Add MobilityArena as a preferred source on Google
We are all so accustomed to using multiple Google services on a daily basis that it is taken for granted. Well, I got wondering if it would be possible to use a smartphone without Google Services and apps, and set out on an experiment to try to pull it off. Android OS without Google Mobile Services is also called de-Googled Android. The phone would also be said to be a de-Googled smartphone.
Whether it is Gmail, Search, Maps, or the apps store, Google services are right in our faces every day, especially if we use an Android smartphone. Granted that there are people in the world who have never used a smartphone or owned a Google account. But those are outliers. Those who live in the thick of the modern digital world seem unable to escape the clutches of Google. Or can they?
For the first part of this experiment, I am using an Android smartphone. In the second part, I will be using a non-Google smartphone, i.e., one that does not run Android OS at all. And please, don’t mention iOS, either.
My smartphone of choice for this first experiment is the Xiaomi Go. In this first part of the experiment, the phone runs Android OS, but the intention is to use Android without logging into any Google service. Technical people will tell you that Android OS itself still communicates with Google’s servers, whether you are logged in to your Google account or not. I understand that. Which is why there will be a second part of this experiment without Android OS in the picture at all.
So come with me, let’s see how easy it is to use a de-Googled Android smartphone – one without Google services in today’s world.
De-Googled Email, Contacts, Calendar, Drive
Email is a basic service that every digital native or migrant must use on a smartphone. In this case, I use mail for /e/. It reads something like bla-bla-bla@e.email., and it works. But it must be able to sync my contacts and calendar across devices, or else it is useless to me. Thankfully, /e/ does that. That was easy.

Getting an /e/ account is free and gives you access to a suite of services that include email, drive, calendar, notes and tasks. You can create yours HERE .
An Alternative App Store
Who uses a smartphone without being able to download and install third party apps? Maybe some people do. But not me. Seeing as I am not willing to login to my Gogle account, that means I cannot use Play Store. I turn to Aptoide . It is my favourite of the 3rd party Android app stores. It also notifies me of apps installed on the phone that have updates waiting for them. Nice.

But I quickly found that it doesn’t have all the apps that I need. Bummer.
A Google Maps Alternative
For example, I needed an alternative maps app to Google Maps. Downloading Bing Maps from Aptoide was easy, but Bing Maps turned out to be a disappointment, so I looked for HERE We Go (former Nokia Maps). Nokia Maps got me anywhere I wanted to go back in the day. But it wasn’t available in Aptoide.

So, I turned to APK MIrror and was able to download it from there. HERE Maps works like a dream. I won’t be missing Google Maps.
Email App
Since I do not want to use any of Google’s apps at all, I couldn’t log into my non-Google email account with the Gmail app, so I had to hunt for an alternative email app. AquaMail came to my rescue. I tried Outlook but ran into some snags, so AquaMail it was.
What of Search?
I have had an alternative to Google Search for years, and it goes by the name DuckDuckGo. DuckDuckGo does not store your personal info, follow you around with ads, or track you. I have been setting it as my default search engine on all my smartphone for years. You can find it at DuckDuckGo.com.

I can tell you for free that DuckDuckGo works better than Bing and Yahoo.
So, it turns out it isn’t exactly difficult to use a smartphone without Google services and free of the clutches of their empire, as I have demonstrated. It was quite easy to pull off that I wondered why not many more people do it. Perhaps it is the natural human nature to go with what everyone else does.
For example, if you opt out of using smartphones entirely, you could easily live a digital life outside of Google’s empire without hitches.
It is the smartphone part that is the real problem. Android OS itself is a part of Google’s empire. You could argue that iOS is available, but that is like leaving someone for their twin. Not much difference. For the second part of my experiment, I would need a smartphone without Google services entirely – a smartphone that runs an operating system that is not in cahoots with Google.
Part Two Loading: The Rough Patches
I encountered some rough patches in the course of this experiment, and it will be unfair not to highlight them. Some of those patches have to do with running the experiment on an Android phone, as above, while some have to do with using non-Android phones like a Windows Mobile phone, an Ubuntu phone, and a BlackBerry phone. So expect the second part soon.
Part Three: A de-Googled smartphone – one without Google services
In the third, and hopefully final, part of this experiment to use a smartphone without Google services, a de-Googled smartphone, I will be using a smartphone running Lineage OS or /e/OS. I am not sure yet. Or both. It depends on how fast I can get my hands on either of them.

e-phone running /e/OS, a smartphone without Google services
You are familiar with Lineage OS, the successor to the popular CyanogenMod, which was shut down by its developers in 2016. /e/OS is a more recent open source mobile operating system (OS) designed from the ground up with a privacy-enabled internal environment for mobile phones. You can read up about it HERE .
If you have any questions, or ideas you would like for me to try, please share and I will do my best to follow through.
Author:Mister Mobility
Digital Skills and Communication Coach | Mobile Phone Connoisseur since 2001 | Tech Blogging since 2004
Add MobilityArena as a preferred source on Google
By way of a reminder, /e/OS claims to be an open source, privacy-enabled smartphone operating system devoid of the influences of big corporations like Google and Apple who run by harvesting user data. Because it is “unGoogled Android”, you can still use all the favourite apps and games that you are used to.
This is the sort of operating system that Huawei should be working on. Android, with no Google services and apps. And now, the non-profit foundation behind it say you can order any of the available smartphones with /e/OS pre-installed.
So what refurbished smartphones with /e/OS are we looking at?
For starters, the Samsung Galaxy S7 and Samsung Galaxy S9. The e Foundation say they partnered with professional smartphone refurbishes to provide these first smartphones with /e/, and at a great price too! e Foundation says these are the “highest grade refurbished smartphones”, which translates to getting them at much lower costs that one would have if buying them brand new.

Shipment of this first set of refurbished smartphones with /e/OS starts early next. Naturally, my choice would be the Samsung Galaxy S7, being the more affordable option. It is available with dual SIM slots and 32 GB storage. And at €279, it should cost a little over N100,000. That is a little above my budget for this experiment, though.

Samsung Galaxy S7 Edge is one of the available refurbished smartphones with /e/OS
I’d love to not have to spend more than N50,000 on the hardware for this experiment. When I am finally convinced that things work well enough and I am ready to dive in full-time, I wouldn’t mind spending more on a smartphone that runs /e/OS.
Of course, seeing as my days of flashing phones ended years ago, I also prefer not to have to deal with the intricacies of buying a more affordable device, then downloading and flashing the /e/OS ROM myself. Looks like a case of me not going to eat my cake and have it. Something has to give, however I choose to move forward. I will make up my mind though and make my move.
If you would like to live on the bleeding edge and be among the first to get your hands on a smartphone pre-installed with /e/OS, and this is within your budget, go ahead and register HERE .
- Don’t miss our reviews .
- Follow our news on Google News .
- Join our WhatsApp Group , to be notified of the most important articles and deals,
- Follow us on Instagram , Facebook , Twitter , and YouTube .
Author:Mister Mobility
Digital Skills and Communication Coach | Mobile Phone Connoisseur since 2001 | Tech Blogging since 2004