Wednesday, 21st July 2010, sheilaellen (http://blogs.bluegumtree.co.uk/vista/)
Or “How Sony Ericcsson took a good thing and very nearly made it bad.”
I love the X10 Mini Pro. I’ve had it for a few weeks now and am still marvelling at how light and compact it is and that I once again have an FM radio with me at all times. However I am struggling to adjust to the customisations that Sony Ericsson have made to to Android. For example:
- Right now, as I type, there’s an annoying blue bar occupying the bottom sixth of my screen. On the left-hand side it tells me, in no more than three letters, what language I’m currently set to. On the right-hand side it tells me what mode the keyboard is in (letters vs. numbers, upper, lower or title case) and provides an option to hide the bar. It’s information I’d rather do without, in return for a larger usable screen area. So I hide it, only to discover that it reappears with the very next key press… I’ve had a rummage through the phone’s settings and haven’t yet found an option that enables me to hide it for good. If you know of one, please let me know.
- The default calendar widget has less functionality than the default one on my G1 – and that was just enough to make it useful!
- The default email client assumes that my email account name is the same as my email address (which it isn’t).
- Although I’ve disabled the on-screen keyboard (it has a hardware one) it still pops up if when the cursor is placed in a form field and I haven’t yet opened the keyboard. I understand that some people might want this sometimes but, personally, I’d like “off” to mean “off”. This could be solved using finer grained preference settings.
However, every cloud has a silver lining:
- Luckily there’s a fantastic email app called K-9 Mail that does everything I need and more, so that’s my email problem solved.
- And as I’ve yet to find a decent calendar widget so I’m thinking of taking a stab at creating one myself.
Monday, 21st December 2009, sheilaellen (http://blogs.bluegumtree.co.uk/vista/)
I recently had to revert back to using a 1GB memory card in my G1, since the 16GB card spontaneously corrupted. Ever since, my phone’s been helpfully pointing out, at least once per day, that it’s short of storage space and suggesting that I manage my applications; by “manage” it means “delete”.
There are some apps that I could delete but I’m reluctant to do so because I like them and might forget what they’re called should I acquire a more powerful android device and wish to reinstall them. There are others that I rarely use but do exactly what I need them to do on those rare occasions that I do need them. Until now, I’ve been managing to hang on to the aforementioned apps by deleting apps that I’ve installed either because they looked as though they’d do what I needed but didn’t or simply because they looked shiny in the store but quickly dulled with use. However, with Christmas looming, last night I thought I’d try installing the RTM android app – and it’s a whopper (~3.75MB). I’m determined to give it a proper trial but this means that finally I’m going to have to get ruthless with the other apps.
As I shall probably wish/need to reinstall some of them at a later date, if not on this phone then another, here’s a rollcall of the victims of this cull:
| Name |
Description |
Use |
Pros |
Cons |
Size |
Version |
Credits |
| BeyondPod |
Full featured podcast manager and RSS feed reader. |
Managing the few podcasts I subscribe to. |
Easy to use. Can schedule automated checks and downloads. |
I get stuck in the interface, looping between the various screens as to exit, instead of pressing “Back”, you have to press “Home”. Also, I’ve yet to get it to successfully subscribe to ABC’s MediaWatch vodcast; not sure if that’s a problem with the vodcast or the app. |
1.55MB + 1.01MB data |
204 |
BeyondPod Team |
| Phonebook |
Contacts management: “unified communications inbox” (calls and SMS), stats, birthday notifications, search, groups. |
Alternative to the default address book. |
Much better than the default address book. |
I only keep in contact with a few people via voice calls and/or SMS so don’t really need/use the advanced features. |
1.87MB + 88KB data |
106 |
Voxmobili – Onmobile |
| Meridian |
Media player: search, lyrics, subtitles, gestures, ID3 edit, rating, meta data. |
For playing media (mostly audio) stored on my phone, which isn’t much with this smaller SD card. |
Much better than the default app. |
I rarely listen to the music stored on my phone, preferring to stream from online radio services instead. |
1.53MB + 100KB data |
75 |
III – Romulus Urakagi Ts’ai |
| IcWord |
Document viewer: Microsoft Word only. |
Allows me to open and read MS Word documents. |
Provides functionality that isn’t available to me by default. |
Only useful for MS Word documents. |
1.16MB |
2 |
Derek Li |
| FBReader |
eBook reader: epub, oeb and fb2. |
Reading novels. |
Gives me the option to read a book without having to carry anything extra around with me. |
I prefer to read the paper version. |
1.09MB + 44KB data |
527 |
Geometer Plus |
| Pixelpipe Pro |
Media uploader: images, video, audio, text. |
Posting to Flickr. |
I can upload instantly, no need to wait until I have access to a more capable PC with internet access. |
I very rarely use it. |
1.05MB + 76KB data |
23 |
Pixelpipe |
| WordUp! |
Word game, very like Boggle. |
Killing time on the bus. |
I love word games. |
I don’t use my phone to play games very often. |
0.98MB + 52KB data |
28 |
Anthrological |
| Odd One Out |
Game: spot the odd one out, against the clock. |
Get’s pretty challenging to beat the clock towards the end. |
Not enough variety, just the same shapes but with less time. |
I don’t use my phone to play games very often |
264KB |
9 |
CRSoft |
| OffiViewer |
Office document viewer. Opens PDF, Word, Exel, PowerPoint, OpenDocument and RTF files. |
For reading random documents downloaded off the web or received as email attachments. |
I don’t have to wait until I get to a more capable PC. |
I don’t use my phone to read office documents very often |
240KB + 4KB data |
12 |
Art of Solving |
The RTM app had better be good…
Sunday, 8th February 2009, sheilaellen (http://blogs.bluegumtree.co.uk/vista/)
This post was written on my (new) G1 using a handy app called wpToGo. Admittedly I could have written it just as easily using the laptop currently resting on, you guessed it, my lap but I wanted to test how well the app works. I’ve already tried PostBot but didn’t even manage to get it setup properly. I don’t anticipate posting from my phone very often but – you never know…