{"package_name":"au.id.micolous.farebot","name":"Metrodroid","summary":"Metrodroid can read information from some public transport NFC smartcards","category":"Navigation","icon_url":null,"latest_version_code":4842,"latest_version_name":"3.1.0","apk_url":"/api/apk/au.id.micolous.farebot","apk_size":8699493,"apk_sha256":"2f71f986ea9b6f7fc6690f302651e277ffb66e41f440b611337bfaba29aeabc9","source_kind":"fdroid-repo","repo_slug":"izzyondroid","last_updated":1779371400,"release_timestamp":1763461450,"description":"<p>Metrodroid can read information from some public transport NFC smartcards. It was formerly known as Farebot M.</p><p>This is a fork of Eric Butler’s Farebot project, with support for additional cards and bug fixes. A list of supported cards can be found <a href=\"https://github.com/metrodroid/metrodroid#supported-card-protocols\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noindex nofollow noopener\">here</a>.</p><p>You require a NFC-compatible phone in order to read cards.</p><p>You need a NXP NFC chipset in your phone in order to read MIFARE Classic cards. Some phones have NFC chips from other manufacturers, which do not read Mifare Classic cards (eg: Nexus 4, Nexus 5, Samsung Galaxy S4). Check the About screen in the app in order to determine if your phone supports MIFARE Classic.</p><p>Some agencies have encrypted cards. You will need to acquire encryption keys in order to read them. These are generally unique to each card. Sorry, I can’t help you with this.</p><p>Some other agencies’ cards using Cubic Nextfare on Mifare Classic may also work.</p>","categories":["Navigation"]}