HomeMirror alternatives and similar packages
Based on the "App" category.
Alternatively, view HomeMirror alternatives based on common mentions on social networks and blogs.
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Foodium 🍲
🍲Foodium is a sample food blog Android application 📱 built to demonstrate the use of Modern Android development tools - (Kotlin, Coroutines, Flow, Dagger 2/Hilt, Architecture Components, MVVM, Room, Retrofit, Moshi, Material Components). -
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2048-android
The android port of the 2048 game (for offline playing) -
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A showcase music app for Android entirely written using Kotlin language -
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News-Android-App
📱:newspaper: Android client for the Nextcloud news/feed reader app -
Endoscope
Endoscope lets you to stream live video between android devices over Wi-Fi! 📱📲 -
android-arsenal.com
Source to android-arsenal.herokuapp.com -
clean-status-bar
Tidy up your Android status bar before taking screenshots for the Play Store -
Leisure
Leisure is an Android App containing Zhihu Daily,Guokr Scientific,XinhuaNet News and Douban Books -
WaniKani-for-Android
An Android client application for the awesome kanji learning website wanikani.com -
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Library to change Android launcher App Icon and App Name programmatically ! -
LeeCo
LeeCo is an awesome app for (including unlock) problems, solutions, discuss(from leetcode) and comments. -
OpenFlappyBird
An open source clone of a famous flappy bird game for Android using AndEngine -
FoldingNavigationDrawer-Android
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TurtlePlayer
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This is a dev tool to visualize the colours of Material design defined on -
GradientDrawableTuner
🕹️ See how the properties of Android's "shape" affect the Drawable's appearance, intuitively. -
vanilla
Vanilla Music Player for Android (abandoned). Visit https://github.com/vanilla-music/vanilla for an actively developed fork -
freegemas-gdx
Freegemas libGDX is an Android and Java desktop port of Freegemas, which in turn is an open source version of the well known Bejeweled. -
PopularMovies
:movie_camera: Movie discovery app showcasing Android best practices with Google's recommended architecture: MVVM + Repository + Offline support + Android Architecture Components + Paging library & Retrofit2. -
Android-Jigsaw-Puzzle
Android app that allows you to draw anything and turn it into a jigsaw puzzle. -
Downloader Demo using RxJava
Demo of Downloading Songs/Images through Android Download Manager using RxJava2
Appwrite - The Open Source Firebase alternative introduces iOS support
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README
HomeMirror
Android application powering the mirror in my house
Note: code unmaintained
This was a fun project, and I may pick it back up again one day. You can still follow the instructions for putting a mirror together, but may need to bring your own light-text-on-dark-background app.
Software
- Day, time, and weather display
- Birthday messages
- Chore reminders
- Biking weather recommendation
- Stock price swings
- Today's new XKCD
- Next calendar event
- Top news headline
- Face detection with mood detection
APIs provided by Yahoo Finance, Forecast.io, the BBC, and XKCD
How to Run
- Clone project
- Get a forecast.io api key
- Add a keys.xml file under res/values with <string name="dark_sky_api_key">your_key</string>
- Import project to Android Studio and run
When its mirror time, I also recommend turning on the device Developer Option: "Stay Awake - Screen will never sleep while charging"
Making a Mirror
Video walk-through on adafruit (Thank you Becky!)
1. Obtain Android device
We had too many. Sad old devices are ideal. I used a 2012 Nexus 7.
2. Obtain two-way mirror
We did this the old-fashioned way, and quested to Canal Plastic Center. A beautiful and highly recommended establishment.
Wiki of places to buy two-way mirrors
Get a mirror at least as large as your Android device. My mirror is 6"x12" with 1/8 thickness.
3. Sticky stuff for mounting
Our trickiest problem was figuring out how to mount everything with minimal damage and error. We eventually discovered reusable double-sided adhesive, which is amazing.
We're using it both to mount the mirror to the device, and the device to the wall.
4. Attach black backing
We used black construction paper. If your device and mirror are awesomely identical in size, you can skip this.
Note: You want to glue it well, so the backing doesn't tear when the adhesive is holding it.
- Cut a piece of black backing the same size as your mirror
- Decide where you want your device to show through. We did upper right. Leave a border all the way around for adhesive.
- At that location, carefully cut a hole in the backing the same size as your device
- CAREFULLY glue the backing to the mirror. We used spray adhesive, and practiced how we would pick it up and lay it on the mirror a couple times before going for it. We also wore black surgical gloves.
5. Adhesion
Fire up the app on the device.
Put the adhesive along the bezel or edges of the device. Line up the mirror and stick it on there.
6. Wall spot
You probably want a long usb cable. Find a wall spot where you can keep the device plugged in.
Put a bunch of adhesive on the back of the device, and stick it on there.
Links
At the heart of this project, is 'put a mirror on it'. Check out alternative mirror projects and feel free to add your own reflections