Category Archives: Reviews

My Experience with Android ICS (4.0)

There are tons of reviews and comparison articles about Samsung Galaxy Nexus, Android ICS or 4.0 and how it stacks up against other phones  such as iPhone. But since many of you have asked about my experience with Android I figured I would address it as a post. And as a one liner, for the most part I am happier than being an iPhone (4) user, but there are things I find to be frustrating as well. It’s a trade off like everything else.

Android ICS is my exposure to Android (other than playing with friends’ previous Android versioned phones for 2 mins here and there) so I can’t comment on how things were before, but in a nutshell the UX in many aspects is similar to how you do things in iPhone, other things very different. Here is what I like:

Configuration – In iOS, apps exist in silo and can be configured to the extend allowed by the app developer, and between apps, they don’t interact much. In Android they do much more. A couple of examples: You can configure what apps should be used for calling depending on type of number (international, local, specific country).  I can customize the home screen using any launcher app, I can configure it to ask me which of the three browsers to use each time I click on a link. I can configure it such that depending on what event has taken place (new email, new instant message, facebook notification etc) different color lights blink, the phone vibrates (or not, how many times). In other words you can really configure things at very detailed level. Not appealing to most people probably, but I really like this aspect as it makes the phone much more catered to my needs if I take the time.

Apps – It feels there are more free apps for android and I can’t say there are any apps I had on iOS that I couldn’t find for android (ok, maybe instagram), but it is clear that the same apps a lot of times feel less polished and snappy as their counterpart in iOS. Facebook app for example is plain awful in android and if you click on a link you need to switch to the browser app (in iOS it opens it within the app itself for the most part). Probably by design so google+ can get better traction.

Performance – since you can control things a lot more as a user, the performance can also be impacted by this, hence as a user, in iOS very seldom you find the phone slugish, in Android you have to keep an on things a bit more. The phone has also just frozen at times och screen has been unresponsive half a dozen times so far in my 3-2 months of usage. Never happened in iPhone.

Notifications and Widgets – By far I prefer Android’s approach here. You can also have widgets on the home acreen (e.g. your calendar) so you don’t have to start an app to check on things. Very useful. Still, the lock screen (if you use passcode) on Android is as useless as the iOS. I would like to see for example my upcoming meetings on it. And I have not found an easy way to configure this part yet.

In summary what makes me like Android more than iOS is the summary of what I described above but also other little (and sometime less significant) things such as the fact that you can take still pictures while you are shooting a video, a great turn-by-turn GPS app, superior experience in some of the Google specific apps like gmail or maps (e.g. you can offline-cache any 15 mile radius in maps in case you are heading into a bad reception area) and as I use some of these (gmail) it tips the scale easily towards Android.

Next stop will be getting a windows 8 phone to see how that measures once it is out…

Telephony in our household: Combining Google voice, Skype-in/out & cell-phones

Our household is amongst the ~17.5% household in US that does not have a landline and while it has worked very well, there has been occasions where we have felt that having a stationary phone would have been nice.

Recently this got me thinking as I got a Google Voice account (by having one in GrandCentral which Google bought a while back). Here is how we do telephony in our household:

  • Mobiles – both of us have one but it’s always on silent/vibrate not to risk waking up our baby, so we do miss calls. Also a lot of times we are not home and wish to make international calls to family, in which case having Google voice (see below) & a Rebtel account really helps.
  • Landline – We have a skype-in number (with skype-out feature) that we use through a Voip phone (Netgear SPH200D) which hooks up directly to our internet router so we are not dependent on a computer (and skype software) being on. And it ends up being much cheaper than paying monthly fee for landline. Of course if your internet connection is down, so is your ‘landline’ with this solution.
  • Google Voice (GV) – And finally the part that brings it all together: Having a GV nr allows people to call this nr, which in turn will ring all the other phones until someone picks up or it goes to voicemail. Voicemails gets transcribed to text and searchable from gmail. Further you can receive txt msgs on this nr.  There are tons of other features on GV beyond these though. Some of my favorite features:

And I expect soon enough Googletalk will be part of this solution which then really makes the possibilities endless.

Switching to Google Chrome

A long time ago I switched to Firefox mostly because of its extremly useful plug-in model (which also includes add-ons such as ieTab). I do use Internet Explorer (IE) from time to time since certain sites still are optimized (or only work) for/on IE.

Then came Google Chrome along and at a first brief encounter (installed on my Windows Server 2008 machine), I wasn’t impressed with the promised speed along with the fact that there were virtually no plugins out there to use.

A couple of months passed and I kept reading in blogs and other places about the amazing performance of this browser (e.g. test done by ExtremeTech), so I decided to give it a week on my Vista machine just in case in case…and surely I started seeing results. Web pages do load faster and I really find the omnibar very useful saving me both time and click as it tends to find what I am looking for 85% of time as the first result.

So even though I have to give up a few of my plugins (and thereby features) due to chrome being so new on the market and lacking proper plugins, I still find it worth it even if the speed gain is 2.3% (according to the tests). You may think above certain limit small gain in speed does not matter and it’s more of a marketing ploy. I disagree because performance hit even in small dosage is very noticeable and frustrating, so I take performance over feature richness if I have to.

Qik.com – Best Thing Since Sliced Bread?

I heard of qik.com a while back and been wanting to try it out but unfortunately it was not available for Windows Mobile phones. To summarize it in one line: the site allows you to stream live video from your phone on the net.

Why is this so cool? If you think about it, a major part of having family/friends close to you geographically means that you get to know about the small details of their lives as you have frequent interactions which provides this wonderful aspect. You know, small seemingly unimportant details that we feel there is no time to share or are simply not important enough when we are thousands of miles away from each other and chat over the phone/skype/chat etc.

With my (3G) Nokia and Qik installed on it, all I need to do is send a text msg to whoever I want to share a visual moment with, be it when I am at a concert, our baby doing something cute or some other share-worthy event happens, and they can get on qik site and watch it live (with ~10 seconds lag). It also gets recorded in case you want to see it later. No more a need for a web cam connected to computer with internet connection.

And here is an actual example of a situation when it was very useful : When being at a pool with our daughter Carmel, I sent a text message to my parents telling them they can get on qik.com which they did back in Finland, and they were able to enjoy Carmel, seeing her splash and laugh in the pool, *live*. Alternative to this would have been to record it on the phone or other camera, download it to a computer, upload it to youtube.com, send an email to them to watch it which at best would have been a few hours after the event; not anywhere as good as watching something live and feeling you are part of it.