qBitController is a free and open-source app for controlling qBittorrent from an Android device.

  • Aisteru
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    136 months ago

    Awesome project! Thanks for advertising it

    • @Matth78@lemm.ee
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      6 months ago

      I would say VueTorrent has more features. Yet on Android as it’s not an app you can’t make it open magnet links or torrents when tapping / downloading one.
      That would be great to have it as an app or to be able to turn it into a pwa.

      • adr1an
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        16 months ago

        The closest would be a folder, synchronized between phone and computer (e.g. using syncthing) where you save the torrent files. Then the client scans and automatically adds torrents from there. It will remove such files, so while at it, you should also configure to save completed torrent files somewhere. When possible, torrent files are a better option (they bring metadata, required if you ever wanted to re-share some content).

  • sag
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    16 months ago

    I wish there was a good free and open-source downloader with torrent support, like 1DM+.

      • @GingeyBook@lemm.ee
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        96 months ago

        I understand the developer may be known and trusted

        But I do not have the expertise to do my own thorough code review

        • @GravitySpoiled@lemmy.ml
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          156 months ago

          If that’s of your concern, you can’t download the play store version either. It is the same app, has the same signature.

          • melroy
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            116 months ago

            as if the play store only contains safe APKs right?

          • @GingeyBook@lemm.ee
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            26 months ago

            Excuse my ignorance and correct me if I’m wrong

            But does the play store not do some sort of scanning itself?

            • @GravitySpoiled@lemmy.ml
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              156 months ago

              Even worse. Many apps have google signature instead of the developers. They upload their key and give it to google. Horrible practice. Nowadays, fdroid gravitates towards reproducible builds with the dev’s own signature and google is going the other way round. Gravitating towards an unsafe “best practice” …

            • Norah (pup/it/she)
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              86 months ago

              Potentially, but that doesn’t really matter, as you can match the signatures of the two versions and see that they are the same. You cannot fake that and have one version have different code, it’s not possible.

          • ChewyOP
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            26 months ago

            They do basic checking for known malware.