Updated
Updated · MUO - MakeUseOf · Jun 18
Mako Wins Switch From Niagara as $43 Price and Widget Limits Undercut Rival
Updated
Updated · MUO - MakeUseOf · Jun 18

Mako Wins Switch From Niagara as $43 Price and Widget Limits Undercut Rival

1 articles · Updated · MUO - MakeUseOf · Jun 18

Summary

  • Mako became the author's default launcher across multiple Android devices after Niagara's $43 lifetime license and ongoing subscription model made its no-widget design harder to justify.
  • Built in Kotlin and running fully on-device, Mako is free, open-source under GPL-3.0-or-later, requires no account or network connection, and is available through F-Droid.
  • Its single-screen layout centers on an app list and one compact info strip, while grouping and collapsible sections help tame hundreds of apps without adding heavier interface layers.
  • That stripped-down design also helps Mako run smoothly on older phones and tablets, though it still lacks widget stacks, gesture-heavy customization, and a resizable top strip.
  • The switch underscores a broader trade-off in minimalist Android launchers: users may accept fewer customization options if privacy, speed, and zero cost outweigh polish.

Insights

Mako Launcher is free, private, and open-source, but what is the hidden cost of its long-term survival and development?
Is Mako's no-widget philosophy a refreshing stand for digital wellness or a step back for Android's personalization features?
After Nova Launcher's privacy scandal, can free apps like Mako survive without eventually selling user data?