I can’t believe this name wasn’t already taken.
@ernest, here’s a nsfw screenshot in case it doesn’t appear for you. https://i.imgur.com/il0uZC4.png
There’s two of us! Really the minority in this thread. For me there was no guide so i was extremely confused at first. Then I found it interfered with one of my most used apps that featured similar gestures so I turned it off and never went back.
Looks like this is only compatible with gmail. Anyone know otherwise?
PairDrop.net does the same via your browser. I think it’s more or less the same mechanism, just no install needed and fully cross platform. Just visit the site on both devices and share stuff.
The snapdrop app on fdroid gives you an easy share intent to use.
How’s the gesture recognition accuracy? I long for the days of swype but gboard is the only one that’s come close to me.
Aegis: 2fa. Free, open source.
Auto Auto-rotate: per app rotation settings. Free, open source.
Missed notifications reminder: adds a repeating sound or vibration if a watched app has an active notification. Ie, you got an email when you were away from your phone so every few minutes your phone makes a beep or whatever so you don’t need to check the screen constantly. Free, open source.
MJ PDF: simple, fast PDF reader. Free, open source.
Snap drop: web based instant file transfer between devices. Free, open source.
X-Plore: the only file manager that ever clicked for me. Dual pane that’s really intuitive. Absolutely packed with features (connects with local network, cloud providers, ftp, ssh, dlna, has file sync)
They’re doing more than riding on apples services for free. They had to build and run a notification relay server to make this work.
Same thing that’s been in the news about Apple sharing info with police. The content of the messages are ETE encrypted but notifications of who is talking to who is not