It was sold back in 2022 to Branch Metrics
<a href="https://www.androidcentral.com/apps-software/branch-strikes-twice-with-nova-launcher-and-sesame-search-acquisition" rel="nofollow">https://www.androidcentral.com/apps-software/branch-strikes-...</a><p>August 2024 everyone working on it was laid off except the original dev
<a href="https://www.theverge.com/2024/8/9/24217077/nova-launcher-layoffs-only-original-developer-remaining" rel="nofollow">https://www.theverge.com/2024/8/9/24217077/nova-launcher-lay...</a><p>September 2025 the original dev left after being told to stop work on open sourcing it
<a href="https://www.theverge.com/news/773937/nova-launcher-founder-left-kevin-barry-branch-open-source-android" rel="nofollow">https://www.theverge.com/news/773937/nova-launcher-founder-l...</a>
Seems like there might be enough coverage that Nova Launcher is ready for a Wikipedia article now. Previously it was deleted. <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nova_Launcher" rel="nofollow">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nova_Launcher</a>
Thanks for taking the time to post these.
<a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Branch_(company)" rel="nofollow">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Branch_(company)</a>
"We are a Swedish company building products that help people get online, used by millions of people worldwide."<p>So I look for them. They have a "Free wifi connection" / "Wifi passwords map" app. It surprises me because it has a good score on Google Play but then I begin to check the reviews, and a bunch of them go like: "Five stars because if you do a good review you can use it for free".<p>I install it and on starting it and in the first minute: Asks you to create an account but you can't click on the terms of service or privacy policy, the links don't work. I skip it. It tries to change your default launcher. It tries to change your default browser. It asks you to share your home wifi password with them. Pops up adds everywhere. Tries to get a good review from you.<p>No thanks, not even near.
giving anything to the user in return for a good review should be grounds for disqualification from app stores. (and it should be legally required for app stores to enforce it)
Since they claim to be a Swedish company, it might be worth filing a report with the Swedish consumer agency[0].<p>I am not a lawyer, and especially not a Swedish lawyer, so I can't say how illegal this is in Sweden or what if anything will happen.<p>[0]<a href="https://www.konsumentverket.se/en/articles/report-to-the-swedish-consumer-agency/" rel="nofollow">https://www.konsumentverket.se/en/articles/report-to-the-swe...</a>
Apparently they made €7.2 million in profit in 2024.<p><a href="https://www.allabolag.se/foretag/instabridge-sweden-ab/stockholm/informationskonsulter-kommunikationskonsulter/2KHLU62I5YFD4" rel="nofollow">https://www.allabolag.se/foretag/instabridge-sweden-ab/stock...</a>
What an undeserving fate. A beloved app now being passed from vulture to vulture who rip off every possible morsel they can.<p>When Branch bought Nova, I moved on to use Lawnchair [1], which is open source. Although it has been in beta like forever, with occasional glitches, it works well enough and has enough features to satisfy my customization cravings.<p>[1]: <a href="https://github.com/LawnchairLauncher/lawnchair" rel="nofollow">https://github.com/LawnchairLauncher/lawnchair</a>
My biggest issue with lawnchair (and most launchers really) is that they all are horribly glitchy on my Pixel 6, and also break the app drawer / switching feature.<p>I literally just want a vanilla pixel experience, but be allowed to change the search engine on the home screen searchbar... This got me into the weeds on the widget and launcher ecosystem and they're all very bad.
I highly recommend Octopi Launcher. It's simple, has customization you might want without <i>requiring</i> it in order to be useful, and works great on various phones.<p>Also great on foldables, since it lets you have a different home screen for different display sizes.
This is very good to know! I am currently setting up my old pixel 6 to be a permanent Google home terminal. I was thinking about trying Lawnchair, now I'm not so sure.
To be fair, this was probably six or so months ago when I last went through this. Niagra had the launcher / app switching issue, so did Lawnchair, even Nova Launcher (before I knew of what had happened to them). It could have been a general bug for all launchers except the OEM.
Was a Nova user, moved to Lawnchair yesterday. It's not the same experience I got from Nova (for example, the Clock widget don't work), but the adaptation is not unbearable.<p>I purchased Nova Launcher Prime years ago thinking it was the best investment I put on Google Play, well, maybe I should've spent the money on something else.
The write-up on the link seems promising, at least. I'm sure ads will come to the free version, but they appear to be respecting Nova's legacy and longtime Prime purchasers. Anything is better than the slow decay it has been enduring the last year or two. Can't do much but be cautiously optimistic.
Last update introduced a bunch of ads and tracking plugins. See: <a href="https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46686655">https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46686655</a>
I'll have whatever you're smoking please.<p>You don't acquire something like this, as a metrics company, who does cohort analysis and touchpoint tracking[0] simply to make a bit of ad revenue.<p>Nova is dead. No room left for optimism.<p>[0] <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Branch_(company)" rel="nofollow">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Branch_(company)</a>
It’s becoming evident that open-source is the only thing that can cure Enshittification. Every proprietary application will become enshittified, it’s just a matter of when.
Haven't heard of Nova in a very long time, this was one of the original customizable launchers for Android wasn't it? If it's gone this long without being open-sourced, it might be time to let go. Been using <a href="https://kisslauncher.com/" rel="nofollow">https://kisslauncher.com/</a> for many years and have no complaints.
The Nexus 5 bezel and the Google+ link in the footer don't make this launcher look modern and maintained... but I'll give it a try anyway.
Yeah but I believe Launcher Pro (~15 years ago) was before Nova.<p>Preview: <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cREpIdgmWSk" rel="nofollow">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cREpIdgmWSk</a>
KISS is a complete paradigm shift from other phone launchers. It takes some getting used to. It has made me rethink how I use my phone from time to time because I have it set to sort by recently used: I only have a few apps I use regularly it seems.<p>Not for everyone, but it's my preferred way to use a phone now.
I suppose it doesn't matter because there is probably a search or something, but I only use my banking app and children's games every month or 2. I like knowing where they are at. 2 swipes away.<p>Also, doesn't this mean more attention to the screen? I can blindly pick apps without looking at my screen. Makes it useful when running + audiobook + taking notes.
Didn't know about KISS, I know Kvaesitso is also a search-focused launcher (that seems to have more features ? I didn't download KISS)<p><a href="https://kvaesitso.mm20.de/" rel="nofollow">https://kvaesitso.mm20.de/</a>
Yeah, I was rocking Nova on my Samsung Galaxy Nexus back in 2012. It was the first time I ever paid for an app. Back then Nova was a huge upgrade to usability, but stock launchers eventually caught up, and by the late 2010s I was really just using it to make my phone look cool. I've heard it's borderline abandonware at this point, which is a shame.
There's still nothing that's as configurable as SweeterHome was. It died somewhere around the Android 2 days.
thanks for that link ! cheers
When a company says that they're here to stay after an acquisition that usually means the opposite.
Sad news. I've been using Nova for years now, across multiple devices.<p>Thankfully my build is super minimalistic and another launcher was able to replicate it pretty quickly. Black wallpaper, white icon pack, list app drawer with a few folders, 4 scrollable home screens with large white icons for the most frequent apps (browser, Gemini, personal lifestyle logging app, Signal conversation with wife).<p>The idea that there might be ads (albeit on the free tier) is ridiculous, but then again that is the final frontier for adtech companies. I've often thought the Google stock launcher will likely soon have ads, just like Microsoft started trying to slip them in with Windows 10.
I got fed up with Nova and all the others to the point that I've built my own launcher in two evenings. Its just a black screen (no wallpaper or widgets) with a list of alphabetical scrollable apps (almost like how Windows Phone / Lumia looked), no icons/colours. Just black with white text & accents. You can tag an app as a favourite and it will show at the top. Thats it. No internet connection, no real customizations. It works amazingly well and fast and looks awesome on OLED. Once you are used to it, everything else (incl iOS) looks like a circus.<p>If you are an app developer, remember to add a black/oled theme to your apps. A good chunk of my apps have them and they fit so well with my launcher.
Nova has been my favorite launcher for years, but after this, I may have to look elsewhere. Even as a paid user, I don't have much confidence that I'm not being sold off for ad exploitation.
I read another post this morning that there was already an update last night with a bunch of tracking code added, and additional permissions required (that didn't trigger anything for the user to know of those additional permissions).<p>I am a paid Nova user from a decade ago, but haven't used it in ages fwiw.
I missed the post yesterday. Good to read it today. Uninstalled after reading this and switched to Octopi (interestingly the same name as the Pi-based 3D printing webservice). Only missing features so far is more icons on the drawer in width and top-used. Then again insta-search also solves this.
I guess mine hasn't updated yet. I'm a paid user, but I'll be migrating elsewhere. What a disappointment.
I was having issues recently with my Pixel phone hanging/freezing/going stupid, it was Nova. I changed to Lawnchair yesterday after learning this and works much better and my battery is no longer draining for no apparent reason
I use Niagara Launcher because of the simplicity and quick access to every app. I highly recommend to everyone who wants a fast launcher and clean look.
Shout out for Smart Launcher, which I'm very much enjoying: <a href="https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=ginlemon.flowerfree">https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=ginlemon.flowe...</a>
I tried a few alternatives last night but ended up going with Lawnchair. I miss some of the deeper customisation of Nova, but its otherwise nice and stable and, most importantly, not spyware.<p>I'm not sure if this would actually affect me in the short term as a Nova Prime user (unsure if the extra trackers were added there too), but in the long term it certainly would
I've used Nova Launcher for years (don't know if I'm paid), but I'll be happy to pay for an ad free version.<p>I know there is a long history of companies buying another company for a product and then killing it after a period of time. I'm willing to give Instabridge the benefit of doubt... for a while. If they do decide that Nova Launcher is not a fit, I hope they open source it so that current users are not left on the lurch.
What a throwback. Nova launcher sounded familiar, but I wasn't sure where to place it in my head. When I saw the logo I was immediately transported to memories of using lineage OS and bricking my new Samsung Note 4. I was trying to customize every button combination to do something smart back then. The good old days when I had the time to fix the phone after every update. I've since moved to the apple ecosystem... Set and forget.
> I've since moved to the apple ecosystem... Set and forget.<p>Careful, you'll get blasted for that in these parts. Until about 7 years ago, I had been an Android absolutist. Custom ROMs, launchers, you name it. I sneered at those Apple-loving simpletons. Then, after missing several important phone calls in a day due to the phone 'app' not working properly, I got fed up and got a Nexus 6, the official Google phone and the reference implementation for Android. The phone was big and ugly, but at least I was still using a "real" operating system.<p>Then, as I went through the app store looking for some needed apps, I realized that I couldn't find what I wanted. What I downloaded and installed turned out to be scams and hijacked the phone as ad-riddled malware. It slowly dawned on me: The Play Store is anarchistic, lawless hellscape.<p>I was too old for this shit. I went and got an iPhone and never looked back. I turn it on, it does things. I don't have to worry about it. Yes, the software quality isn't near perfect, and they seem to be gradually enshittifying their app store. But at least they make a token effort to keep things in a somewhat curated state.<p>It's night and day, far as I'm concerned. I've gotten to the point where I just want my things to work. I don't want to spend hours tweaking and troubleshooting. I realize I'm in a cult compound, but it's better than the Mad Max world outside.
There's nothing wrong with iOS and iPhones. If that's what works best for you, then that's what you should use. With this said...<p>Most people use their Android phone like iPhone owners do. They use the default launcher, default settings, and things work. Like you, they turn it on and it does things. They'll install their apps for work, social media, etc, just like iOS users. Maybe they'll install a different browser so sync works or have adblocking, but that's it.<p>Unlocking bootloaders, custom ROMs, perhaps rooting, getting to the point where apps are hijacking your phone (wth?)... I'm not sure if you understand this, but that's very extreme. If you get blasted, it's because that's the equivalent to jailbreaking an iPhone, replacing the OS, and so on. Of course things are going to break.<p>iOS lets you do a lot of UI customization these days. Home screen(s), widgets, icons, lock screen, etc, some of which I can't do on my Android phone and may have to use a 3rd party launcher! Why don't you spend hours tweaking that stuff, like many do? Why doesn't it bother you that you can do it? Just a guess, but I think you've changed. You no longer care about this stuff and maybe you also don't have the same free time? That's fine, but also shows that the problem wasn't Android or iOS, but the old you that didn't always know when to stop.<p>On a side note, things have changed a lot in the past few years. These days you don't install a custom ROM if you want features... you get a phone from a brand like Samsung because their UI is packed with features that custom ROMs don't have. You also don't need them for updates when a new phone gives you 5-7 years of support. Most posts I see here about custom ROMs are about privacy and security, removing Google from their phones, stepping away from the cloud and subscriptions, etc. Don't assume that that the wild side of Android is still the same because it isn't, at least not to the extent. You may also want to drop the idea that using Android requires doing all you've mentioned, because almost no one does that. You were the 1% of the 1%.
your pants are so on fire
Thanks for the lawnchair recommendations, y'all. It's been real, Nova Launcher. Sleep now my sweet prince.
I see Nova has been very popular. Why did the original developer sell it? There must be some business model for these sorts of popular apps that don't involve selling it? Crowdfunding?
I recently switched to a OnePlus 15 and Nova Launcher had a really annoying 0.5-1 second delay every time you went back home.<p>I've been a paid Nova user and used it on every android device for the past 10 years or so.<p>I ended up migrating to the stock OnePlus launcher and it's actually surprisingly good, other than you have to disable the stupid google recommended page every time you reboot the phone, so I'm still open to alternatives.
let me make your day. this will fix the problem 100% -> <a href="https://old.reddit.com/r/oneplus/comments/1p3pcnt/guide_fix_custom_launcher_lag_gestures_on_oos_16/" rel="nofollow">https://old.reddit.com/r/oneplus/comments/1p3pcnt/guide_fix_...</a><p>I couldn't believe it myself but by basically force closing the settings menu the drawer animation will be gone until you reboot :)
Trebuchet (a "launcher", heh) is the stock Lineage one, and it is genuinely fine. App screen, home screen, nested folders. Nothing more you really want.<p>Unfortunately it's built/bundled with Lineage, and you can't find a standalone APK for it anywhere
That's an OxygenOS 16.0 bug; worked fine on 15.0, and broken on all (~five?) launchers I tested on 16.0. (currently on Octopi Launcher, and just live with that annoying delay until it Hopefully™ gets fixed)
Unfortunately OnePlus has been doing sketchy things too. I wouldn't trust them with your data.
A few years I started working on a launcher, built from scratch with jetpack compose. It has all the basic functionality, and some very nice details like multi touch support, similar to iOS. Though I never released it since I got burnt out and I stopped using Android. This is making me want to go back to it and finish it.
Ugh, quite annoying. My next phone might be an Android (instead of the current iPhone), and I was looking forward to returning to Nova Launcher, after having used it many years ago as my favorite launcher. This feels like a big no-go now.<p>What are other good customizable launchers on Android nowadays?
Much less popular but I switched to Kvaesitso from Nova about a month ago and it's been amazing and it's open source. Much more opinionated than Nova but it matched how I used Nova so I really enjoy it.<p>[1] <a href="https://kvaesitso.mm20.de/" rel="nofollow">https://kvaesitso.mm20.de/</a>
I used Nova for years and went through this research before, having tested many alternatives. Octopi is what you're looking for. It can do pretty much everything Nova did for me and more besides. They also update often with improvements and fixes!
I've been using lawnchair as a launcher that is open source (apache) since the first news broke months when the previous dev/owner warned people what was coming, and it works just fine. Not quite as versatile as Nova Launcher, but with 100% less adware now that the new adware company is running up in people with a bait and switch.<p>Enshittification is real!
I know this is weird, but.......<p>I'm really happy with Microsoft Launcher.
I paid for "Square Home" a couple years ago and I'm very happy with it. It's highly customizable. The Windows Phone style layout probably isn't for everyone but it works well for me.
Depends what you want, I guess. The nice thing about Android is we still have many options.<p>I recently moved to AIO Launcher and I've been really enjoying it. I'm sure it's not going to be everyone's cup of tea though.
Lawnchair newest beta, though they still didnt fix years old bug with dark/black font on dark/black background in folders/drawer<p>also resizing/padding widgets ain't as good as Nova, but for sure much better than Octopi which is completely weird, tried yesterday, chaotic settings, can't even disable background picture for dock<p>switched yesterday to Lawnchair from Nova after 10+ years, seems OK besides those few quirks, but still keeping Nova as backup, will see after 2 weeks testing how is the stability, if I can remove even nova backup
Can someone explain why launchers matter so much to them? All the apps I use are on a single page and it's just one button press; what more would I need than that?
On any Android phone I immediately install Niagara. Best launcher by far. Makes everything so efficient and beautiful.
Niagara is amazing. It's quite different from other launchers, so either it works for you or doesn't. It perfectly matches what I was doing before, which was searching for apps by name to launch them.
There's also the open source Kvaesitso !<p>[0] <a href="https://kvaesitso.mm20.de/" rel="nofollow">https://kvaesitso.mm20.de/</a>
Doesn't KISS do this? I'm curious why Niagara when KISS is probably lighter/smaller.
> <i>Open sourcing a product responsibly involves licensing, security, build tooling, contribution workflow, and trademark stewardship.</i><p>You can scratch at the very least <i>contribution workflow</i> from that list; anyhow, the original author had already spent <i>months</i> preparing the open source release, ironing out legal and dependency issues, so everything should already be there or pretty close, at least on the technical side of things (arguably one of the biggest sides)
I switched to Smart Launcher Pro, and it seems to scratch the same itch. It was more expensive, though.<p>Nova carried me for almost a decade, and I'll miss it.
That's what I switched to as well after evaluating a half dozen or so other ones.<p>I agree, it's fine. It's missing a couple of niceties that I enjoyed with Nova, but nothing I can't live without.
Personally, I stopped using Nova launcher years ago.<p>Now I use Kvaesitso, which is search-focused exactly how I used to configure Nova.<p><a href="https://kvaesitso.mm20.de/" rel="nofollow">https://kvaesitso.mm20.de/</a>
I am a paying Nova Prime user and I really love that I can press on an app to open it. OR swipe up on a app to open a directory where I put similar apps
Haven't used Nova for a while and at first was curious if this was good for bringing it back from unmaintenance. The heavy focus on sustainability and marketing in this blog makes it seem unlikely though.<p>Switched to Pear when Nova got unstable after a Pixel upgrade and I noticed it hadn't been updated in years. Been working well though will keep any eye on any other recommendations that show up in this thread.
After many years of Nova, switched to Olauncher. I'm a happy person.
I used Nova paid for years, but moved back to the stock Samsung launcher when Nova started having issues with widgets not refreshing (Outlook calendar view was the worst, it would work for a day or two and then just get stuck). I guess I should try something else now.
Hope the dev will opensource it and do smth like what Maps.me did wirh Organic maps
Nova Launcher Prime was good, but nkw I use Pie launcher which is OSS and minimal. Although it has very less features when compared.
Using Lawnchair for more than a year now. No major issues on my device with Android 13 and Lineage OS 22.2. Will not look at other alternatives for a long time.
I've been a nova user for the last 7 years or so.
I was thinking what else deteriorated from best to worst.. Poweramp.
Niagra Launcher is where it's at for stable out of your way intuitive.
yeah nah..<p>Will Nova become open source?<p>We know this matters to many of you. It is something we are actively evaluating. Open sourcing a product responsibly involves licensing, security, build tooling, contribution workflow, and trademark stewardship. We do not have a decision to share yet, but we will be transparent once we do.
Are launchers needed at all? I find the default GrapheneOS interface to be serviceable and I did not know what a "launcher" was until fairly recently.
Nova launcher used to have loads of great features, but it seems now the best of those features have made it to the stock Google/Samsung launchers
> We will keep data collection minimal and purpose driven, and we will be clear about what is collected and why. We do not sell personal data.<p>I don't believe this at all. If they aren't lying, then why did they add new trackers?<p><a href="https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46686655">https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46686655</a>
Immediate uninstall.
It's 2026, why are people still using custom launchers?<p>Serious question from a former Nova Prime user.
I don't want a big search bar on my home screen, and there's no way around it with the Pixel Launcher except use a different launcher.
Honestly... I just wants a launcher with tabs to sort apps in categories (no not app groups).<p>Nova Prime almost gone, before that Apex Launcher...<p>And every other launcher seems to just love to just present a search bar to find your apps and use some magic sorting algorithm to sort your apps...<p>I want predictable, user ordered apps in tabs so I can open one by heart with my eyes closed.
I'm with you... and have yet to find the solution. Somehow only Nova does tabbed app drawer pages (and allows folders within them).
Same. I organize my phone into screens by topic (apps and some widgets), that allows me to keep a mental model without remembering app names etc. Will probably be hard to find a 1:1 replacement for Nova Launcher, if it enshittifies :/
Why? To avoid using Google search. It's been an inferior search product for years. Last time I used the default launcher on a pixel, I couldn't change it to a better search product, so I changed launcher.
My phones almost a decade old (OnePlus 5T, so I guess 8 years now), back from the time that launchers were a bit more necessary. If I had a modern android phone I probably wouldnt use a launcher, but then again I probably wouldnt use a modern android phone either
I appreciate that I can choose to decorate my house as I see fit. At least on my Pixel 10 there's way too much google this and google that. I guess if you're deep into the ecosystem it's a value add but for me a custom launcher lets me remove all that code.
People want different interfaces for the home screen of their device, obviously.<p>I want a black background, with a simple A-Z list of the apps I have on my phone, with some hidden. No icons, no transparency effects and animations.
Time to say goodbye, I guess. It's been a while and things kept going south. Hello Lawnchair, my old friend.
the url "nova-is-here-to-stay" says to me that Nova will be discontinued in about 90 seconds.
> "building products that help people get online"<p>To me looks sounds like the motto of a company made to defraud people of their money.<p>Otherwise, very sad the demise and enshittification of this Launcher that was really one of the very good one around the good old time of the nexus 5.
> Are you going to add ads?
> Nova needs a sustainable business model to support ongoing development and maintenance. We are exploring different options, including paid tiers and other approaches. As many of you have already anticipated, we are also evaluating ad based options for the free version.<p>> If ads are introduced, Nova Prime will remain ad free. Our guiding principles are clear: keep the experience clean and fast, avoid disruptive formats, and provide a straightforward way to keep the experience ad free.<p>Seems pretty clear.
> What this means <i>right now</i><p>> Nova is not shutting down. Our <i>immediate</i> focus is simple: [...]<p>So it will be shutting down or gutted into a privacy nightmare. That's all I needed to see.
I'm really behind on this stuff but what does this mean for Sesame. It's all just dead now, right?
I take it the stock android launcher these days is not good?
It's fine, and it works. I have a Pixel, though, and there's no way to disable the google search box on the homescreen. I will never use the search box, yet it dominates a good portion of my screen.
Isn't the stock one open-source? Even if it isn't, Java is really trivial to decompile reversibly, and removing features is much easier than adding. Take advantage of Android the way it was meant to be taken advantage of.
I think the only reason not to use stock.. I guess once of the main reasons people look elsewhere. And I don't actually need fancy features.<p>Probably there are more annoyances, but I never get to those since the search just kills it quick.
Is there a way to disable "swipe right for news feed"? I hated that inclusion in the Pixel launcher.
I hate that search box, it's ridiculous that they force it on users. On the plus side looking up how to get rid of it led me to Lawnchair which I have been happily using for many years at this point.
It's "fine". In fact, a lot of the features that Nova pioneered has made its way into the stock launcher.<p>But it does what it does and that's all. It's been a long, long time since Google believed in the concept of options or customizability. If you want to do something outside the default, well you can go straight to hell. Which is fine, I guess, since we still have great options for launchers out there.
It does the job, but it's important to remember that there isn't a "stock Android launcher". Google, Samsung, OnePlus, Motorola, Xiaomi, etc, develop their own launcher and have different features.<p>I used Nova mainly because I use 2 phones and it is easier to keep things similar. For example, the app list on my Samsung scrolls horizontally. On my other phone running LineageOS, it's vertically. With Nova, it's the same on both devices.<p>It was also useful when moving phones, as I could just restore a backup to restore my layout.
the timing of this<p>Related:<p><i>Nova Launcher added Facebook and Google Ads tracking</i><p><a href="https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46686655">https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46686655</a><p>(lots of good discussion about alternatives in this thread by the way)
It blows my mind how many stories hit the front page, every day, that bottom out on whining about proprietary software. I've literally been talking about the Win10/11 whining for 3+ years, and yet EVERY. SINGLE. WEEK THERE ARE MORE.<p>Lawnchair is *EXCELLENT*. I say that as a former Nova Launcher user. And Lawnchair is fully OSS and actively developed.<p>I just cannot fathom people who enjoy this <i>non-stop</i> BS rollercoaster and are happy to be passed from OG dev, to scummy publisher, to ??? publisher. And all just be happy about that instead of ... why am I even typing this shit. The people that care, care and use OSS or migrate when the writing is on the wall. The people that allow themselves to get jerked around and just take it are going to keep just taking it. And whining about it, while changing none of their behavior.<p>(Totally not related; see HN and the constant cycle of people shitting on decentralization and then being pikachu-shocked when proprietary centralized services do what they always do).<p>(Though, it's nice to finally, <i>finally</i> see a predominance of anecdotes of Linux experiences that aren't based on 3 year old distro ISOs. EDIT: 3 is generous, I saw people talking about a 20.04 LTS spin less than a year ago and acting like that was indicative of Linux on Desktop).<p>To be fair, I'm probably just way off base here. <i>A company whose focus is absolutely not an Android Launcher surely won't enshittify or sell it in due course.</i> Surely. Surely, surely, surely. Right? Like last time?