Right now a lot of us are trying to divest and diversify from having our entire lives on Google both because of the way Google spends its money and the long-standing privacy concerns seeming a bit more scary now.

What services have you switched to and what has your experience been? What do you like, what don’t you like, would you recommend them?

  • JustARegularNerd
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    9 months ago

    Been degoogled for years at this point:

    • Stock Android --> LineageOS or GrapheneOS (no gapps)
    • YouTube --> Invidious*, NewPipe
    • Google Search --> DuckDuckGo, Brave Search
    • Google Play Store --> F-Droid, Aurora Store

    I’ve also decoupled from other similar services:

    • Outlook --> ProtonMail
    • Calendar --> Nextcloud*
    • OneDrive --> Nextcloud*
    • Windows, macOS --> Linux (after years of distrohopping, I found LMDE is incredibly stable while still being a nice “out of box” distro)
    • Google Maps, Apple Maps --> OSMAnd, Organic Maps

    I never used any online password manager myself, I went from writing passwords in a literal book to KeePass, to now Vaultwarden* for that

    * - self hosted

    • @Lyra_Lycan@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      79 months ago

      Nice, I have also chosen most of the same as you. For custom ROM there’s CalyxOS, which ironically makes a Pixel phone one of the best picks for deGoogleing
      I don’t like the proprietary style of Proton Mail, plus they charge to have more than one account logged in, which is very inconvenient, so I set up my own Mailcow instance

      For YouTube I highly recommend ReVanced

      For notes I use Apache-CouchDB and connect using Obsidian with the LiveSync plugin. Live sync is fantastic and is as close as I think I’ll ever get to OneNote.

      NextCloud is great, a pain in the arse to add existing files as you need to upload everything, but a few hours of uploading with Cloudflare set to DNS only is fine

      • JustARegularNerd
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        29 months ago

        I’ve considered CalyxOS but prefer the hardening of GrapheneOS with no gapps - still means a phone decent on privacy. However I do try to keep an open mind, so if CalyxOS has additional privacy benefits to my existing setup I’d be interested.

        I agree with the proprietary style of ProtonMail point, and my workaround for multiple accounts has been to use my own domain and have email rules for delivering messages to the respective folder. I don’t have immediate plans to move from them, but I am watching the news cycle and have considered Tuta as an alternative.

        I haven’t used ReVanced, but I remember the original YouTube Vanced was a mod of the original YouTube apk - if that’s still the case, I feel like ReVanced would offer even less privacy than Invidious or NewPipe. However I’m happy to be corrected.

        I personally use Nextcloud notes but the Obsidian setup you have sounds interesting, especially if it’s like OneNote - I’ll keep it in mind!

        Completely agree on your Nextcloud points - I uploaded my uncompressed Telegram archive to it, which took like 12 hours over my Gigabit lan. I suspect it hated the sheer amount of small files

        • @Lyra_Lycan@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          9 months ago

          You’re absolutely right about Revanced taking the official app and adding mods, I pretty much rely on being logged in for now but the NewPipe etc. alternatives are definitely a more secure option.

          Obsidian actually has more features that I appreciate than OneNote! It not only has community plugins, meaning any dev can bang together a feature, but it specialises in workflow, linking notes together, adding tags, and the golden egg of the app is their Graph view. I used this repo as a guide to set it up, except for manually adding the livesync configuration in-app

  • venotic
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    229 months ago

    ProtonMail was the GMail alternative for awhile, until Proton CEO did a stupid move. Otherwise, ProtonMail had actually been a great service and it was nice having a data cap of 500MB. It told me that was all I ever needed for the few years I had with it.

    Firefox Forks over Chrome.

    • JustEnoughDucks
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      69 months ago

      Tuta also has a free tie up to 1GB. Been slowly switching over for a few years. It isn’t perfect and you can only use the first party app for “security” but tuta supports a ton of privacy efforts within the EU also

      • venotic
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        239 months ago

        Proton CEO endorsed Trump. Proton’s stance has always been against Big Tech and how Big Tech is bad and that’s all well and good. But, it’s contradicting when you praise or endorse an administration that’s more than likely going to let Big Tech roll over everyone.

          • go $fsck yourself
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            9 months ago

            I never saw anyone try to claim that he was MAGA. Even if he doesn’t necessarily support Trump, the tweet is still beyond tone-deaf as it’s still painting Trump in a positive light while Trump is trampling on our rights and the constitution.

            Edit -
            It should also be mentioned that Trump is also actively making things worse for privacy everywhere else, so why even bother cherry-picking that one nomination? It’s obvious that the way Trump works is that if you don’t follow his word he will just fire you. Even if this nomination may have a past that might show they would do some good things for privacy, if you’re not a pawn under Trump’s control then you will just be replaced. So the whole point is moot.

            Additionally, look at the tweet in question “Republicans were the party of big business and Dems stood for the little guys, but today the tables have completely turned.” There is zero excuse for praising the Republican party and somehow not supporting Trump. They are directly connected and the two concepts cannot be divorced. Supporting the Republican party in any way literally means supporting Trump. Full stop.

            • @stardust@lemmy.ca
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              49 months ago

              He also conveniently ignored that after working at the FTC, Slater become the vice-president for legal and regulatory policy for the Internet Association lobby group. Which was founded by “small business” like Google, Amazon, eBay and Facebook.

              And involved in trying to infringe upon privacy rights. https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2019/09/lawmakers-must-not-let-internet-association-weaken-california-consumer-privacy-act

              So yeah, proton founder cherry picked information that tried to make it seem like it was acceptable to praise the pick when reality is the past is too murky to endorse in any manner. And that medium article that gets floated around ignores Internet Association too, so wouldn’t be shocking if it was from proton attempting to do PR damage fixating on identity politics with intentional omission of Internet Association involvement.

          • venotic
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            39 months ago

            It’s even worse. I can’t really see how someone can find anything positive to say about Republicans. I’m sorry but Non-Americans do not really know how bad Republicans really are here, until they’re faced with a party governing their country that behaves similarly to them.

            Oh by the way, Net Neutrality got killed again when the BIden Administration tried appealing for it to be restored. Can you guess which party or affiliation was probably behind it? If you guessed Republican, you’d be right.

            I’m just waiting for the gotcha moment to come around and Proton will one day, truly see that Republicans are not on their side.

          • @stardust@lemmy.ca
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            29 months ago

            Poor article with it attempting to be a character fluff piece that completely ignores that after working at the FTC, Slater become the vice-president for legal and regulatory policy for the Internet Association lobby group. Which was founded by “small business” like Google, Amazon, eBay and Facebook.

            And involved in trying to infringe upon privacy rights. https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2019/09/lawmakers-must-not-let-internet-association-weaken-california-consumer-privacy-act

        • @letsgo@lemm.ee
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          39 months ago

          Proton CEO endorsed Trump

          Even that’s a bit of a stretch. He approved one thing Trump did. It wasn’t blanket praise for everything Trump has done. He also didn’t condemn everything Democratic, just one thing.

          I don’t see why approval of one thing someone did constitutes automatic approval of everything. What if Trump has an amazing recipe for a ham and cheese toastie? Would liking that recipe make me a Putin sympathiser? Of course not.

          • venotic
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            59 months ago

            You’re going down a slippery slope fallacy.

            First off, endorsing means that you have a public approval of or support of so it doesn’t mean what you twisted it up as. So when I say he endorsed Trump, I am saying that he supported or approved something he did, not saying that he’s a MAGA voter. Contexts and learning what words are used in them is kind of important. Maybe you ought to learn that sometime.

            Secondly, I don’t give a flying fuck if Trump ever made some recipe, the old bastard is going around doing too much shit that outweighs any positive thing he’s done. Any positive thing he’s done, we would’ve much have rather it be someone else and not him, because of the amount of stigma that surrounds him because of the shit he’s done that has affected millions.

            That’s literally saying and I really hate beating this dead horse, but it’s saying Hitler actually did make some good art pieces, so we should ignore the fact that he was the executor of a grand scale war that costed millions of lives and hosted a death march on those he didn’t like.

          • go $fsck yourself
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            59 months ago

            I already mentioned this elsewhere, but he did praise Trump and platform him, then he praised the Republican party saying they are the party of “the little guys” (small business), which is just flat out wrong. He does not acknowledge that there are an abundance of things Trump is doing that is fucking awful and disgusting. At best it’s an extremely tone-deaf tweet. What that does do, though, is paint Trump and the Republican party in a very good light. That’s effectively an endorsement without saying it in exact words.

            Also, it’s so very obvious that anyone associated with Trump absolutely needs to abide by Trump’s every whim or else he will replace you. So, the point he was trying to make is entirely moot in the first place.

            There is just no way to praise Trump or the Republican party without showing your ignorance or alignment with them. Just like you can’t just have a little bit of shit in your food. Once you’ve got even a little bit of shit in your food, then you’ve got shit-food.

  • @rraggl@feddit.nl
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    9 months ago
    • Desktop: Linux (Tuxedo)
    • Browser: Vivaldi
    • Search: Ecosia & DDG
    • Mail / Groupware / Calendar / Contacts / Cloud Drive / Meet: Infomaniak kSuite Pro
    • Backup: Syncthing
    • Movies / Netflix / Amazon Prime: buying DVD / Bluray and ripping to my home media server with Jellyfin and Videoland.nl
    • Mobile Phone: Fairphone with /e/OS or Calyx
    • Whatsapp: Signal, Matrix / Element, Briar, Threema
    • YouTube: Grayjay, Floatplane, Nebula, Curiosity Stream
    • Maps: Magic Earth
    • Photos: ente.io
    • Authenticator: Ente Auth
    • Twitter / X: Mastodon
    • Cards: Catima
    • Keep / Evernote: Notesnook / Anytype
    • Backup comms: Meshtastic / UHF / VHF
    • Translate: DeepL
    • Podcasts: Antennapod
    • Google Home: Home Assistant
    • Google Assistant / Gemini: Mistral Le Chat / LLama
    • Router: openWRT (GL.iNET Flint2)
    • Firewall: opnSense (Deciso)
    • Pushbullet: KDE Connect
    • speedtest.net: LibreSpeed
    • Fing: Ning
    • Kobo / Kindle: Pocketbook
    • Amazon: Local / European dealers
    • Pocket: Wallabag
    • Creality / Bambulab: Prusa
    • VPN: Proton, Wireguard, Netbird
  • LinkOpensChest.wav
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    129 months ago

    These are what I use:

    Browsers: Fennec, LibreWolf

    Email Clients: K-9, Fair Email, Proton Mail, Thunderbird

    Pictures: Fossify Camera, Fossify Gallery

    File Sharing: Proton Drive

    YouTube: Tubular

    SMS Messaging: Textra (It’s not FOSS, but unfortunately there doesn’t seem to be a FOSS app in existence that shows the actual name of the person who’s sent the message in group chats. They just show an icon, which isn’t enough for me to keep track)

    App store: Droid-ify (F-Droid), Aurora Store

    Password Manager: Bitwarden

    eBook Reader: Librera FD

    Books: Bookwyrm

    Translation: LibreTranslator

    Calendar: Proton Calendar

    What I can’t find good alternatives for:

    YouTube itself - enough said

    Phone screen translation - I still use Google Assistant, and I’m not aware of anything else that grabs and translates all text on my phone screen

    Maps - Rant time. This one is so annoying because there are FOSS navigation apps based on OpenStreetMap that are excellent in every way except one that makes them unusable for me: Using POV navigation instead of observing the convention of up = north. I did find one that lets you maintain a normal map view during navigation, but it doesn’t keep your position centered automatically, which makes it impossible to use while driving. I have no idea who all you deranged people are who actually like the POV navigation, but there are definitely a lot of you because I can’t find a replacement for Google Maps. I even tried Mapquest because at least it’s not Google, but when I tried using it to navigate the first time, it somehow autocorrected “St” to “Ave” and I ended up lost lol. This maps situation really grinds my gears. I do still try to contribute as much as I can to OSM though because it’s an important project, and hopefully someday an uninsane developer will make a proper alternative to Google Maps.

      • LinkOpensChest.wav
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        Yeah Tubular is basically NewPipe with Sponsorblock. I’ll give Freetube a try.

        What I mean though is … it’s still YouTube, y’know?

    • LinkOpensChest.wav
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      Oh, and I go back and forth between Sear XNG and Startpage for search engine. I know Startpage is Bad, but there’s no search engine in existence that really makes me happy.

    • @letsgo@lemm.ee
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      29 months ago

      I have no idea who all you deranged people are who actually like the POV navigation

      I use both POV and up=north depending on my use case. For some routes where I don’t care about the details of the route I find it useful to have the POV view with what I need now zoomed in and correctly oriented and what I’ll need soon still visible and smaller but still distinguishable.

      The problem with up=north is that when you’ve zoomed right in to see the detail, all the wider view stuff is missing, especially when out of built-up zones. It’d be better if the detail level would be replaced/augmented with a detail density setting, so that when you’re out in the sticks with only you, a small single track road with grass down the middle and one sheep visible all the way up to the horizon in any direction that you don’t have to zoom right in to the individual blades of grass before you see the road you’re on.

      Other times I do care about the route, and in those cases I’ll use up=north and manual zoom as needed. I still get caught out though when travelling south and the arrow pointing left means I need to turn right.

      When I first saw POV I thought it was a stupid gimmick. But then I tried it out and really liked it, but not always.

      • LinkOpensChest.wav
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        I always like seeing the details, and I can’t imaging looking at a map and up not being north. It would be like reading a book turned sideways – hypothetically I could do it, but it would require far more brainpower to interpret than it’s worth. I do like my location kept as the centerpoint though. That’s really nice, but apparently hard to implement. The “re-center” feature on Google Maps is my friend.

  • sbird [moved to sopuli]
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    9 months ago

    for me:

    • google drive > pcloud (objectively better app tbh)
    • chrome > librewolf > floorp (i like having the tab bar at the bottom, and librewolf is a bit annoying sometimes)
    • photos > ente
    • gmail > proton > tuta > “disroot” (proton and tuta aren’t IMAP, and their first-party apps are slow. disroot probably isn’t the best one, I just chose one that supports IMAP)
    • google search > ddg > SearXNG
    • google office > onlyoffice on windows, libreoffice on linux
    • google maps > Organic Maps
    • google passwords > bitwarden
    • google auth > ente auth :)
  • Lettuce eat lettuce
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    109 months ago

    The #1 Google service/app that I used in the past was Google Maps. I’ve replaced it with Magic Earth for the last few years and it’s been great. It uses Open Street Map for its navigation data, handles addresses very well, has live crowd-sourced traffic and hazard data, and can record rolling footage if you want it to act like a dashcam.

    It works on Android and iOS, and supports Apple watch and Android car play if you use those.

    For email I use Protonmail, for Google drove I use Proton Drive and my own self hosted NAS. For browsing I use several different Firefox forks like Zen, Floorp, LibreWolf, etc. UnGoogled Chromium for the rare times that a website “needs” Chrome to run.

    My phone runs GrapheneOS which works great.

    • Bhaelfur
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      59 months ago

      I’ll have to check out Magic Earth. My biggest fear switching from Google Maps was not having up to date road closures or accident reports.

      • Lettuce eat lettuce
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        49 months ago

        The traffic data, at least in my area of the US, is pretty good.

        Road closures are a rough point for sure. Generally, Magic Earth does have them marked, but not always. And the map data is only updated once a month. So even if a new closure does show up on Magic Earth, it takes several weeks to a month.

        This isn’t a terrible issue for me in my area, because I know the major roads and highways decently well, but when in other states or cities, it can be a problem.

        That being said, it’s still about 80% accurate on the whole. And on rare occasion, it has actually had a closure marked correctly that Google Maps didn’t.

  • @Bronzie@sh.itjust.works
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    Almost everything, finally!
    OS: GrapheneOS
    Calendar: Proton
    Browser: Firefox
    Storage: NAS
    Youtube: NewPipe and SmartTube

    I’m still stuck with Maps and Android in my car as it has Android Automotive, but I’m happy with my progress so far

  • silly goose meekah
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    • Desktop OS: Linux (Arch)
    • Phone OS: /e/OS
    • mail, notes, calendar, online storager: mureno
    • maps: cittymapper, magic earth

    I’m pretty happy with all of those

    • @KingDionysus@lemm.ee
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      You don’t use gentoo? Ha. Peasant. /s

      I actually love arch and somehow found arch easier than all the other distros once you get it down.

  • 0485
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    89 months ago

    I have moved away from Google Contacts and Google Calendar and am now using Synology Calendar/Contacts. I’ve left Google Drive for Synology Drive and I’ve left Google Photos for Synology Photos. Everything is self hosted and self maintained.

    • Luc
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      19 months ago

      Just as a small note just in case, since this data is quite irreplaceable: raid isn’t backup. Especially if the drives are of the same model, they’re fairly likely to fail at the same time. Speaking from experience sadly

      I use restic for off-site backups, hosted with a friend

  • Shimitar
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    69 months ago

    Firefox.

    Immich for photos

    Radicale for calendar and contacts

    My own mail domain and server, for mail

    Lineages on android

    The only thing I cannot do without, is google maps.

      • JustARegularNerd
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        89 months ago

        As per their website:

        As online advertising becomes ever more ubiquitous and unsanctioned, AdNauseam works to complete the cycle by automating ad clicks universally and blindly on behalf of its users. Built atop uBlock Origin, AdNauseam quietly clicks on every blocked ad, registering a visit on ad networks’ databases. As the collected data gathered shows an omnivorous click-stream, user tracking, targeting and surveillance become futile

        • @POTOOOOOOOO@reddthat.com
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          29 months ago

          Yep that’s it. It’s not only an ad blocker, but an a huge middle finger to the ad industry. Leaving this on for a few weeks can cause thousands in damages. And you can set it up to only do this to tracking ads. It’s pretty neat. You definitely should not run this with an extension that frequently refreshes the page though. That would definitely be a very bad idea if everyone did that.

  • @SexDwarf@lemmy.world
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    Replaced

    • Gmail -> Proton Mail
    • Keep -> Joplin
    • Docs -> LibreOffice + OpenDocument Reader
    • Drive 100 Gb -> Proton Drive (free 5 Gb)
    • Photos -> ente photos
    • Play Books -> ReadEra Premium + Kobo
    • Translate & Lens -> DeepL

    Haven’t been able to replace (just yet)

    • Wallet
    • Maps & Earth
    • Sheets
    • Home
    • Calendar
      • @SexDwarf@lemmy.world
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        9 months ago

        We tried it but my wife hated it. With Proton, you have choose one subscription. I already use Pass plus so I can’t have Mail plus (shared calendars) without Proton ultimate which is an overkill in my situation and too expensive.

    • @iborrelli@lemm.ee
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      19 months ago

      Google sheets is simply… Really good. I haven’t been able to find anything else close. I’ve tried libre and even excel but sheets is by far my favourite. And I really love spreadsheets so I feel I’m in a horrible position and so torn.

      • @SexDwarf@lemmy.world
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        19 months ago

        Tell me about it. Wallet is literally the only good option. The alternatives to Maps don’t come even close, it’s simply the best and most convenient app. Same with Earth (use it rarely but still).

  • @Lyra_Lycan@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    I guess I’ll share my setup aha. Forewarning: I invested heavily into self hosting and being in full control of as much as possible, mainly to try to be ‘Internet independent’.

    • Google ads, APIs, telemetry and everything else that is not necessary: AdGuard Home (selfhosted)
    • Android app store: Fdroid with IzzyOnDroid repo, failing that Aurora Store, if apps still whine about not being to use Play Services then I use the Play Store
    • Gmail: Mailcow Dockerized (selfhosted) with K9 Android client
    • SMS (not that I use it anyway): Fossify SMS
    • Instant messaging: Matrix (selfhosted) for Discord/Telegram style with Element client, or Telegram FOSS
    • File Manager (I goddamn hate that Google Files forces itself onto any phone after initial setup, even when there’s a manufacturer installed one already): Material Files
    • GBoard (It’s also really fucking invasive): HeliBoard
    • YouTube: via Revanced Manager, with Odysee as a hopeful replacement. Much lower userbase though, obviously.
    • Google Photos (refuses to settle for less than 100% file access): Part of a self hosted Samba share that I keep synced to via FolderSync (from Play Store - they charge €10 for the app outside of Google)
    • Chrome: Brave (I downloaded a script to debloat it of crypto and AI)
    • Google Search: My partner uses Ecosia for environment reasons, and I use DuckDuckGo for privacy reasons
    • Chromecast: I recommend a Roku
    • AndroidOS: CalyxOS if Pixel, LineageOS if not
    • Play Services: Gapps pico or nano because some things are still tied to Play Services
    • Maps is superior, unfortunately, but OSMAnd is a good alt
    • Google DNS, used by default by a lot of things like routers: Cloudflare 1.1.1.1 and 1.0.0.1
        • @Lyra_Lycan@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          19 months ago

          I definitely understand their sentiment though - Google is obviously a search engine monopoly, and I simply found Chromium to be better suited to my needs than Firefox, and settled for a modified Chromium base.

    • kamen
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      I’ve tried HeliBoard as already suggested elsewhere, but I find its autocorrect and suggestions absolutely abysmal in English and even worse in my native Bulgarian. With Gboard I can usually type a letter or two and it already knows what’s up, and it often knows what’s the next word based just on the previous one.

      How’s your experience with it?

      • @black0ut@pawb.social
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        19 months ago

        Usually autocorrect accuracy is directly proportional to info stealing by the keyboard. Google’s autocorrect is so good because it’s constantly phoning home with what people write so they can improve their model.

        I use a keyboard with no autocorrect (Unexpected Keyboard), and, although it took a while to get used to it, I got used to typing fast and mostly accurately after some time using it. You can also get used to your autocorrect’s quirks, and you’ll find that you will type faster with it.

      • Fleppensteyn
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        19 months ago

        I tried Heliboard but went back to SwiftKey. It’s the best keyboard I’ve found. It’s from Microsoft but I have internet access disabled in Tracker Control and it works fine with multiple languages, swipe and emoji.

        • kamen
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          19 months ago

          I’ve tried SwiftKey as well, but last I remember it was a bit sluggish. I’ll give it another try, thanks.

      • @Lyra_Lycan@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        That’s pretty accurate tbh, I’m ashamed to say I only know English, but a couple downsides include poor suggestions and aggressive replacement (doesn’t save if you prefer an acronym to be lowercase), and it’s amusing watching it freak out when I enter an email address. I do need it though - I’m glad it *does have those features, and a clipboard. Plus I often remote access my PC and my Linux server, and being able to use up/down arrow keys is an absolute must, at least for now. Not even the Gboard had that and it took a little while to find one.

        I suppose the best keyboard for you is determined by your reliance on features like autocomplete, predictive input (i.e. listing emails in an email box), clipboard, multi-language support, and aesthetic customisation!