That diverges from how the app was intended to be used or for what audiences it was marketed for

  • _g_be@lemmy.world
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    16 hours ago

    I used a Color Picker app (an app that generates color palettes of complimentary colors from one or more color inputs or a picture) to find good paint combinations for d&d miniature painting.

    That’s not that far off from it’s intended use, but I bet it’s not the audience they imagined lol

  • layzerjeyt@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    18 hours ago

    Not what you were asking, but delta chat is an app that turns email into chat. Same premise.

    I use the f droid store as a launcher almost more than I use my launcher’s native feature when I have to use an app thats not on the home screen. I can’t remember the weird names people give their projects so I just search for what I need and open whatever is already installed.

    I use bitwarden password manager to keep notes about websites because it loads in the sidebar according to URL automatically. (More useful on desktop than mobile.)

    • thatsnomayo [he/him]@lemmy.mlB
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      2 hours ago

      I fucking love Arcane/Delta Chat I made it my main email client. Murena.io is the best free option with compatibility I have found. There is a rate limit of one email sent per five minutes for it tho. It’s a great way to stack a bunch of aliasing accounts. I use Tutanota to make the emails for the Murena accounts.

      One weird trick that will change your life (unironically) is setting custom notification sounds for various email reply chains and other Arcane Chat groups. Cheogram for XMPP can do this even better. I wish they could adopt all of each other’s features. This may sound like it has limited usefulness to anyone who hasn’t played around with feeding bots & RSS feeds into other chat services for portability, convenience, etc, but it can be used to unify all kinds of things. The Mastodon bot is very useful

      It’s tucked away in the menu but the backups for Arcane Chat are very easy to use, totally extensive due to the storage-based nature of the protocol, with the disadvantage of not being encrypted, automated, and password-locked

      If you have trouble remembering app names precisely, I recommend KISS Launcher. Although it is very search-heavy, it has a terrific tagging system. I’d recommend alphabetizing your tags though as it is slightly quirky. Tagging home screen shortcuts is my crack. So, I guess that’s my answer to OP as well. Nothing like KISS I am aware of. Best way to use Android.

  • dragonlover@lemmy.zip
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    21 hours ago

    I use audiobookshelf to manage my TTRPG pdfs. It can correlate multiple files under one “Title” which makes organizing ttrpg stuff simple and it’s a nice interface. Plus it’s self host able so I can share it with the other people at my table. I just wish the PDF reader was a little more robust but it mostly does the job.

    • jacksilver@lemmy.world
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      48 minutes ago

      I also use audiobookshelf in a weird way. I use it to read Manga and comics on my phone/e-reader.

      While the folder structure it uses is a bit convoluted, the UI and apps are great.

  • Postmortal_Pop@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    I have home assistant running on my home server. It’s default use is managing your smart home but my house is too poor to be smart so I use it to push notifications about chores to my kid.

      • 3abas@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        https://www.home-assistant.io/

        Home Assistant IS the state of the art. Local and privacy first, very powerful and has a huge community that provides a huge catalog of integrations that fill the gap that official integrations don’t cover. Incredibly customizable and capable.

        You can buy their official hardware, install it on a raspberry pi to make a dedicated hardware yourself, or install it on any computer.

        Their hardware has matured and is now in the polished luxury category, so I would only consider it if you start using it and know you’re going to use it enough to justify it, just install it on a computer or Nas/(docker) if you have one and try it out.

        There is a learning curve, plenty of good YouTube tutorials and a very helpful community online though. Have fun!

  • Luc@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    GSam Battery Monitor, I use to check things like until what time I was up or how cold it was in the bedroom overnight. The graphs show when my phone screen was on (when I set my alarm) and log the battery temperature which I’ve found matches room temperature after a few hours (with WiFi/data off so it’s not doing whatever background tasks if people are conversing in a group chat or so)

    One time I was absolutely certain my alarms hadn’t gone off but you could see a little blip on the screen graph, once every minute, matching precisely the (turned off) alarms. Either Sam is in on it or I just slept really soundly that day :D

    Apparently it has ads though. Wouldn’t recommend, I always had it firewalled because I didn’t think it needed internet access to display some offline data from my phone in the first place and apparently that also works as an ad blocker? Fun side effect. But so I’m very interested in any open source alternatives people know of!

  • SomGye@sh.itjust.works
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    2 days ago

    I have used Telegram, for over 12 years, to send messages and important notes to myself, and to very quickly send files between devices. It supports fast and smart search and pinning, and it acts as an archive for certain dates and events, but with the ability to have file attachments or screenshots on those dates (unlike a normal calendar). Everything else I have tried has some of these features, kind of, but nothing else has all of them and in the way that I need. Plus it’s free and fast and fully cross-platform.

  • monovergent@lemmy.ml
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    2 days ago

    There is a particular camera app that a few of my close friends and I have used for group photos since over a decade ago. It’s proprietary and tracker-infested, but there’s a certain humor and nostalgia to the filters and effects that I’ve never found a good way to replicate without the app. It’s sort of an in-joke that we insist on using it whenever we do get together. So I have it on my secondary device and painstakingly patched the apk so it can run without any unnecessary permissions.

      • monovergent@lemmy.ml
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        2 days ago

        Well, that’s the thing. I wasn’t going to bow down to that app’s demands or put a band-aid on it, I had to conquer it.

  • NONE@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    The DeepL app as a “Syntax corrector”.

    English is not my main language. I translate what I write in English to Spanish to see if it’s correct.

    • cheese_greater@lemmy.worldOP
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      2 days ago

      Right but do you use it for some orthogonal use? Arent you just using it exactly as intended for its primary purpose?

      • deranger@sh.itjust.works
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        2 days ago

        Should have read more, I wasn’t aware that was part of the question. I’m just posting about niche usage apps I like. I don’t use them often, but they’re essential for their niche.

        Idk if this counts, but I use the Reminders app on my phone to create packing lists for work travel. Very easy to uncheck everything then re-check off things as you pack them. Keep building a perpetual packing list and you’ll never forget things. Lists in general are awesome for offloading cognitive workload.

        RunPee will alert you when there’s a lull in a movie so you can sneak away to take a leak. Includes a plot summary of what you missed while you pissed.

        RPM app - I use this for ensuring my turntable is spinning at the correct RPM.

        I’ve got a Dolby app on my Mac that I use for encoding or decoding Dolby B/C tape recordings because I’m a cassette nerd. Super niche.

        I also enjoy GPS raw data apps for seeing how fast my airplane is going when it takes off.

        If I think of any more I’ll post again.

      • evasive_chimpanzee@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        Idk about merlin, but with iNaturalist, the purpose was logging sightings and locations of plants/animals/fungi/etc, and letting people double check your ID so it can be used in research.

        This built a massive database of images, locations, times, etc, which is a really good training set for image (or sound) recognition. Now the app is really good at automatically recognizing stuff from pictures, so people just use it for that. The app actually started to try to penalize you for using it for identification without actually logging stuff.

  • Eggyhead@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    I’m not sure if this counts, but I use Readdle Documents, which is a file browser from before the files app on iOS, on my iPad as kind of a siloed collection of files and folders exclusively for work. I can still access those folders from my desktop finder at home through iCloud Drive just like anything else, but accessing all my personal files from the app on iPad (which is what I take to work) is a bit trickier, so it just keeps all my work things organized, focused, and away from my personal life.