The goal of this project is to create an SMS/MMS app that has full support for all of the features that users love, is based on material design, and supports a strong end-to-end encryption version of a tablet/desktop messenger that sends messages through your personal phone number.
Check out Pulse on the Play Store or the app's website for a more comprehensive overview of the app's features, platforms, and functionality!
Many other Pulse platforms are also open source (all but the backend). If you would like to take a look at them, you can find them on Klinker Apps GitHub.
This repo is almost ready to go, right out of the box. There are just two properties files that
you need to create for the build process to succeed: api_keys.properties
and keystore.properties
.
Both files can simply be copy and paste from the examples, if you choose.
You'll need to set up a few different API keys. Rename the api_keys.properties.example
file to api_keys.properties
. This alone will get the build working and might be perfectly fine
for your usage.
If you are using a self-built version of the app on a daily basis, then you might want to put in a few of your own API keys, rather than the public ones I have available. Please see the notes at the top of the file to learn more.
Whether you are going to make a release build of the app or not, you will need to copy the
keystore.properties.example
file to keystore.properties
. If you aren't going to make a release
build for anything, just leave it as is.
If you are going to make a release build, you will need to add your keystore to the repo and fill in fields outlined by that file.
Contributions are welcome!
- If you just want to report a bug or file a feature request, I have a centralized issues repo for tracking issues/requests across all of Pulse's platforms. Please file the issue there.
- Any other contributions can just go through the Pull Requests on this repo.
If you are looking to make a large change, it is probably best to discuss it with me first. Open up an issue, letting me know that this is something that you would like to make a PR for, and I can tell you what I think.
As a consumer app, allowing unlimited customization and endless settings pages is not Pulse's goal. While some may disagree, ultimately this does not add up to the best user experience. More settings means a much higher overhead for new users, as well as a more difficult time for existing users. I have done my best to enforce this vision by provide logical defaults, throughout the app. While Pulse is not light on customization, there is a balance between what could be considered "too much".
This vision is somewhat different in the eyes of an open source project, however. A major benefit of open source software is that you can customize it however you want. With that in mind, even if a feature you are suggesting is not something that I want to officially support in the app, that does not mean it can't and shouldn't be included! If you find use out of it, chances are someone else will, as well.
Within Pulse, I have made an "Open Source Experiments" settings page. There are disclaimers at the top that these preferences come as contributions from the community, without official support. This would be a great place to put any "tweak" options that you wish to include.
Copyright (C) 2020 Luke Klinker
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
You may obtain a copy of the License at
http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
limitations under the License.