This app was mentioned in 9 comments, with an average of 3.33 upvotes
>What's is the benefits of it being open source?
People can check out the code to see whether there is any shady thing going on. Some people have a policy to use open source softwares as much as possible. Also, open source projects tend to give users more control. If someday Flud's developer stops maintaining it, we won't be able to do anything about it (this app is prime example). But, if LibreTorrent gets stuck, someone else can continue to maintain it. Play Store already has some LibreTorrent clones.
Hi, I'm looking for an app like EveryWiki but with support for more wikis and works better with tablets. Better design is also a plus. Thanks.
Android:
F-Droid - "F-Droid is an installable catalogue of FOSS (Free and Open Source Software) applications for the Android platform. The client makes it easy to browse, install, and keep track of updates on your device."
Yalp Store - "[It] lets you download apps directly from Google Play Store as apk files...Other features include browsing categories, viewing and leaving reviews, black/whitelisting apps for updates, filtering apps by being free/paid and containing/not containing ads...By default Yalp Store connects to Google services using a built-in account, so you do not have to own a Google account to use it."
Transistor - "Transistor is a bare bones app for listening to radio programs over the internet."
Newpipe - "Lightweight YouTube [app]...NewPipe only parses the YouTube website in order to gain the information it needs."
Material Notes - "Material Notes offers a simple no hassle interface for adding notes in a beautiful material design. It works completely offline, offers rich notes with lists, headings, quotes and more."
Blokada - Free and open-source ad blocker.
EveryWiki - Lightweight Wikipedia app.
EveryWiki is good.