Power up your Unistellar experience.
Hi, and welcome to the official repository of the Nebuni app!
Available on Android and iOS, Nebuni is a companion app designed to enhance your Unistellar experience.
Nebuni is an independent project and is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or connected to Unistellar.
- ❓ What's Nebuni?
- 📸 Screenshots
- 🌟 Key features
- 🚀 Release
- 💡 Why Nebuni?
- 🐇 No, I mean... WHY Nebuni? Why this name?
- 🗺️ Roadmap
- ❤️ How to support?
- 📜 License
Nebuni is an open source cross-platform app helping to use your Unistellar's telescope.
The first feature will be to fetch science missions, storing them locally for offline use and with an option to open official Unistellar's app science page, like if using the science website.
- Create Observation Place to customize your observing experience and find appropriate missions
- Check every mission details before use, with date and time displayed for your timezone
- Missions are stored locally, so they can be check offline (or connected to an Unistellar's telescope)
- Adapt to every device and screen, from phone to tablet, full or split screen, etc... You can use it side by side with Unistellar's app!
- Support Light and Dark theme, along to custom theme on more recents Android devices
Nebuni will be released on Apple's App Store and Google Play Store when the real v1 will be reach.
For iOS users, go to this link, follow instruction provide by Apple and join the beta program of Nebuni 🐰
For Android users, go to this link, accept conditions if needed and install the beta version of Nebuni's app! 🐰
I'm a user of Unistellar's telescope and one thing I missed to do more science is a tool to help me find missions, especially when I'm connected to my telescope, without internet access.
I also want to try Kotlin and Compose multiplatform development framework for mobile app.
So I joined both and start working on Nebuni!
Oh... I see. In fact, as a side project, I don't really think about a name of product, or something. But be real, "Unistellar's science mission fetching app" is a bit long, difficult to remind and limited in terms of future development, right? So... I brainstorm few minutes...
Nebula was deep sky object I prefer (sooo colorful!!! 🤩)
Nebula could be a good starting point to link to "Unistellar", or, more globally, "Universe", "Unity", etc... like "NebUnistellar" or "NebUniverse"...
And, in shorter way... Nebuni make me think about... a bunny 🐰! (So, in same time, I got a name AND a logo, pretty cool, right? 😎)
Also, Lepus is a small constellation, associated to Orion and his dogs (for story), but fainter than them... Like Nebuni, a smaller app than Unistellar's one (or any other company if some feature could be compatible to all of them)
Here are some elements to be added inside the app to have a good experience with the main feature currently focused.
- Call and fetch Unistellar's science API
- Add input to define GPS coordinates (and use them to make API calls)
- Open Unistellar's app by using providing deeplink
- Save GPS coordinates for next app use
- Save API result locally for offline use
- Support "Cometary Activity" missions
- Support "Planetary Defense" missions
- Add option to create new Observation Place
- Add option to update and delete Observation Place
- Add option to filter and group missions (by type, start date,...)
If you like Nebuni and want to support its development:
- ⭐ Star the repository on GitHub if you have an account — it really helps!
- ☕ Buy me a coffee on Ko-Fi to help me keep improving the app
Copyright (C) 2025 Sylvain
This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU Affero General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU Affero General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU Affero General Public License along with this program. If not, see http://www.gnu.org/licenses/.