There are no alternative apps yet. You are witnessing ground floor construction work. So, pick up a hammer and help out
Jerboa
Jerboa is a native-android client for Lemmy, built using the native android framework, Jetpack Compose.
Warning: You can submit issues, but between Lemmy and lemmy-ui, I probably won't have too much time to work on them. Learn jetpack compose like I did if you want to help make this app better.
Built With
Features
- Open source, AGPL License.
Installation / Releases
Support / Donate
Jerboa is made by Lemmy's developers, and is free, open-source software, meaning no advertising, monetizing, or venture capital, ever. Your donations directly support full-time development of the project.
Crypto
- bitcoin:
1Hefs7miXS5ff5Ck5xvmjKjXf5242KzRtK
- ethereum:
0x400c96c96acbC6E7B3B43B1dc1BB446540a88A01
- monero:
41taVyY6e1xApqKyMVDRVxJ76sPkfZhALLTjRvVKpaAh2pBd4wv9RgYj1tSPrx8wc6iE1uWUfjtQdTmTy2FGMeChGVKPQuV
- cardano:
addr1q858t89l2ym6xmrugjs0af9cslfwvnvsh2xxp6x4dcez7pf5tushkp4wl7zxfhm2djp6gq60dk4cmc7seaza5p3slx0sakjutm
Contact
There are at least two alternatives already: lemmur and jerboa. In addition the federation probably makes it practically impossible to block other apps and web frontends be etc. And you can run and use an old web front to your heart's content.
I think lemur is abandoned, but yeah
Lemmur was last updated 9 months ago
You could make a Lemmy app if you want. Jerboa seems to be what most people are using but Lemmur was available in the past and stopped development partially due to a lack of interest.
Lemmy is still small compared to Reddit
But also, with the fediverse structure, there is no way to lock out alternative apps. Functionally, all apps are third party.
you aren't able to use alternative app because there is no alternative app apart from jarboa on Android
I know this is a joke but you also have the option of making a PWA using native alpha
Yeah but that's because it's still very early
I raised this concern as well. I haven't seen a lot of mods commit to moving from Reddit to Lemmy, and I think the lack of tools and established apps is a big reason. Reddit will have this problem at the end of the month, but it doesn't help that Lemmy has this problem now.
Saying "then make your own app" is also not helpful. Not everyone is a developer, or has the extra time to work on one, especially for a free platform.
I am hopeful that enough techy people will join Lemmy and want to invest time into making it better, but even if 1000 users suddenly started working on apps and tools it will still take a while before they are on par with the reddit apps. The best hope is that an API translator for reddit->Lemmy gets working soon and 3rd party reddit apps become Lemmy apps.
Joke appreciated :)