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9 votes
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Android emulators to actually use mobile apps in day-to-day life?
My understanding is that Android emulators primarily exist for mobile development and app testing and such-like, and maybe secondarily, to play mobile games. I want to explore the possibility of...
My understanding is that Android emulators primarily exist for mobile development and app testing and such-like, and maybe secondarily, to play mobile games.
I want to explore the possibility of using them as a, basically, full-time replacement for installing apps on my phone. More and more apps and services have no "desktop/laptop" version, and no website version. Installing the app on your phone is starting to become a non-negotiable requirement ... one that I'd like to find a work-around to.
So, yeah ... I guess that's the question. Is this a 'thing'? Has anyone experimented with--or flat-out used--an emulator on a desktop/laptop to run their banking app and the like? Is this even possible? Can you connect an emulator to an app-store and just start downloading/installing stuff?
Thanks.
16 votes -
Google will require developer verification for Android apps outside the Play Store
82 votes -
Designing a slide-out phone case with a keyboard
For reference, I have next to zero knowledge of building electronics. I've replaced the joysticks on two Nintendo joycons (which I actually found pretty fun), and that's it. I also have no...
For reference, I have next to zero knowledge of building electronics. I've replaced the joysticks on two Nintendo joycons (which I actually found pretty fun), and that's it. I also have no experience with 3D printing or designing specific products.
I am also sick of touch screen keyboards on phones, do not like any of of the phones that do have keys or the Clicks phone case (why is it on the BOTTOM—), and currently have a lot of free time.
So my question to you: how would I go about designing my own slide out case with its own keyboard?
Because that is my ideal solution at this point. And in fact, it turns out someone DID make a 3D printed "slider terminal" this year. Except it's for the Note 10 (I have a Galaxy S9), and seems to be used as a full-fledged replacement for a desktop experience with a trackpad. That's neat and will probably appeal to a lot of people here, but personally, I just need physical keys.
Along with the keyboard used for that terminal, I also found this other tiny keyboard which doesn't have the trackpad and is about the same dimensions as my Galaxy S9. Actually I found that first and was trying to figure out if there were any cases that could store and pop that out. The biggest issue is that it would cover my camera except maybe when it's slid out, but screw it, I want a damn physical keyboard.
I do have access to 3D printers (yay public libraries!) and I'm willing to learn Blender in order to make this thing. I just need advice on where to begin and how to tackle this. In particular, I have no clue how to go about the slide out part. I feel like I should be able to figure out how to make a case that fits the dimensions of my phone and the keyboard fairly easily, but no idea where to begin with researching the sliding component.
Besides that, I also know that I'm not alone here in my frustrations with phone keyboards, so I'm hoping we can pool together ideas on how to do this. As far as I can tell there's not really a "one size fits all" solution that would work for all phones (well, except perhaps a foldable case instead of slide-out), but maybe we can at least share decent starting points for people to design their own. For instance, the slider terminal uses a keyboard that came with a remote, and it would never have occurred to me that could be used for this sort of project. And there are a lot of potential workarounds for the camera placements, so Person A may have an idea that doesn't work well for them, but does work better for Person B than their own original idea.
So yeah. Advice, ideas and general brainstorming are welcome!
20 votes -
Firefox just got better for Chinese, Japanese and Korean speakers on Android
19 votes -
Accessing a Google account without attaching to the phone on Android
Ok so I have a Google account for an organization. But when I have that account logged in on my phone some of the security restrictions impact all accounts on my phone. I have a pixel 7a with...
Ok so I have a Google account for an organization. But when I have that account logged in on my phone some of the security restrictions impact all accounts on my phone. I have a pixel 7a with Android 16 if it matters.
I would love to have access to this gmail account, with notifications, on my phone without forwarding the emails to one of my personal accounts. Any way to do that within the Gmail app itself, or if I need a different app, any recommendations?
In my perfect world I'd have OneDrive access too, but I can use a browser window there if needed.
13 votes -
App Dev for All: creating Android apps on Android
9 votes -
BlackBerry Classic returns in 2025 as Zinwa Q25 with updated hardware and software, conversion kit available
19 votes -
Disco Elysium on Android | Reveal trailer
15 votes -
New Android phones, stock or flash?
I'm getting a new phone (OnePlus 13, not that it really matters) and I'm considering the benefits of flashing over something like LineageOs straight away rather than using the stock OS. Normally,...
I'm getting a new phone (OnePlus 13, not that it really matters) and I'm considering the benefits of flashing over something like LineageOs straight away rather than using the stock OS.
Normally, I expect? You'd run stock until security updates stop or something changes where you want a longer running OS, but I'm considering it because I cannot be bothered with all the bloatware they put on modern phones these days.
Plus it should save a heap of battery.What are people's thoughts on this? Is it something you always do anyway or do you usually run stock for a while?
33 votes -
Is anyone working on an Android version of ICEBlock?
Is Anyone Working On An Adroid Version of ICEBlock? I am curious. Is anyone porting that app to Android or making a clean room version?
29 votes -
Interview with Google's Android leader Sameer Samat
6 votes -
Google Wallet adds age verification and more government ID support
21 votes -
Playtiles: The pocket-sized gaming platform
21 votes -
You're going to use Gemini on Android whether you like it or not
48 votes -
[SOLVED] Requesting help for Android Auto troubleshooting assistance
I have a Moto G 5G 2023 and 2025 Chevy Trax that I'm trying to troubleshoot why Android Auto cannot last more than 10 minutes without crashing out and needing to either wait for the connection to...
I have a Moto G 5G 2023 and 2025 Chevy Trax that I'm trying to troubleshoot why Android Auto cannot last more than 10 minutes without crashing out and needing to either wait for the connection to be available again, or unplug and replug the USB cord to get it to reconnect. Sometimes it goes for an extended period of time, and sometimes it won't last for longer than a minute before it crashes with no visible error on the phone. I think it might be something in RAM, but more often than not it's when Google Maps is up, with Audible in the background and I'm not sure if it's one of those or possibly my Launcher or having the three buttons turned on for my phone, or some weird esoteric thing.
12 votes -
Meta and Yandex are de-anonymizing Android users’ web browsing identifiers
22 votes -
Space Cadet Pinball by ksylvestre
33 votes -
Android Auto to support browser and video apps officially
12 votes -
Somebody explain the logic of massive permission overreach?
18 votes -
How does one get started programming an Android app?
It's been a long time since I've done any "serious" programming, but I have long held a desire to recreate an app that's been out of development for a decade, and I reckon I'd do fine if given the...
It's been a long time since I've done any "serious" programming, but I have long held a desire to recreate an app that's been out of development for a decade, and I reckon I'd do fine if given the right direction.
My "qualifications".
I've done "school project" level stuff in *many* different languages (VB6, Python, Java, C++, C#, PHP, Lisp, Prolog, R, to name a few) so I know my language-agnostic basics, and I've made a career out of quickly learning new tools and platforms and maintaining other people's work. The problem is all that experience is either "give a plain text file the right file extension" or building the project via a proprietary IDE, so getting started from scratch I'm totally lost. What IDE? What language? How does the .apk happen?Googling for this gives me either "no code" platforms, which is zero of the fun and basically what I do at work, or documentation that has skipped the first ten steps because it assumes you know the prerequisites already. Help?
20 votes -
Sidephone - Your simple second phone
18 votes -
Your phone doesn't listen to you but apps send screenshots home
44 votes -
Three Cheers for Tildes: App updates and feedback (April 2025) — Version 1.4 adds a text size setting
This topic is for the Three Cheers for Tildes mobile app. I'll summarize the major updates at the start of each similar topic, so people can read the updates and then hit Ignore if they don't care...
This topic is for the Three Cheers for Tildes mobile app.
I'll summarize the major updates at the start of each similar topic, so people can read the updates and then hit Ignore if they don't care about more frequent updates and user feedback.
Recently:
[Android] Version 1.4.3 (Apr 30, 2025): Fixed a layout bug on topics.
[Android] Version 1.4.2 (Apr 11, 2025): Reduced highlighting when formatting markdown. Fixed minor text size bugs.
[iOS] Version 1.4.1 (Apr 11, 2025): Fixed a bunch of text size bugs reported through TestFlight, especially when rendering comments. Reduced highlighting when formatting markdown.
Version 1.4.0 (Apr 6, 2025):
- Added text size setting
- Fixed markdown formatting bar bugs
The text size setting for accessibility is long overdue. I've been feeling bad that some users couldn't even use the app because the text was too small.
This has been another large change where I had to go back and re-test screens throughout the entire app, and fix many layout bugs caused by the dynamic text size. It's been very tedious!
In fact, the iOS release is delayed because I found some last-minute bugs and have had to go back to figure out solutions.iOS is up on TestFlight!Also I am aware that there are still bugs in some places when you set the text excessively large. It's not a priority for me to fix those, unless they make the app unusable.
Have been particularly busy so far this year and that will continue for a while, so I may be less responsive here, even though I likely will see your messages. Thanks for continuing to report issues; v1.4 fixes some bugs based on those reports.
Previous topic: February 2025
Where to get it
Android version on Google Play Store: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.talklittle.android.tildes
Or sideloadable APK at https://www.talklittle.com/three-cheers/
iOS version on the App Store: https://apps.apple.com/app/three-cheers-for-tildes/id6470950557
Join TestFlight for iOS beta testing: https://testflight.apple.com/join/mpVk1qIy
91 votes -
SuperCard X enables contactless ATM fraud in real-time
15 votes -
Explaining the Qi standard in automotive
6 votes -
Android phones will soon reboot themselves after sitting unused for three days
43 votes -
Spotify down? No, your Spotify mod was just blocked—here's why it won't work anymore.
27 votes -
EU paves the way for iPhones and Android devices to ditch USB-C entirely
32 votes -
Theory crafting: XR glasses + Windows VM via Android
Title kinda gives the gist of it all. I have been wondering about a way to have a "full" desktop with just XR glasses, a phone, bluetooth keyboard, and an internet connection. Not sure if this is...
Title kinda gives the gist of it all.
I have been wondering about a way to have a "full" desktop with just XR glasses, a phone, bluetooth keyboard, and an internet connection.
Not sure if this is easily doable, or if Windows VMs would be so expensive to make it pointless. Maybe something like WINE or w/e the not 20 year outdated current thing is to run Windows software.
The main use would be to run 1-2 browsers and trading software.
Just curious if this is a foolish idea or not.
5 votes -
Google is bringing every Android game to Windows in big gaming update
26 votes -
The OneXSugar asks: what if Nintendo Switch could transform into Nintendo DS?
9 votes -
Mozilla sees surge in Firefox users thanks to EU’s Digital Markets Act
68 votes -
Three Cheers for Tildes: App updates and feedback (February 2025) — Version 1.3 uses edge-to-edge UI on Android
This topic is for the Three Cheers for Tildes mobile app. I'll summarize the major updates at the start of each similar topic, so people can read the updates and then hit Ignore if they don't care...
This topic is for the Three Cheers for Tildes mobile app.
I'll summarize the major updates at the start of each similar topic, so people can read the updates and then hit Ignore if they don't care about more frequent updates and user feedback.
Recently:
[Android] Version 1.3.6 (Feb 28, 2025): Fixed minor UI bugs.
[iOS] Version 1.3.1 (Feb 27, 2025): Fixed an annoying scroll bug when typing comments and posts.
[Android] Version 1.3.5 (Feb 19, 2025): Fixed keyboard and animation bugs.
[Android] Version 1.3.4 (Feb 12, 2025): Fixed keyboard and markdown bar bugs.
[Android] Version 1.3.3 (Feb 11, 2025): Fixed keyboard bugs.[Cancelled this release.][Android] Version 1.3.2 (Feb 11, 2025): Fixed bugs reported in comments.
Version 1.3.0 (Feb 9, 2025):
This is an Android-focused update. Android 15 makes apps edge-to-edge by default so it's time to move to edge-to-edge. I've enabled it on Android 11 and higher.
Edge-to-edge mostly means turning the system bars translucent, so you can see the content all the way to the edge, instead of a blank area. In practice, we still need to keep some translucent bars there, so status bar icons and the clock can still be distinguished from app content and not become a jumbled mess.
Implementing this was a gigantic pain (which is why Google received pushback from so many developers and added an opt-out). I had to redo many layouts and re-test every screen in the app multiple times, on different Android versions and different settings (portrait, landscape, single pane, dual pane). Hope it's well received by Three Cheers users! Personally it took me a day to get accustomed to it, but I've ended up liking the edge-to-edge style more. I probably won't add a setting to turn it off.
Screenshots of what it looks like on an Android 14 device as of v1.3.1:
- 3-button nav, edge-to-edge (new): https://postimg.cc/1nnc2rWG
- 3-button nav, old: https://postimg.cc/Hcq4g8Kf
gesture nav, edge-to-edge (new): https://postimg.cc/ctf744G6- gesture nav, edge-to-edge (v1.3.2): https://postimg.cc/TpwHPDYB
- gesture nav, old: https://postimg.cc/PNDQMKvh
Three Cheers for iOS v1.3.0 is only minor bugfixes. iPhone apps are already edge-to-edge, and this change is Google's way of copying/catching up to Apple.
Previous topic: November 2024
Where to get it
Android version on Google Play Store: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.talklittle.android.tildes
Or sideloadable APK at https://www.talklittle.com/three-cheers/
iOS version on the App Store: https://apps.apple.com/app/three-cheers-for-tildes/id6470950557
Join TestFlight for iOS beta testing: https://testflight.apple.com/join/mpVk1qIy
83 votes -
Apple will soon support encrypted RCS messaging with Android users
39 votes -
What's the deal with SafetyCore, the weird app that suddenly appeared on Android?
29 votes -
Amazon Appstore on Android and Coins will be discontinued on August 20, 2025
11 votes -
Apple TV available on Google Play Store
12 votes -
TikTok and TikTok Lite APK are available on TikTok.com
9 votes -
Right to root access
41 votes -
Three Cheers for Tildes: App updates and feedback (November 2024) — Version 1.2 lets you save comment drafts
This topic is for the Three Cheers for Tildes mobile app. I'll summarize the major updates at the start of each similar topic, so people can read the updates and then hit Ignore if they don't care...
This topic is for the Three Cheers for Tildes mobile app.
I'll summarize the major updates at the start of each similar topic, so people can read the updates and then hit Ignore if they don't care about more frequent updates and user feedback.
Recently:
Version 1.2.2 (Dec 5, 2024):
- Added advanced settings to auto-vote on topics when opening them
- Added advanced setting to hide "Reply" from text long-press menu
- Fixed inserting markdown links with parentheses
- Fixed UI bugs in profiles
- Fixed crashes opening certain topics
Happy Thanksgiving! Three Cheers version 1.2 is out for Android and iOS! (Nov 27, 2024)
- Save drafts of comment replies, edits, and private message replies
- Manage drafts via Settings
- Improved some error messages
Does not yet support saving drafts of new submissions
I know some of you were hoping for topic submission drafts, but I wanted to release what I've implemented so far with comment drafts. This version took a decent amount of time to develop, and I didn't want to delay it further by adding submission drafts in this release. Thanks for your patience!
Previous topic: September 2024
Where to get it
Android version on Google Play Store: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.talklittle.android.tildes
Or sideloadable APK at https://www.talklittle.com/three-cheers/
iOS version on the App Store: https://apps.apple.com/app/three-cheers-for-tildes/id6470950557
Join TestFlight for iOS beta testing: https://testflight.apple.com/join/mpVk1qIy
97 votes -
Looking for an Android tablet with some probably unreachable requirements
Hello. I'm currently in the market for an Android tablet, not strictly for my personal usage, but for my family so there's one easily reachable touch screen computer around the house. The problems...
Hello. I'm currently in the market for an Android tablet, not strictly for my personal usage, but for my family so there's one easily reachable touch screen computer around the house. The problems start with my requirements, which are... not exactly tablet market friendly:
- Available in France (and without overly high shipping costs)
- Long term manufacturer support so it isn't subject to suddenly become e-waste because they decided to stop providing updates after like 1 major Android release
- Ability to install an Android distribution that doesn't rely on Google apps such as LineageOS + microG
- Sufficient specs to use a web browser and play videos without issues.
- I'd like the model to be easy to repair in the same vein as the Fairphone but that's lower priority
The budget is best defined as "probably not enough" (I don't think I can afford to spend much more than ~400€). Given that I suspect from my initial search not yielding much that fitting all the requirements is impossible especially within that budget, do you have pointers on models that provide an acceptable compromise for what I'm looking for, or that somehow do match all the criteria?
Hilariously, the closest candidate so far within budget seems to be... The Google Pixel tablet, which despite being a Google product has a fairly straightforward way to get an unGoogled ROM on it.
15 votes -
Epic Games Store adds third-party titles, free games, and more on mobile
14 votes -
UFO50AndroidUnofficial: A tool to build your own Android version of UFO 50
18 votes -
Xiaomi WinPlay: Play PC games on Android tablet
4 votes -
The day Google killed the Pixel 4a
39 votes -
Pluvia: Lightweight unofficial Steam client for Android
24 votes -
MCON controller announcement video
6 votes -
Three Cheers feature request: Bookmarks
Can we get the ability to see and then follow bookmarks to bookmarked content?
17 votes -
Private DNS (DoT) on Embedded / IOT Android Devices - Help With Connection Errors
Good evening, everyone. I was wondering if any of my fellow Tilders had experience with using Android's Private DNS feature on unconventional android devices e.g. WearOS, Android TVs etc. It was...
Good evening, everyone. I was wondering if any of my fellow Tilders had experience with using Android's Private DNS feature on unconventional android devices e.g. WearOS, Android TVs etc.
It was quite easy to figure out exactly how to set up an alternative DNS server on these devices. By default, Google has hidden the private DNS setting on them, but it is still accessible from ADB. In both of my examples it is likely easiest to enable “Wireless Debugging”, pair the devices successfully, and then run the commands.
settings put global private_dns_specifier one.one.one.one
(replace this with the pertinent server!!)
settings put global private_dns_mode hostname
The issue I have been running into, however, is if there is seemingly any form of content filtering enabled on the DNS server of your choice, the WearOS device seems to think internet is unavailable when first connecting. If you open the Settings app and leave it open for long enough on the Wi-Fi page, it will switch from “Internet not available” to “Connected”. Contrary to this, if you open an app like Samsung Internet for, it does not take this time and just refuses to use any configured Wi-Fi network.
To go into my specific situation in a little more detail, I use NextDNS configured with Hagezi Multi PRO++ block list. I have no issues on my S24+ with regard to internet being deemed unavailable by the OS (sure the occasional public Wi-Fi network blocks DoT—I just use mobile data then). I have also yet to try it on my Smart TV, which is frankly the more important target device than my watch (I will get around to it in the new year once the holidays are over).
This is all a potentially very convoluted way to ask what people's experiences are with this, and if they have faced similar problems to me when using providers like NextDNS, AdGuard etc. that provide content filtering options on their encrypted DNS connections.
Merci beaucoup !
4 votes