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Archive for the ‘Android OS’ Category

Network Trumps Device For The Consumer

February 16th, 2010 kurtfm Comments

This is a general reply to all the geek writers that keep reporting how terrible it is that there are all these different android devices out there for users to try to figure out.  This is just writing from your own perspective.

Most users are not going around and trying to figure out all the different ‘Android’ devices.  They are not like you.  They are not comparing Nexus One with Droid or looking at the differences between 1.5, 2.0, 2.0.1 and 2.1 to make their decision. They are not sampling every possible smartphone on the market, looking at trends, attempting to make sure they are on the ‘best’ platform or device.

I think for most people the search starts with the network provider, then goes from there, especially now that there are ‘options’ on each network.

Categories: Android OS, Comparisons, Verizon Tags:

Bluetooth Headset Excitement Is Squelched By Android Lack of Support

January 26th, 2010 kurtfm Comments

I saw a Motorola Bluetooth headset on sale at Amazon and decided to go for it.  Always wanted to be wire free but didn’t have a new enough device to take advantage of it, nor could I bare to even think about spending the type of money have have wanted for them.  There are better deals out there than before.

Take the one I got for example… 40$-ish from Amazon after shipping and tax, seemed like a decent enough deal (I think I missed this when they sold it at Verizon store for 24$ in one of their 24 hour sales).

http://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d.html/ref=redir_mdp_mobile/190-7720955-1250669?a=B002BH3I9U

Not really wanting to do a full review of the Motorola S305 headset for the Droid.  Suffice to say I can pair it and listen to music without having to mess with wires while working or working out.  Very cool feature that I did not realize about this headset is that it also has a mic built in.  If I get a call while wearing them I can answer as if I was wearing my regular bluetooth ear piece. I may shift it over to my mac for skype usage as well.

The *squelched* in the title really has nothing to do with the actual headset but with Android Bluetooth support.  Summary is that while a Bluetooth audio device will pair with your Android phone you can’t use any of the controls on the remote device to trigger functionality in Android. The most obvious is limited ability to push a ‘talk’ button on your Bluetooth ear piece it won’t do anything on your voice like… open the voice dialer.  Similarly, my new fancy headset has skip/repeat/pause/volume controls which do nothing on the Droid.

A lot of people discovered this when they bought the Droid and were a little upset in some cases and ready to return the device.

https://supportforums.motorola.com/thread/15939

http://www.google.com/support/forum/p/Android+Market/thread?tid=68ee7bd469245477&hl=en

http://androidcommunity.com/forums/f41/voice-dial-and-bluetooth-4999/

So if you go through and read a bunch of these the deeper developer types will tell you it’s not Motorola or HTC that is to blame but Android Bluetooth ’stack’ itself that the big G needs to improve to make this happy (so you know who to blame).  Either way it’s kind of lame…. seems like it would be priority for a phone device to get working.

One consolation is that this only came to the iPhone with the 3G update (so I read) or their latest OS release… but that’s not too consoling to me. The only thing that consoles me is to know that it’s only a software problem and not a hardware or device issues so it CAN be fixed.

Droid Going to Get Camera Auto Focus Updated!

December 4th, 2009 kurtfm Comments

http://blogs.zdnet.com/gadgetreviews/?p=9881&tag=nl.e539

I will be even more excited when it actually hits the phone. Things like this will help build faith that your Android phone decisions should really be around the hardware deficiencies and not software. That’s what I thought when I first heard about the camera issues. It sounded like something that could be resolved through an update.

Categories: Android OS Tags: , ,

Android Calendar to Desktop

December 1st, 2009 kurtfm Comments

I would venture to say that many people buying a Droid have never  really delved into the online calendar world.  I use a calendar at work heavily but haven’t really done much personal calendaring.  Entering an appointment or event right on into the built in Calendar app is such a cinch I started doing it. Then comes the next question… how to view or sync this with your desktop calendaring software.

As many Androidites already know… by jumping into Android you are drinking the Google CoolAide for better or worse.  Your little calendar app automatically syncs with your Google account calendar.  You can view it simply by going to Google Calendar or by using CalDAV to sync with software able to sync with it Mozilla Sunbird and Apple iCal work well.  You can view and add to your calendar through these desktop apps….though I am finding I use the web based applications for most everything getting the same experience no matter what system I am on.

Categories: Android OS, Apps Tags: , ,

Setting Unlock Pattern

November 20th, 2009 kurtfm Comments

As I added more and more stuff to my new Droid I began to wonder how secure is this? A kid could figure out how to slide the unlock. Can I secure it with a password? Sort of. I found in the ‘Location and Security’ menu the ability to set your own ‘Unlock Pattern’ which to be honest I thought was a little weird at first.  I still wonder how secure it really is as it seems easy for someone to see me entering it (vs typing something on a small keyboard).  On the plus side, once I got used to it… doesn’t really take any longer than swishing the unlock in than in the ‘no pattern’ scenario.  My initial thought was that I would just set it to be required when traveling but may just keep it on.

The process was just like setting up password, but does feel like your missing something. Thought it might help to see it so here are the steps I went through to set my pattern….

As I said from the home page open the menu and touch the ‘Location and Security’

setunlock

Select ‘Set Unlock Pattern’ which takes you to an intro page giving the steps coming

securephone

‘Next’ will open an intro describing how to create the pattern with four dots

example

The next screen allows you to record your pattern, letting you retry (reset) if you don’t like it.

patternrecorded

Once you feel comfortable with this… touching ‘continue’ takes you to a pattern confirmation page, where you enter it again

confirm

After touching ‘Confirm’ it takes you back to the preferences screen with the ‘Require pattern’ set and ‘Use visible pattern’ set.

usevisible

Now when I ‘locked’ the phone and tried to come back I was prompted to enter my pattern

unlockingphone

One tricky thing I found was that if I opened with the slider… had to enter my pattern sideways (in a way), but got used to that pretty quick

keyboardslideunlock

Otherwise, you can still disable sound and go into airplane mode etc.

othermodes

Categories: Android OS, Apps Tags:

Android Facebook App is Missing Something

November 16th, 2009 kurtfm Comments

The Facebook app that came already installed on the Droid / Android 2.0 is simple and would seem to have everything you need.  The funny thing is that I find myself using the facebook mobile site available through the browser more.

Facebook App Main MenuOn the positive side I like the simplicity, always wins with me.  In fact when my wife first saw it she blurted out that she wished Facebook on the web could be like that. There seems to be a tight integration with the camera and Gallery application which works nicely. It shows your update stream, friends, photo, profile, notifications, and let’s you take a photos for immediate upload to your profile.  For viewing friends status updates it works great.  I use groups on the web side so I can filter out my different types of ‘friends’ but this just takes the whole feed of updates together. Updating status is simple.

All my notifications come to my GMail account so now those are popping instantly into my Android GMail app.  When I first started to get them I was flipping back over to the Facebook application to find the comment or message and reply to it.  It wasn’t easy to find… even using the Notifications tab.  I found that clicking on the link itself ending up redirecting me over to Facebook mobile site touch.facebook.com which seemed just as simple and yet have a little better set of features.

browser_m_fb_inboxOne important piece in particular that the stand alone app is sorely missing is my ‘Inbox’ where I can view direct messages friends sent me.  Besides that, going from GMail to facebook mobile site was much more seamless and a better overall experience.

May be I will introduce it to people who are getting tired of the cluttered web browser experience, but then they might miss their Mafia Wars.

Categories: Android OS, Apps, Comparisons Tags:

One Week With The Droid: It’s Alive!!!

November 14th, 2009 kurtfm Comments

What were my first impressions of the Droid after using it a week? Overall: still love it. Flaws? Of course there are. First week is still fairly honeymoonish. Playing with the new toy, liking the hardware learning the software, etc.

Connected to the Mainframe

It came to life after it first slurped in my Google account. It started talking. Since I was already using gmail for pretty much everything (but work) it brought the Droid to life. The gmail application is simple and works great. The other epiphany came when I started to check and make sure numbers from my old cell were in there. All my Google and Facebook contacts all sync’d from the get go. Looking for a friend’s number was bit overwhelming if you have a lot of emails and FB connections many of which you don’t really call regularly but thankfully there is a little feature to filter out contacts that don’t have numbers which helps. The amazing thing to me was how little I did to get this all setup.

Additionally I added the free Meebo app for instant messaging and hellotxt app for updating status across my social networks. Meebo is the cleanest of the free IM apps I tried out. Besides the clean UI I really liked that it seldom completely disconnected me if I started on wifi and then stepped out of range it would seamlessly switch to 3G. I found hellotxt app to be fine so far. I usually update through IM anyway so this is a nice step up.

It Knows Where It Is

As many reviewers have pointed out Android 2.0 is very much location aware. You see it below your google search box in the browser (with consent of course). GPS was not one of the things I just had to have, but it’s pretty darn cool to have it none the less. Maps is cool but the directions functionality available in the … ‘Car Home’ application (not sure if it’s just another part of Maps or a separate application). Just tell it where you are trying to go it searches for closest match lets you select and get voice turn by turn directions from where you are. I only played with it but thinking it’s gonna come in handy on our Thanksgiving trip.

Play Something For Me

Based the reviews out there I was assuming this would suck. There is no simple iTunes-like sync to/from your desktop (like contacts sync). This was the first ‘flaw’ or ‘not so user-friendly’ encounter I had. No clear obvious explanation of how to transfer songs to the card. When it was plugged in it showed connected by USB but it was only charging. I could not see the SD card mounted on the desktop. Opened the ‘Getting Started’ pamphlet (that you usually never read right?) and found in the last page ‘Other Tips & Tricks’ the very last tip #5… “Transfer files to/from your PC:” which tells you how to do it. If you click on the notification that the USB is connected … it will give you the option to mount your SD card. Once I got that I was able to figure out the rest. I would say this ‘works’ but isn’t really clean would expect that to work a little better. After I got some music on there I didn’t have any issues using the built in Music app or playing the songs uploaded (as some reviewers did). I found the interface to be nice and clean, easy to use… and sound quality is great. I also downloaded several apps for streaming the best of which so far is Pandora. I am hoping for Imeem’s to improve and let me play for my favorited playlists from Imeem.com (and not just songs).

Beyond Music I setup the YouTube app so I can plug in to my subscriptions and playlists. Nice. Search inside YouTube works pretty well. I also started browsing the Market Place for games that would interest me. HDOS and Robo Defense are definitely keepers for me personally.

Phone Home

For me the phone works great. Better signal and sound quality than my last one… just phone for phone. Contacts mentioned above works great for me. When I first started using it up to my face I assumed it did the screen lock which is good, but was surprised when it did the unlock as I brought my hand down (way cool). I was expecting I would have to unlock the screen to get to the interface so the first few times I was bumbling with it but then made sense and I just rolled with it. My only complaint about the use ‘as a phone’ is funny to mention, but I did notice it so I will say it. It’s been mentioned that the Droid is solid, made of quality indgredients… metal, glass, etc. which you can feel. If hadn’t been using my Droid for a while, like it was next to my desk, and I got a call… when I put it to my face it was (uncomfortably) cold. This could be just cause I am in the Pacific Northwest and the temps are cooler but I bet I am not the only person who notices that.

Not Recycling Yet

I am still within my 30 day return policy window but at this point I am still keeping it. As time goes on it will be interesting to see how things grow positively and negatively.  I suspect as time goes on it will be the Android OS that either wins or loses my loyalty and not so much the Droid device.

Categories: Android OS, Apps Tags:

Droid Now or Wait for New Flock of Androids in 2010

November 13th, 2009 kurtfm Comments

This is one of the questions I faced when considering the Droid purchase. See my first post on why I bought the Droid. Besides the iPhone allure, the issue around keyboards and which wireless carrier to go with. There was also the possibilities of other Android based phones to consider.

Verizon currently only has two Android based phones the HTC Droid Eris and Motorola Droid. Cellfanatic.com has a good detailed comparison of these two.  For me the decision to get the Motorola goes back to the keyboard thing.  The HTC was tempting.  It feels nice in the hand (more like a phone, less like a device). It also has HTC’s pinch zoom (iPhone-ish) functionality.  The other thing about Eris for me that was a hard sell is that it’s only $100 less than the Motorola but spec for spec it seems you get so much more from the later. I expect Verizon will have one or two more Android based phones in 2010… and possibly the famed iPhone.

If you are not tied to a certain network like I am then options abound. I know that Garmin-Asus, Dell, Sony, Kyocera are all planning 2010 new Android based phones on various networks.

Categories: Android OS, Comparisons Tags: , , , ,

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