We Flip hopes to cultivate community digital wellbeing. It allows users to switch off from technology in a group and spend time together in the physical world.
You can head over to the Google Play Store to download We Flip.
Paper Phone helps you disconnect by printing a personal booklet containing key information for which you would normally need your smartphone. The app allows you to choose what to include in the booklet, including contacts, maps, calendar information, and more. You can also create paper apps for recipes, phrasebooks, and notepads. Paper Phone is available for free via Google Play Store.
Desert Island aims to limit your dependence on the tech by challenging you to get through a day by just sticking to essential apps. You can choose the important app, up to seven, and then see if you can last through the day. You can download Desert Island from Play Store.
Morph is an Android launcher that shows different apps based on time and location. By doing this, the app hopes to keep your focussed on important tasks.
“Simply think about how you divide your time and choose the apps that are most important to you in each mode. Based on time or place, your phone will automatically adapt – giving you just the right apps at just the right time,” Google writes. Morph is also available via Google Play Store.
To recall, Google had launched its Digital Wellbeing tools for Pixel smartphone users in November last year. The company later expanded the support for non-Google devices, and more and more smartphone makers are incorporating them in their Android devices. The likes of OnePlus have even gone ahead of releasing their own digital wellbeing tools like Zen Mode. As per a recently leaked internal Google document, the company has made its mandatory for the Android smartphone makers launching devices on Android 9 Pie or Android 10 to include digital wellbeing tools in their phones in order to get Google Mobile Services.