One thing is a flight of a few hours and another ten hours or more. Although my strategy generally boils down to “sleep as much as possible”, I I prepare my cell phone so that it is impossible to get bored during longer flights. This involves installing a series of applications that I don’t normally have on my mobile.
When I travel, I use a lot of offline documents from Google Docs, Google Keep, Wallet, Gmail and other basic documents, but there are other lesser-known apps that I install exclusively before a flight. These are the following.
Forfeiture of the executive
Framelapse is one of the oldest applications for generating timelapses or time-lapse videos. My phone already has this feature, but I can barely configure anything and the time-lapse camera that records it isn’t fast enough to notice much of a difference in the movement from the plane.
I then prefer to use Framelapse, especially if I’m sitting at the window. I purchased this application many years ago and although its interface is somewhat outdated, it still works very well, allowing me configure time between frames in detail
Stellarium
If the flight is at night, which will be the case at some point if it is a flight lasting several hours, use an application to locate celestial bodies It’s a great idea.
Stellarium is one of the most popular and does not need an internet connection to show you where the Moon is or If this point of light is a UFO or Venus. It’s true that through the plane window we don’t have much angle to observe the sky, but it’s a way to pass the time.
Zonely
When We cross different time zones It’s easy to lose track of what time is where. Calculating times with time difference is complicated and a very useful application to avoid confusion is Zonely, from OnePlus.
The application allows you to configure a series of cities to see later on a graph what time is it in each place, at each moment. Unfortunately, OnePlus has discontinued the app and it is no longer available on Google Play, but the old version still works perfectly and you can download it from other sites.
Speedometer and GPS altimeter
During a flight, I am sometimes curious to know how fast the plane is traveling. It’s a somewhat irrelevant fact, but long hours of sitting with almost no legroom provide a welcome excuse for entertainment.
You can know data such as speed and altitude easily with many GPS applications, such as GPS Speedometer. These applications use the mobile’s GPS and do not need data to function.
VLC
Before a ground flight prepare Spotify by downloading enough music to survive the apocalypse and enough films and series on Netflix to take you around the world, but not everything is available on these platforms.
This is where locally saved content on mobile comes in, which deserves special attention. old school video player instead of using Google Photos or similar. VLC is one of the best.
Amazon Kindle
There was a time when I took my Kindle (the device) on the plane, but lately I’ve chosen to reduce the amount of junk I carry with me and instead I use the Kindle app on my mobile.
It’s not as comfortable as reading on a Kindle, but the truth is that I eventually get tired of reading before it becomes uncomfortable for me to read on the mobile screen. In the Kindle app I have a good number of books
Google Play Games
Google Play Games usually comes pre-installed on mobilealthough I never pay too much attention to it to the point that sometimes I hide its icon or deactivate it directly.
However, Google Play Games is a great travel companion because it offers a few built-in offline games: Minesweeper, Snake, Solitaire, Cricket, PAC-MAN and Crazy Jumps.
Fallout shelter
Of course, I usually install a series of offline games that seem interesting to me at the time, but one recurring game that I usually revisit is Fallout shelter.
The dead hours of a flight are an ideal time to manage my fallout shelter and take it to the next level, because this is a game in which you can spend hours and hours.
Valley of Stars
Speaking of games you can play for hours, another usual suspect that comes up on every transatlantic flight is Stardew Valley, the famous farm simulator…and more.
There’s always time to clear the rocks, water the tomatoes or try to go further into the mines. In addition, the game is updated from time to time and I still have content to discover.
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