Photos
    • Preview
    • Affinity Designer

    For my work

    • Safari (I just love WebKit’s developer tools)
    • WebStorm
    • XCode
    • Calendar

    For music practice (hobby)

    • GarageBand
    • Stave’n’Tabs

    For 3D printing modeling (hobby)

    • Shapr3D with an edu account from a friend

    I tried tons of third party apps (Omnifocus, Ulysses, Agenda, Things, Fantastical, Pro Tools…) but always end up using Apple’s stock apps because I love simplicity and I discovered that with my overthinking bad habit, having a good but simple/limited app is more efficient than an overkilled one.

    • @[email protected]
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      12 years ago

      If you’re on iOS I’d give Memmy a shot. It’s very similar to Apollo, and I’m really liking it. The devs are great too

        • @[email protected]
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          12 years ago

          I tried bean in the early stages and didn’t really like the interface. I’ll try it again now that it’s out of test flight but I’ve really enjoyed Memmy so far.

      • @[email protected]
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        12 years ago

        Thanks for the advice but I already tried Memmy and a bunch of others and I always ended up back to using WefWef webapp, so I’ll stick to Voyager

    • Tippon
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      42 years ago

      WefWef as in the Lemmy client? It’s been renamed to Voyager, and I believe there’s an iOS app too. I’m using it on Android now, and it’s great 👍

  • MentalEdge
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    2 years ago
    • Sleep as Android
    • QP-Gallery - QuickPic, modded to be good again
    • Tachiyomi - Manga and Comics manager and reader
    • Audiobookshelf - Self hosted podcasts and audiobook player with progress sync
    • FolderSync - Just filesyncing, since the nextcloud app sucks at it
  • N-E-N
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    152 years ago

    TickTick would be hard to replace. Ive yet to find another cross-platform reminders app that’s so good

    Most of my other fav apps (Voyager for Lemmy, Bitwarden, NextCloud, NeoStore) could be replaced if I needed pretty easily (altho itd be a downgrade)

    • Nusm
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      152 years ago

      I didn’t read close enough and thought you said TikTok. I thought to myself, “TikTok has reminders?!?”

    • @[email protected]
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      2 years ago

      May I recommend Tasks? Not only is it open source and doesn’t collect nearly as much information as TickTick apparently does (according to Play Market), but it’s packed full of features, and also interfaces with a bunch of other apps, like Google Calendar and Google Drive for backups.

      Edit: it also is still maintained and updated regularly

      • @[email protected]
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        22 years ago

        I’ve tried to get into Tasks.org a few times, and I really like just about everything about it, but the deal breaker for me is that is seems like it doesn’t have any collaboration features - can anyone tell me otherwise?

        My partner and I have been making really good use of Todoist and its (admittedly limited) collaboration features - we have a ‘household’ project, and anything on that list is visible to both of us and can be assigned to a person.

        I’d really love to get on a proper FOSS solution, but so far many of them are missing collaboration. Vikunja is really cool and has collaboration, but doesn’t have any widgets atm (important for my scatter-brain). Still on the hunt!

        • @[email protected]
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          12 years ago

          Hmm, it says it can synchorize with your Google account - that’s Google Calendar I think, isn’t Google Calendar collaborative? Or if you’re degoogled - are any of the alternatives collaborative, like EteSync or CalDAV?

          • @[email protected]
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            22 years ago

            Yeah to some extent I suppose a calendar colab would get some of the way there, but I don’t think it gets as far as sharing to-do items between two different users. Maybe there’s a way to set it up to work that way, but I haven’t seen it yet. I’ll look into it!

            • Blake [he/him]
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              12 years ago

              Hey, sorry, I realise this is like, a month ago… but I thought I would be able to help you out! Tasks are actually just IMAP items, just like emails, meetings and notes. The way to collaborate with an IMAPS Tasks list is to share that list with another user - your underlying provider should have guidance on how to do that. Usually the way it works behind the scenes is that a “guest” account is created for the person you want to share with, unless you’re both using the same platform, in which case mailbox access permissions can simply be added. But you don’t need to worry about the specifics, really - the important takeaway from this is that tasks.org is not responsible for sorting it out, it’s down to your caldav provider - usually, your email provider!

      • N-E-N
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        52 years ago

        I will check it out but, unless I’m just missing it, it doesn’t seem to have an iOS/iPad app. That unfortunately might be enough to be a dealbreaker

  • @[email protected]
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    22 years ago
    • Markor - amazing android text editor.
    • Symfonium - music player that I can use with my selfhosted navidrome.
    • Vivino - wine rating app.
    • Deedum - gemini browser.
    • Fluffychat - matrix chat app.
  • @[email protected]
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    2 years ago
    • Iceraven
    • Newpipe
    • Foxy Droid
    • Bitwarden
    • Termux
    • RVNC
    • Showly
    • Librera
    • Simple File Manager
    • Simple Gallery
    • Syncthing
  • @[email protected]
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    2 years ago

    Wallabag.

    I self-host my own instace, save articles I want to read from my laptop, and then they sync with the app on my phone. I read them offline when I have some time to kill

    • @[email protected]
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      62 years ago

      That looks exactly like something I’ve been looking for. I’m going to spin up an instance tonight and take it for a test drive. Thanks!

    • @[email protected]
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      22 years ago

      Been meaning to check out Wallabag for some time now. How easy/ difficult is it to setup your own instance?

      • @[email protected]
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        2 years ago

        I don’t self-host a lot of things, but I’d say this is not the easiest I’ve done, just because it involves setting up multiple containers (unlike something like SearXNG). Also thought that I had to set-up an SMTP container, but I got away with not having to do it.

        I used ansible (and pass to store credentials), so this is how I did it (maybe someone can pitch in and tell me what I can improve):

        - name: Deploy Wallabag database
          community.docker.docker_container:
            name: db_wallabag
            image: mariadb
            recreate: true
            state: started
            memory: 500MB
            restart_policy: always
            log_options:
              max-size: "10m"
              max-file: "1"
            env:
              MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD: "{{ lookup('community.general.passwordstore', 'self_host_containers/wallabag_mysql_root_password', missing='warn') }}"
            volumes:
            - ~/wallabag/data:/var/lib/mysql
            healthcheck:
              test: ["CMD", "mysqladmin", "ping", "-h", "localhost"]
              interval: 20s
              timeout: 3s
        
        - name: Deploy Wallabag redis
          community.docker.docker_container:
            name: redis_wallabag
            image: redis:alpine
            recreate: true
            state: started
            memory: 500MB
            restart_policy: always
            log_options:
              max-size: "10m"
              max-file: "1"
            links:
            - "db_wallabag:db_wallabag"
            healthcheck:
              test: ["CMD", "redis-cli", "ping"]
              interval: 20s
              timeout: 3s
        
        - name: Deploy Wallabag
          community.docker.docker_container:
            image: wallabag/wallabag:latest
            name: wallabag
            recreate: true
            state: started
            memory: 500MB
            restart_policy: always
            log_options:
              max-size: "10m"
              max-file: "1"
            links:
            - "redis_wallabag:redis_wallabag"
            - "db_wallabag:db_wallabag"
            ports:
            - "80"
            env:
              MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD: "{{ lookup('community.general.passwordstore', 'self_host_containers/wallabag_mysql_root_password', missing='warn') }}"
              SYMFONY__ENV__DATABASE_DRIVER: pdo_mysql
              SYMFONY__ENV__DATABASE_HOST: db_wallabag
              SYMFONY__ENV__DATABASE_PORT: "3306"
              SYMFONY__ENV__DATABASE_NAME: db_wallabag
              SYMFONY__ENV__DATABASE_USER: db_wallabag
              SYMFONY__ENV__DATABASE_PASSWORD: "{{ lookup('community.general.passwordstore', 'self_host_containers/wallabag_symfony_env_database_password', missing='warn') }}"
              SYMFONY__ENV__DATABASE_CHARSET: utf8mb4
              SYMFONY__ENV__DATABASE_TABLE_PREFIX: "wallabag_"
              SYMFONY__ENV__MAILER_DSN: smtp://127.0.0.1
              SYMFONY__ENV__FROM_EMAIL: [email protected]
              SYMFONY__ENV__DOMAIN_NAME: 
              SYMFONY__ENV__SERVER_NAME: 
            volumes:
            - ~/wallabag/images:/var/www/wallabag/web/assets/images
            - ~/wallabag/data:/var/www/wallabag/data
            healthcheck:
              test: ["CMD", "wget", "--no-verbose", "--tries=1", "--spider", "http://localhost"]
              interval: 1m
              timeout: 3s
        
        
        

        Then I set up caddy for the reverse proxy

        - name: Upload Caddyfile
          ansible.builtin.copy:
            src: ./upload_files/Caddyfile
            dest: ~/Caddyfile
        
        - name: Deploy caddy
          community.docker.docker_container:
            image: caddy:2
            name: caddy
            user: "1000:1000"
            recreate: true
            state: started
            memory: 500MB
            restart_policy: always
            log_options:
              max-size: "10m"
              max-file: "1"
            links:
            - "wallabag:wallabag"
            ports:
            - "80:80"
            - "443:443"
            volumes:
            - ~/Caddyfile:/etc/caddy/Caddyfile
            - ~/caddy_data:/data
            - ~/caddy_config:/config
        

        And this is the Caddyfile

        my.url.com {
            reverse_proxy wallabag:80
        }
        

        Finally, you then have to login with user:wallabag and password:wallabag and change them in the webUI. I changed the “wallabag” user to my user and set a new password.