I just discovered this and it works fantastically on any old / unused android device you might have lying around, I was shocked at how easy it was, all the instructions are there, once you have it running all you need to do is set your router DNS settings to your pihole IP address and presto! Ads and trackers are gone!

https://github.com/DesktopECHO/Pi-hole-for-Android

  • @Madex@lemm.ee
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    4110 months ago

    Good concept but the WiFi latency and the processing speed would I’m sure slow down your browsing experience.

    Cool though!

    • @herrvogel@lemmy.world
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      1410 months ago

      Running a pi-hole doesn’t require much juice. It’s a fancy DNS server, not a router. First gen raspberry pis were pretty weak and even those things didn’t even break a sweat.

    • 🗑️😸
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      610 months ago

      Oh for sure. I think this is for a very niche user base: People who know about PiHole but don’t have a pi/linux box but do have an old Android phone. It’s definitely a strange but cool project.

    • chrizbieOP
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      510 months ago

      I haven’t seen any notable issues yet, a lot of people use a wireless pi zero to do the same thing so as long as you aren’t running a state of the art gaming rig (which i’m not) I think it’ll be fine

      • @Boxtifer@lemmy.world
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        310 months ago

        Your client hardware wouldn’t matter tho. State of the art or whatnot of a gaming rig would be fairly low. In sure most modern mobile phones create more DNS requests these days compared to a Windows machine and steam. It’s the configured software on the hosts that will dictate how much traffic your devices will get. A lot also cache by listening to the TTL. There will be some form of additional latency but your average Joe won’t probably notice.

        • chrizbieOP
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          110 months ago

          Oh I see well I could say I’m an average Joe lol

    • @TrustingZebra
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      210 months ago

      I’m not sure about that. The average consumer router is fairly underpowered but is still capable of handling the needs of most home networks.

      • sam
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        1110 months ago

        Wifi adds latency. Adding 30-300 ms of latency will noticeably affect your browsing experience.