SAN FRANCISCO, Feb 1, 2026, 04:25 PST
- An Android Police writer said he swapped key Google apps for Fossify alternatives, keeping clock, calculator, keyboard, calendar and contacts as full replacements.
- Fossify’s public repositories show updates to several core apps on Feb. 1.
- The author said Google’s push to integrate Gemini into its apps had become “heavy-handed.”
An Android Police writer said he “replaced every Google app I could” on his Android phone with open-source alternatives from the Fossify suite. Fossify’s Clock, Calculator, Keyboard, Calendar and Contacts apps have “entirely replaced” Google’s equivalents for him, he wrote, though other swaps were “mixed results.” (Android Police)
In a Jan. 31 essay, Jon Gilbert wrote that Google’s apps have long been part of the appeal of Pixel phones, partly because they share one design and avoid the “feature bloat” of Samsung’s OneUI interface. But he said Google’s approach to weaving Gemini — its AI assistant — into those apps has become “heavy-handed.” (Muck Rack)
That matters because Google’s software is the front door to its cloud services. Some users call the effort to swap it out “de-Googling” — removing or avoiding Google apps and services without changing phones or platforms.
Fossify describes itself as a set of privacy-focused apps that are open source, meaning the code is published for anyone to review or reuse. The project grew out of a “fork” — a split from the codebase of the discontinued Simple Mobile Tools suite — according to its GitHub page. (GitHub)
Naveen Singh, who lists himself on GitHub as the creator of Fossify, describes it as “a collection of privacy-focused, open-source mobile apps” and says he is “currently working on” the project. (GitHub)
Public repositories show Fossify spans core phone functions, from a dialer and SMS messenger to a launcher, camera, clock and calculator. Several flagship apps were marked “Updated Feb 1, 2026,” including Phone, Messages, Launcher, Clock, Contacts, Calendar and Calculator, the repository list shows. (GitHub)
The suite also sits inside Google’s distribution pipes. On the Play store, Fossify lists multiple apps under one developer account; its Gallery listing shows more than 100,000 downloads and a 4.4-star average rating, according to the store page. (Google Play)
The competitive set is obvious: Google’s versions of these tools ship on many Android phones, and handset makers such as Samsung Electronics bundle their own dialers, messages apps and galleries, often tied to their own services.
But the trade-offs can bite. Alternatives may lack features people take for granted — tight cross-device sync, polished spam filtering, or deep integration across maps, search and email — and smaller projects can struggle to match Google’s pace on updates and security fixes.
Even a successful swap is not a clean break. Many Android apps still expect Google Play services in the background for notifications, payments and other plumbing, so “de-Googling” often ends up partial.
Still, the Android Police experiment has put a spotlight on a basic point: for some users, the simplest app is the one that keeps quiet. Fossify’s recent burst of updates suggests the project is intent on being that kind of replacement — at least for the basics.