Any suggestions for paid one time purchase apps on the Google play store?

53 points

Tasker. Basically an interface for writing scripts for your phone. Even if you don’t have a use case in the beginning you’ll start finding things to do with it.

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20 points

I used it to identify the cell towers near my home and turn wifi off when I was out of their range and back on when I was in range. It seemed to help save battery by not constantly looking for wifi networks and I didn’t have to remember to turn it off and on manually.

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2 points

Cell towers are not wifi, but I think I understand what you mean.

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7 points
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Never said they were lol

At home I want wifi on, and away I want it off. This saves battery so it’s not constantly looking for wifi networks.

I could achieve similar with location service turned on all the time, but that drains battery even more.

Since cellular data is always connected to some cell tower nearby, and Tasker is able to identify the cell tower names, I used the ones near my home as flags to indicate “I’m close to home, therefore turn on WiFi because I’ll be home soon”. And turn it off when I leave my neighborhood.

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2 points
Deleted by creator
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2 points

That’s smart!

I have a few triggers that turn on Do Not Disturb mode:

  1. When I open an app that I doom scroll before I fall asleep and when I wake up.

  2. When I connect to my doctor’s or dentist’s office wifi.

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11 points

I used tasker to display an icon on my status bar to tell me whether auto rotate is enabled or not. I kept lying down on my side forgetting that I had auto rotate on and my display would rotate when I didn’t want it to.

It’s an incredibly specific and minor thing that was annoying me, but tasker let me fix it. It’s a great tool, but can be complicated if you aren’t familiar with scripting. Luckily it’s got some presets and a “basic” mode.

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3 points
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There’s a completely free app (no ads, either) that prevents auto-rotate from actually happening unless you want it to. It pops up an icon when your phone wants to rotate, and it you don’t tap it within the timeout (adjustable up to 3 seconds) then the icon goes away and the rotation never happens. It’s highly customizable, and I just can’t live without it since I found it.

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1 point

I also find that super annoying!

I created a trigger to disable auto-rotate when I’m using the apps I’m usually browsing while in bed (i.e. doom scrolling social media) but I like your idea.

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9 points

I migrated to Macrodroid. Much more intuitive and straightforward.

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2 points

You’ve reminded me that I have premium from like a decade ago. I should have another go with it.

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8 points

What are some things you use it for if you don’t mind my asking?

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19 points

Lots of things

  • Change my ringtone based on time/location
  • Silence phone if my calendar has the word meet or meeting
  • Parse a local news website and read the headlines to me after I dismiss my morning alarm
  • Set up car mode if it is plugged in and connected to my car’s Bluetooth
  • Turn on WiFi based on location
  • etc
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3 points

I have a script which saves my fine location to a Google sheet when I disconnect from my car’s Bluetooth. If, like me, you are the sort of klutz who can lose their car in a two-car garage…

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9 points

The main thing is a script to stop any media playing and turn off the screen after x minutes, so I can fall asleep watching YouTube or listening to something. There’s probably already an app for that but this is pretty customizable.

Another stupid use is putting the phone on silent while using the camera app because Samsung won’t let you turn off the camera shutter sound.

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8 points

I’ve got some that pulls the picture from Bing and the picture from NASA and set them to my wall paper and lock screen back grounds.

I’ve got another one that silences my phone when I’m at work or church and not connected to my car blue tooth. I used something similar in college to silence my phone when a calendar event was happening. My phone never made a peep during a lecture! It resets volumes to normal levels after the silent period is done.

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6 points

I used to get up at 5am and had to get ready for work in the dark so I didn’t wake my family. I’m a klutz and fumbling with my phone’s flashlight constantly just got annoying.

I ended up making a little script so that between 5am and 5:30, shaking the phone turned the flashlight on. After 5:30 the sensor turns off to save battery, since I didn’t really need it at that point.

You can do all kinds of handy little things like that

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1 point

I completely forgot I bought that once during a discount, but didn’t even have it installed. Started using it now, thanks.

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41 points

Balatro

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10 points

I think my cousin told me he really likes this game. Is it really worth the price?

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10 points

Yes

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5 points

I didnt enjoy it but my friends that do have lost days to it lol

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4 points

I got it yesterday, it’s bloody solid. Did tend to demolish my battery a bit, but that night just have been because time was dissolving before by very eyes. If you commute or have to burn time a lot (I spent a lot of time in hospital waiting rooms recently) then it’s amazing m no microtransactions either

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3 points

It is one of the best games I’ve played this year. Really easy to get into for short bits, I pirated it first, played for a few hours on PC, bought it, played it for a few dozen more, and happily bought it for my phone.

Really good, very addictive

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3 points

Very much worthwhile. Pick up Slay the Spire while you’re at it.

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32 points

Sleep as Android

It’s just a really great alarm clock app, but with tons of other sleep tracking functionality. I’ve always had trouble sleeping through my alarms, but I never do with this.

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10 points

If you run Home Assistant, Sleep as Android can publish events to an MQTT broker so you can create automations based on those events, like “smart_period”, “awake”, “not_awake”, “alarm_alert_smart”, etc.

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3 points

I used tasker to slowly ramp up my bedroom lights before my alarm goes off. Makes it easier to get up and not as jaring.

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3 points

If you have Hue bulbs (and maybe some other now, haven’t looked in a while) Sleep as Android can do that too!

I came to say Sleep as Android as well. Been using it since we were submitting bug reports on Google+ (anyone old enough to remember Google+ ? lol) … absolutely love it.

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2 points

I did the same thing with home assistant and just the stock clock app. Just looking at the “next alarm” sensor state.

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2 points

As a backup option, you can give Google Assistant or a Google Home the following commands: “at 10PM, sleep {lightname}” to dim, or “at 6AM, wake {lightname}” to brighten - both work over the space of a half-hour, and for some odd reason that’s not customizable.

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3 points
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£70 premium version is a little rich for my blood. O_O

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7 points

Yikes! Is that what it is now? I got it a decade ago for $5.

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3 points

Same! Wow, that is a bit much :-(

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2 points

Yeah same here! I had no idea it was that much now.

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30 points

I use Paprika 3 extensively.

I find recipes online, download them to the app stripped of all the online recipe bloat. It sorts all the information automatically, including notes and nutritional info. I can check off ingredients and highlight directions, edit tags, compile menus, add my own notes and write my own recipes, it automatically provides a grocery checklist, has a serving calculator to adjust amounts for whole recipes, built in timers, and that’s just the basics off the top of my head.

It’s free up to a certain amount of storage but I think all the features are available.

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2 points

Came here for this. Best app I own.

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25 points

Torque and a $5 BT car computer dongle. It tells you everything about your car. You can see what warning lights mean and clear the codes.

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7 points

What are the main things you use it for? All I ever do is change tires and oil. Both my cars are old, but have never broken down.

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12 points

I’m not the person you replied to, but it’s great for telling you why the check engine light is on. If you’re somewhere that requires emission testing: you can diagnose if you have an exhaust leak, bad O2 sensor, clogged catalytic converter, etc. Besides that: its good just to know if the check engine light can be safely ignored.

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2 points

Nice, fortunately my check engine light has never been on, but when it comes on, I’m doing this!

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8 points

To oversimplify, your car maintains a list of faults, and if that list isn’t empty, it’ll turn on the check engine light. An obd2 code reader let’s you see those codes. I can vouch that these Bluetooth readers + torque are the cheapest way to get these codes without going to a parts store. Even if you have no intention of doing your own work on your car, it’s good to have an idea what the problem is so your mechanic doesn’t rip you off.

They generally only return obd2 codes though, which are required by law for emissions. Many automakers keep extra, proprietary codes that require expensive, proprietary tools to read.

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3 points

Am I looking at the wrong Torque? Doesnt work on newer versions of Android, and their webpage recommends a bunch of $150 OBD BT readers that are all discontinued a decade ago.

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2 points

I’ve started using Piston instead. It’s more clean and modern looking and seems to do everything that torque did for me.

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1 point

What dongle do you recommend?

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