I woke up this morning to an awful looking homescreen on my Android - turns out my Niagara Launcher subscription had lapsed!
I went to check the renewal prices, and they were literally 2-3x more expensive than what I was paying recently - not really excited about that.
Since my homescreen already looked like garbage, I decided may as well try Kvaesitso, a FOSS search-based launcher. I tried it in the past, but abandoned it since I would want to set up my homescreen and apply an icon pack to all the apps individually.
After several hours of setup (mainly applying the icon pack đ), Iâve been using it throughout the rest of the day and Iâm pretty pleased with it, itâs a very smooth, polished and well thought out minimal search-focused launcher. Hereâs what I like and donât like so far:
Like
- Search is much more powerful: can use DuckDuckGo or any custom search engine, search app shortcuts (i.e. webpages saved as apps), as well as tagging apps - none of these are possible in Niagara
- Very, very customizable
- Supports gestures to open apps or run things, so even less apps are needed on my homescreen
- The clock looks so nice
- Cool charging animation that shows rising bubbles from the bottom of the homescreen
- Contextual media controls under the clock
- Allows full-size widgets on the homescreen, these can be hidden off-screen by default if you prefer
Meh but not dealbreakers
- Upcoming calendar events donât show up under the clock, however there is a very nice custom calendar widget included
- Contextual media app cannot be set (e.g. when bluetooth/3.5mm headphone is connected, pin music app on homescreen)
Highly recommend giving it a try if your Niagara subscription lapses, and open to trying a neat FOSS alternative!
Free google play credit, I usually get an email every year for it
But I do pay for Plex, despite Jellyfin being a thing. If I like something and itâs worth it to me personally, why not đ€·ââïžâŠ but you will never find me defending their kinda crappy decisions like the new Discover feature, removal of âAll Songsâ from the plex apps in favor of moving people to Plexamp, removing the Gallery sync a few years ago etc.
Some people want their software to be 100% FOSS all-eyes-on-the-codebase, others just do a balancing act based on their personal values.
I value my software to be âtransparent enoughâ in how it operates, âjust workâ, and hackable to some extent - if I really wanted to I can swap out the ffmpeg binary that Plex uses for transcoding to something else (doesnât remove the Plex Pass limitation for those curious), I can hook into the server API to change ambient lighting colour based on the cover/background of whatever media is playing, I can create speakers running a Linux board to cast Plex media to, etc. But once that hackable ship sails, then I will look to FOSS alternatives.
For Niagara, everything âjust workedâ. No noticeable bugs, fast search, consistent feel and design, useful contextual info (e.g. next calendar event shows under the clock), and gestures that made sense for its overall UX. Using it felt less like you were using a âlauncherâ. The yearly sub was cheap enough that I wouldnât mind covering for it if I didnât get credits, and having a single person working on software usually comes with a high level of attention to detail (particularly in performance and UX) but it does have the downside that the experience may be more opinionated and closed compared to if it was a community-driven FOSS project instead IMO.
Alas, google didnât send credits this year, Niagara made less sense for value/worth-it compared to Kvaesitso, so I abandoned it.
For me, Kvaesitso does everything in a slightly different, much more customizable way, and being FOSS was one of the things that made it particularly attractive as a replacement
Iâm sorry to say this but, your way of picking software is wrong. You should always look for the open source software first, then use proprietary software.
I wouldnât be critical of someone for using Photoshop and Premiere because thereâs no viable alternative for professionals in this area. But using Plex when Jellyfin exists is just wrong. I personally have a jellyfin instance, and thereâs nothing jellyfin canât do when compared to Plex.
Encouraging proprietary software makes them stronger and erodes our rights. Like using chrome instead of Firefox is voting for a future where remote device attestation and forced DRM is a normal thing. Do you want the corps to eradicate your free will?