Suntimes vs Warpclock
Side-by-side comparison of two open source alternatives
Suntimes
Tracks sunlight and moonlight times. Features an app, alarm clock, and widget collection. Suntimes displays sunrise and sunset, twilight (civil / nautical / astronomical), blue and golden hour, the solstices and equinoxes, moonrise and moonset, moon phases and illumination. The alarm clock schedules daily repeating alarms (or notifications) for sunrise, sunset, and other events. The app includes many features commonly associated with a world clock. The times reported by this app are approximate. The app doesn't require network connectivity, GPS is optional. The app benefits from the following permissions: * ACCESS_FINE_LOCATION is used to obtain the current position (latitude, longitude, altitude). * BOOT_COMPLETED is used to restore active alarms after a reboot. * SET_ALARM is used to schedule alarms using the AlarmClock app. * VIBRATE is used by alarm notifications. * READ_EXTERNAL_STORAGE is used to play alarm sounds located on the SD card (api≤=18 only). * WRITE_EXTERNAL_STORAGE is used to backup data to file (places, themes, etc) (api≤=18 only). Note: The "Calendar Integration" and permissions added in v0.9.0 were removed in v0.10.0. This feature is now available as a separate add-on app; Suntimes Calendars.
Warpclock
Warpclock provides a quick shortcut for setting alarms based on your preferred amount of sleep. No more mental math before bed - after a single button press, your head can hit the pillow and you will warp forwards in time with minimal interruption. How to use When you open Warpclock for the first time, you should configure your preferred amount of sleep using the in-app controls. There are buttons to increase and decrease the amount by 1 hour, 10 minutes, and 1 minute. You only need to set this once. There is also a button labeled "Set alarm" inside the app. Pressing this button will create a new one-shot alarm in your default alarm clock app, configured to wake you up after your personalized amount of time has passed. The alarm will automatically delete itself from your alarm app once it has triggered, keeping your list of saved alarms clean. Once the alarm is created, you'll get two toast notifications. The first notification is from Warpclock, displaying the time that the new alarm should go off. The second notification comes from the system alarm clock, confirming that it was created sucessfully and displaying how far in the future the alarm will occur. The app also exposes a widget that you can add to your homescreen for even faster access. In the default launcher, just long-press on your homescreen background and drag the "Warpclock" widget to a location on your homescreen, and drag the edges to resize as desired. Tapping on the widget text will create a new alarm just as if you'd pressed the "Set alarm" button in the app. You'll get the same two toast notifications as well. The alarm is created in your default alarm clock app, so you should use that to configure the default alarm sound and vibration settings. Once an alarm is created, if the trigger time needs to be adjusted, that should also be done in the default alarm clock app. Current limitations This app currently does not handle Daylight Savings Time changes, it simply adds the configured amount and rolls over at 24 hours. You'll need to manually fix a couple of alarms per year if you live in a region that still changes the time back and forth.
| Feature | Suntimes | Warpclock |
|---|---|---|
| License | GPL-3.0-or-later | GPL-3.0-only |
| Install sources | F-DroidGitHub | F-Droid |
| Categories | ProductivityCalendar | ProductivityFitnessCalendar |
| Features | Ad-FreeOpen SourceNo Tracking | Ad-FreeOpen SourceNo Tracking |
| Platforms | Android | Android |
| Website | ||
| Source code |