Tuesday, June 26, 2012

New phones on Olympic years

It seems that I'm replacing my phone about every four years. My previous phone was an iPhone that I bought around Beijing Olympics. I bought my new phone, the Samsung Galaxy Note, just before the London Olympics. My phone before the iPhone, a Sony Ericsson W800i, also lasted ~4 years. I don't think I'm qualified as a "gadget" guy that a lot of people think I am based on this frequency.

Anyway, the more interesting question is: why did I switch from iOS to Android? Well, updating a jailbroken iPhone was a tedious process and I only did it once so my iPhone was running iOS 3. I wasn't able to install any new App from the official or unofficial App Store anymore. I might run into the same issue with Android. Who knows? I'm like the people who vote for a candidate from a different party because of poor performance of the last one. You just hope it'll be better. 

So, what were my top priority action items after getting the phone?
1) Sync contact from iPhone to Google
Android is tightly coupled with your Google account (well, everybody has one, right?) Basically the address book and calendar on your phone ARE the ones in the "Cloud" associated with your Google account. All I needed to do is to open iTunes and sync the contacts to Google. I think not every contact went through but it seems to have taken care of the majority.

2) Sync Yahoo Calendars
iPhone's builtin Calendar app allows you to sync with many different provider that uses CalDAV, including Yahoo. Not so for Android. There are 3rd party app that is supposed to work but I'd rather not risk my money. The solution? Export my existing Yahoo Calendars and import to my Google Calendar and stop using them for good. Yeah, it's more like a workaround. (Google has cut off yet another source of traffic to Yahoo!)

3) Add music
This is easy: connect the phone to any computer using USB and simply copy the files to any directory on the memory of the phone. The phone will automatically scan for the new files.

4) Customize ringtone
Once I have music files on the phone, I could open my Contact list and simply assign one of those files as the ringtone for a particular contact. However, I might not like to use the beginning of a song as the ringtone, for example, I prefer the chorus part in the middle of a song. For this, I downloaded the free app Ringdroid and pick the part I like. Ringdroid saves it as a ringtone file. (I think internally Android OS uses a particular directory for ring tones. It's hidden to un-rooted phone like mine) I wonder why the app is not banned by the phone companies who wanted to squeeze more money out of people. Some are willing to pay $3+ for a ringtone.

5) Whatsapp
It relies on your Contact list/address book. The only thing I changed is its Notifications setting: I turned off "Contact Ringtone" so that it won't play the ringtone of the person who messaged me. I'm confused 'coz I thought I got a phone call.

6) Cangjie input
I downloaded this popular Chinese input method app. I could have made it my default input method because when I type English, it will try to translate and I could pick either the Chinese word or the English word I typed. So it works for both Chinese and English without toggling "modes" like the other Chinese input method app (Go Keyboard) Its prediction is pretty accurate too. However, the reason it is so accurate is that it has generated statistics from keystrokes collected from user. Yes, it did warn user about it. I don't want my keystrokes to be collected all the time so my default is still the Samsung one.

Here is the list of other free Apps I downloaded. I learned about them from my Android tablet experience.
  • Color Note
  • Blogger
  • Apple Daily
  • Discuss(香港討論區)
  • Rhapsody
  • XiiaLive Lite
  • Pandora
  • cBook
  • SpeedCar
  • AirPenguin
  • Google Drive
  • HKBN 2b

SlingPlayer is not free ($29.99) but I gotta take advantage of the big screen! In fact, the 5.3 screen is the reason I chose it over any other phone. The newer Samsung Galaxy S3 is supposed to have better spec (and running Android 4 aka Ice Cream Sandwich already) but I couldn't resist the BIG screen.