One of my favorites is Umbra. I like the vivid clean circles, and it has wide compatability, working smoothly with Nova Launcher, but also working well with Samsung OneUI 5.1 (which many icon packs only partially work with). https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.ryanmkelly.me.umbra
Someology
FreshRSS already has web scraping abilities, and can grab the entire story for truncated feeds almost all of the time, if you add the css container class to the settings for the feed. What does Morss do beyond this?
EDIT After looking, it seems as if it does save the step of looking to see what the CSS class is. But I don't like the fact that all my RSS feeds then go through and are dependent on one single third party. Seems to somewhat defeat the point of self hosting. I'll just stick with FreshRSS alone.
EDIT AGAIN I see now that it is open source, but I still don't see value beyond what FreshRSS can already do.
Does this one work on Verizon in the USA? ATT in the USA?
Since the 0.18 upgrade, just the web page in Firefox for Android. Works better than the apps I've tried. They all still need development time.
I agree. Great job on pattern matching the stripes.
I use an external USB WD hard drive connected to a Synology NAS for backup purposes. The NAS sees it just the same as any other folder on the NAS. You can use it identically to any internal hard drive, except that it will be slower, and if it is a mechanical USB hard drive (not an SSD), then there will usually be a few seconds of lag the first time you access something on it (if it's been unused for a little while) as the drive spins up.
Fellow AquaMail refugee here. My work actually blocks Samsung Mail, but the paid version of Nine works great, and on the same phone, has a noticeably faster UI when compared to AquaMail.
I used AquaMail for years, but they just decided that this fall they will go subscription, and old paid users who bought the app will not get all features. So, I've transitioned to the paid (one time purchase) version of Nine email app(by 9folders). It is equally capable, working with my free accounts and my O365 corporate account (including synching calendar). I looked at several open source options, and none were competent to deal with my Work O365 stuff.
Kbin already calls theirs "magazines", so no need to worry about consistency there.
Well, everybody has their preferences, but it is a big story with a lot of background, and for people who love the story of Dune, it was rather nice to see it given adequate time. It's a large book, and there is still stuff left out. You're not obligated to like these movies (or the book), but if you don't like complex stories that require an attention span, then they've made some Transformers movies you might enjoy. Better choice if you want all action with no world building or story.
But we need guidance for users to choose an instance before they create an account. Right now, people come in blind, into a minefield of politics. It is very frustrating to walk into that mess and then get reprimanded if you mention it. There is no warning for new users.
They could steal all of your logins. This includes things like bank accounts. Your phone could be used as part of a botnet to commit criminal acts. They could shorten your battery life and use up your data plan by mining crypto in the background. You know, just like any other compromised computer.