Native Alpha is an Android app that lets you easily create PWAs (Progressive Web Apps) of your favourite websites. Basically, it’s a way to make a website look and work like an app in a matter of seconds.
I’ve mostly used it to access websites that are effectively spyware (Instagram, Facebook etc) but still somewhat necessary to visit every now and then. This is because Native Alpha also has the added benefit of sandboxing PWAs from the rest of your phone. You can tailor each PWA to your needs (block ads, disable cookies etc).
But with Lemmy, I’ve actually enjoyed using Native Alpha for its primary purpose (easy PWAs) instead of secondary one (privacy).
Here’s how you can set up Lemmy on Native Alpha:
- Download & install Native Alpha from F-Droid or the Play Store
- From the main screen, click the “+” icon from the bottom right
- Input the URL of your Lemmy instance
- Tweak the rest of the settings, or leave them unchanged. Personally, I like to allow the PWA to open links in my browser. I’m not too worried about the privacy risks of this, but YMMV of course.
- You’ll now have the option to create an app icon on the home screen if you’d like. Completely up to you.
- All set! Access the PWA from your homescreen or Native Alpha, login, and you’ve got your very own Lemmy “app” in basically <1 minute
You can stop reading now, but some extra thoughts. Pros of this approach:
- Unlike Jerboa, you can now create communities and search posts (not just communities) from your new Lemmy “app”
- Unlike Jerboa, you can now mark messages read from you inbox
- Jerboa is obviously not invasive, but you save some space on your phone, and prevent any potential additional tracking that would’ve come from installing an extra app
Some cons:
- You still can’t open links to other instances within the app. I’m sure there’s an easy workaround for this, I’m just not sure what that is.
- Native Alpha is a bit glitchy with opening links within a PWA. This is why I chose to open links in my external browser above.
- Some UI gestures are unintuitive. To reload, you need to swipe down with two fingers. But if you also enable the “pinch to zoom” option from your PWA settings, you lose the reload functionality for some reason.
Have you already used Native Alpha? Your thoughts on the experience?
If there’s interest, I can also share a quick recording of the Lemmy experience on my phone.
Just joined, absolutely puzzled about how this thing is structured. I can (just about) see how things are structured, after some stops and starts and also understand why that’s a positive thing now but it’s all backwards for me. Why should a user need to get to grips with all of that, and flit around wondering which instance might contain content they want when they just want to start reading stuff that interest them? I’ve joined this instance, who am I missing out on seeing in others? What’s being said in others that I’ll regret missing? Why is it all walled off seemingly necessitating me to register afresh each time I want to check someone where else out?
The content needs to come first, the structure should be presented and needed to be understood secondarily, it’s backwards and it WILL put people off I’m afraid.