Map Apps for GrapheneOS
from zeroClassSOLDIER@feddit.org to degoogle@lemmy.ml on 17 May 17:25
https://feddit.org/post/29975885

Well, what maps do you recommend over Apple or Google?

I have just recently de-googled my phone with GrapheneOS.

I want something that is going to be real-time and respect privacy.

#degoogle

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airikr@lemmy.ml on 17 May 17:29 next collapse

Then OsmAnd is the right map app for you.

Other say that Organic Maps is better, but after testing it while travelling, I don’t understand how. The road instructions was barely seen while you could clearly see it in OsmAnd.

zeroClassSOLDIER@feddit.org on 17 May 17:36 next collapse

Do you recommend side-loading it or use Obtainium?

airikr@lemmy.ml on 17 May 17:47 next collapse

I only use F-Droid for installing it. Have tried Obtainium for all my FOSS apps, but Microsoft only rate limiting me all the time.

BladeFederation@piefed.social on 17 May 18:43 collapse

Anything you can get through F-Droid is better. It’s more well put together, easier to set up than Obtanium, and auto updates work on GrapheneOS.

guymontag@lemmy.ml on 17 May 19:24 collapse

Its bad practice to use fdroid. No bueno

MrSoup@lemmy.zip on 17 May 19:57 next collapse

Why?

MonaySimpson@lemmy.ml on 18 May 00:31 collapse

See my reply and the one by bladefederation.

BladeFederation@piefed.social on 17 May 20:27 next collapse

This is not correct, the only thing you can say against it is that the main repo builds from source & uses its own signing key instead of just hosting an apk and using the dev’s key. This means you have to trust F-Droid more than usual, but given their hard stance for all apps being FOSS and notating non free services, I trust them more than Google who has hosted straight up malware, or certainly more than downloading from a random Github with Obtanium with no automatic signing confirmation. It also gives somewhat of a guarantee that what is in the code is actually the only thing in the app. Also if the signing is an issue for you, there is always IzzyOnDroid or dev specific repositories that will still let you manage app updates through F-Droid or third party clients like Droid-ify.

MonaySimpson@lemmy.ml on 18 May 00:30 collapse

Not according to graphene documentation. From what I remember it’s because Obtaniuam can’t check the signature of the APK. There is app verifier (recommended by obtanium) but it dosnt work with many apps as they don’t publish the signature. So you can’t verify the APK is what its supposed to be.

FDroid builds the app and signs it. While this may intorduce risk of Fdrpid are doing something dodgey the many eyes and build logs should pick it up.

BladeFederation@piefed.social on 18 May 01:16 collapse

You are correct, Obtanium has no automated signing process and App Verifier verified like one time for me.

Aurora Store used to not have it either but now it does so it’s a pretty easy recommend for me if you’re trying to ditch Play Store completely.

Graphene devs tend to recommend Play Store over F-Droid because Google does typically have A-1 security and that is their top priority. But not very good vetting apps as I mentioned, and tleven non malware has tons of trackers so I avoid Google’s repository if possible. Also many people on GrapheneOS obviously prefer to not have Play Services…

XLE@piefed.social on 17 May 20:14 collapse

FWIW CoMaps what Organic is now called (the talented developers left Organic after internal issues)

wltr@discuss.tchncs.de on 17 May 22:37 collapse

Organic (as well as the original project) has Russian founders, so I’m not surprised. After the war they waged in Ukraine, I prefer staying away from anything Russians do, even if it’s open source.

Telegram is in the same bucket. All developers are Russians. They claim they actually have Ukrainian developers, so they’re like above the war. Which is weird given all the beneficiary are Russians, plus their CEO is visiting Sucker Carlson, and spilling very questionable political opinions (so to say).

I haven’t been following maps with me project that closely, but I remember me reading the relatively recent drama with Organic → CoMaps, and reacted with not being surprised.

Mynameisallen@lemmy.zip on 17 May 18:34 next collapse

CoMaps is probably the best of these, uses open maps as the back end but has a much better up

BladeFederation@piefed.social on 17 May 18:39 next collapse

I personally find all the open source Open Street Maps based apps to be extremely lacking. 90% of the places I’d try to find aren’t there and for some. of them navigation was off too. I use Here We Go.

Good: No missing locations. Uses Trip Advisor for reviews. Database & navigation is good. Less features than Google but low bs. Privacy policy states that no personal user data is collected without consent, and is pretty short & sweet. Telemetry is opt in, though you can’t get traffic data without it. There is a toggle to run it entirely offline. There are buttons to delete history or delete all data collection taken. Based in the Netherlands. Owned mostly by German car manufacturers.

Bad: No search along route or Voice Assistant in Android Auto. Closed source. 2 trackers (Facebook login, Google Crashlytics, both optional though). Rarely any pictures. Requires you to download from the Play Store to use in Android Auto (no Aurora).

iByteABit@lemmy.ml on 17 May 19:31 next collapse

Open Street Maps based apps to be extremely lacking

This should be more of a shared responsibility, it’s not an app’s fault but the simple fact that OSM lacks a lot of information in many areas. That’s why it’s so important to contribute to OSM even a little bit, just mapping your own street block and nothing else is already a huge improvement.

CorrectAlias@piefed.blahaj.zone on 17 May 21:12 next collapse

Did you contribute to OSM to make the maps better for you and everyone else?

My area had nothing a couple of years ago. But I started contributing every week or so and it’s filled out nicely, and some other people started doing the same. It’s more accurate than Google Maps in my area now.

non_burglar@lemmy.world on 17 May 21:43 next collapse

Open street maps is closed source?

CorrectAlias@piefed.blahaj.zone on 17 May 22:32 collapse

I think they’re talking about “Here We Go”

MonaySimpson@lemmy.ml on 18 May 00:34 collapse

I thought MS owned that or bought it. 🤔

BladeFederation@piefed.social on 18 May 01:08 collapse

Nope

inbn@lemmy.zip on 17 May 19:27 next collapse

Agree that maps is one of the harder ones to replace and I’ve settled into a few different apps by use case.

Here WeGo has been a nice compromise of having a solid search function, good routing, offline maps, some reviews via trip advisor, supports my local transit system, and has a sane privacy policy even if its not FOSS. Can also save locations accountless.

CoMaps I use as my main offline walking/biking and would love to see the team make more improvements over time.

I use GMaps WV for the random times I still need to use GoogleMaps usually for looking up reviews or as a backup when other maps fail me.

So really Here WeGo is the closest one to one replacement but I still use the other two as the need arises.

MxRemy@piefed.social on 17 May 19:50 next collapse

I use Comaps, but all the open source map apps are using OpenStreetMaps on the backend. OpenStreetMaps varies from way better to way worse than google maps depending on where you are, but can be manually improved by anyone willing to take the time!

TheDarkQuark@lemmy.world on 17 May 20:32 next collapse

I usually go with CoMaps. If it doesn’t work, then I go to GMaps WV (I have my VPN on, so Google doesn’t know my IP), get the coordinates of the destination, and open it in CoMaps.

Links:

CoMaps: codeberg.org/comaps/comaps

GMaps WV: github.com/woheller69/maps

vatlark@lemmy.world on 17 May 23:31 next collapse

Cartes.app has been developing very rapidly. Its great for public transit, biking, car, and milti-modal.

Its only a web app so its weak for turn-by-turn navigation but it easily lets you move your itinerary to comaps.

Mapy.com (its an app) and Magic Earth have traffic. Neither are open source but they arent google.

MonaySimpson@lemmy.ml on 18 May 00:37 next collapse

Chiming in to say you can use Wayz its owned by google but you dont need google services installed. Basically googlemaps. Not foss though.

I used to use GmapsVW to browse places and send to OSM. So it didn’t matter about missing osm data. But I keep google maps in a private profile (butay swap to wayze) as its got traffic updates and is much easier to use in a pinch.

whatiswrongwithyou@lemmy.ml on 18 May 02:35 collapse

Waze, aka freemap Israel, founded by two veterans of the idfs electronic signals formation, unit 8200.

shortwavesurfer@lemmy.zip on 18 May 00:58 next collapse

I use a combo of osmand and gps-coordinates.net. osmand generally does not do good with addresses, so I put the address into gps-coordinates.net and have osmand navigate me to the coords. I find if you’re looking for a business, you might be able to do it. But if you’re looking for residential addresses, you can generally forget about it with osmand.

MisterD@lemmy.ca on 18 May 01:05 collapse

Users of StreetComplete are doing their best to fix the address issues but we don’t have enough willing users to do it all in a day

valar@lemmy.ca on 18 May 04:00 next collapse

I havent found a fully FOSS one that is usable for me. Wanted to use Comaps but couldn’t get into the UI.

I’ve been using Here Wego and it’s really easy to use

fake_meows@sopuli.xyz on 18 May 04:13 next collapse

Comaps for driving / street navigation Caltopo for backcountry navigation (has offline maps) Trailforks for public recreation trails (hiking, mountain travel, mountain bike) Relief Maps for 3D landscape visualization / viewing

AnnaFrankfurter@lemmy.ml on 18 May 06:41 next collapse

I use OSMAnd. But, offline I don’t really care for real time traffic updates. I know the city I live in and can guess fairly accurately how long any journey will take.

sudoer777@lemmy.ml on 18 May 08:33 collapse

OSMAnd supports custom backends for routing like BRouter and Graphhopper/Valhalla that you might want to use depending on what you’re doing. CoMaps uses strictly its own algorithm that AFAIK is less developed, but they’re trying to add support for things like live traffic.

(Although also having both accurate real-time traffic information and privacy is basically not possible.)