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Non-Windows Software / Re: Calendula (android) - a dead project that I use daily
« on: August 01, 2025, 04:59 PM »
Yeah - essentially everything on the play store is a non-starter because of data 'sharing' and collection. There are a couple that have no collection, but they aren't very good, sadly. I've searched the web for 'foss android medication reminder' and the like, and while there are a few options, none are intuitive or reliable (I'm fine with paid apps, or even say $1/month - I support a few foss devs monthly like this, as well as content creators etc), but yeah 'free' at the cost of my data is absolutely DoA.
Currently I'm using the app Tasks.org for notifications, and sticking with Calendula (notifications disabled) for med tracking. It's alright, I have to check two notifications instead of one for each scheduled med, but I get reliable notifications now. Still worried about the SDK/Android version not supporting older apps though. I think it was last updated during android 10.
I even looked at self-hosted services that use either an app with push notifications, or even just email alerts, but nothing seems to exist. Which is wild to me - in my social circle, if you are into tech, you very likely have regular medications. I guess most geek-types just have better memory and time-management abilities than I do
I just did a quick look again before posting, and https://github.com/Futsch1/medTimer might be what I'm looking for. The screenshots look promising, and I haven't seen it before so maybe...
Currently I'm using the app Tasks.org for notifications, and sticking with Calendula (notifications disabled) for med tracking. It's alright, I have to check two notifications instead of one for each scheduled med, but I get reliable notifications now. Still worried about the SDK/Android version not supporting older apps though. I think it was last updated during android 10.
I even looked at self-hosted services that use either an app with push notifications, or even just email alerts, but nothing seems to exist. Which is wild to me - in my social circle, if you are into tech, you very likely have regular medications. I guess most geek-types just have better memory and time-management abilities than I do

I just did a quick look again before posting, and https://github.com/Futsch1/medTimer might be what I'm looking for. The screenshots look promising, and I haven't seen it before so maybe...