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    <title>Macha</title>
    <link>http://blog.initprogram.com</link>
    <description>Gaming, Programming and Random Rants</description>
    <pubDate>Tue, 27 Sep 2011 19:00:05 GMT</pubDate>
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    <item>
      <title>Android, the early days</title>
      <link>http://blog.initprogram.com/2011/03/09/android-the-early-days/</link>
      <pubDate>Wed, 09 Mar 2011 21:25:00 GMT</pubDate>
      <category><![CDATA[Me]]></category>
      <category><![CDATA[gadgets]]></category>
      <guid>http://blog.initprogram.com/2011/03/09/android-the-early-days/</guid>
      <description>Android, the early days</description>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>So, for quite some time, I've been meaning to buy a smartphone to
   replace my current dumbphone and iPod Touch 2G combination. It had
   worked fairly well for most of the last few years, with a few exceptions, but I
   was getting tired of carrying around 2-3 devices with me (depending on
   if I needed a camera or not) and iOS 4 was very problematic. I was left
   to choose between a stable, responsive device (downgrading to 3.1.2) and one which could continue to install most apps from the App Store. My iPod Touch 2G was also looking like it would soon fall completely to 
   the onslaught of planned obselence breathing down it's neck, as updates
   such as iOS 4.3 did not appear to support it, and many apps ran
   unacceptably slowly on it.
</p>
<p>Initially I had hoped to buy a device in roughly the price range of a
   new iPod Touch, at around €300. This obviously ruled out the iPhone, but
   I reckoned that once I'd eliminated the Apple tax, I'd be able to get an
   acceptable smartphone for that price range.
</p>
<p>As some of you already laughing at my naivety have guessed, I was wrong
   on that point. The sub-€300 price range was represented by a cheap
   Vodafone branded phone, the obsolete-at-birth Sony Ericsson X8, and the
   Samsung i5500 and HTC Wildfire, both of which had a screen resolution
   identical to my 3 year old €80 dumbphone, the Sony Ericsson k800i.
   Nice job guys. I know it's relatively the budget end but you're selling a
   smartphone that has fallen at the first hurdle to a 3 year old phone at
   1/3 of the price.
</p>
<p>So with the budget end ruled out, I waited a while until I had enough
   cash and decided to have a look at more expensive phones. The iPhone?
   €460 for the obselete 3GS, €600 for the iPhone 4. Pass. Around the €400
   mark, I noticed the HTC Desire. It was certainly well reviewed and the
   3.7" screen was roughly around the size I wanted. It did however look a
   little dated with the HTC Desire HD and HTC Desire Z having been
   released since. 
</p>
<p>None of the networks here sold the Desire Z, which limited my HTC
   choices to the HTC Desire or the Desire HD. There was also the Samsung
   i9000 hanging around that price point also, but the general consensus I
   got from people I knew was that HTC was the better of the two.
</p>
<p>So, with the choices down to two, I agonised over the HTC Desire vs. the
   HTC Desire HD. While the HTC Desire HD was €50 dearer, that wasn't a
   major factor. Instead, I was worried that the 4.2" screen was too big
   for practicality.
</p>
<p>However, that decision was made for me pretty quickly when HTC announced
   the Desire S, a definite replacement to the Desire. Not as you might
   think, to wait for the Desire S, as with the phone networks here there
   is no telling how long that would be, but for the Desire HD. So pretty
   quickly I went into the store to buy it. I know, I know. You bought it
   in store? What a caveman! However, the online discount of €30 was only
   slightly more than the €20 discount I got in store from switching from
   O2 to Vodafone, and I find it always helps to be able to shout at a
   specific store if things go wrong.
</p>
<p><img src="http://i.imgur.com/GSih0.jpg" alt="My new phone"/>
</p>
<p>When I'd first bought my iPod Touch, one of my initial thoughts was how
   much better the screen looked than any other device I'd owned before.
   While people with Retina displays might scoff at the 800x480 screen on
   the Desire HD, that too managed to inspire the same reaction, being a
   huge improvement over my old iPod Touch's 320x480 screen. 
</p>
<p>Performance was a huge improvement too, although anything would have
   been as iOS 4 completely destroyed any semblance of responsiveness in my
   iPod Touch. However, it still seemed faster than my iPod had been under
   3.1.2 and than my friend's 3GSes (none of them had an iPhone 4 for me to
   compare with).
</p>
<p>It's more stable than iOS from what I've seen so far. Safari used to
   crash on a fairly regular basis, occasionally requiring the entire iPod
   to be rebooted. However, I'm not willing to make a final judgement on
   this until I've used the device a bit more, and twice I've hit the home
   button to be brought back to a Loading dialog for a minute instead of my home screen,
   as if the home screen app has been closed.
</p>
<p>Compared to an unjailbroken iOS device, the vanilla Android experience
   is extremely well featured. Notifications are handled much better,
   though the pull down UI was a bit unusual. I like the idea of the
   letters typed appearing above the area occupied by my fingers, though on
   my first few uses as I got used to it from iOS, I had to shrug off the
   feeling that I was hitting the wrong button upon seeing this. One annoyance when typing that I still mess up is that the close
   keyboard button occupies the space taken by the button to bring up
   numbers and symbols on iOS devices. I've heard that this keyboard is HTC
   specific, but I haven't access to any other Android device to check at
   the moment.
</p>
<p>Applications are pretty good too. My must have App Store  apps on an iOS device are
   Twitter, Canabalt and Angry Birds. Far from a huge collection,
   obviously, as I got bored of most other apps and removed them
   eventually, and for some found they never worked that well anyway on my
   iPod (Call of Duty, Simcity, etc.). Angry Birds is on Android, free too,
   though the ads are somewhat annoying. If they offered a paid no-ads
   option I would probably buy it again. Canabalt is not, however my device
   has a flash player, so I can actually play it on <a href="http://canabalt.com">Canabalt's
website</a>. I probably won't, because it's not the
   most practical, thought it was a funny discovery.
</p>
<p>Twitter was already included on the device, and my first few comments
   were about how it was inferior to Twitter for iPhone, but acceptable. A
   quick search of Twitter clients (Twidroyd, HTC Peep) failed to show up
   anything better so I stuck with Twitter for Android. However, I soon
   discovered that preinstalled apps don't auto update, and manually
   installing it from the Market got me Twitter for Android 2. Which is
   pretty close to the iPhone app, missing only the My Tweets, Retweeted
   functionality. On the plus side, it has no dickbar.
</p>
<p><img src="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-WhEQKCWgNw4/TVRH-qhSCXI/AAAAAAAAAKo/EC1yo1M1E1Q/s1600/android-screenshot-1b.jpg" alt="Twitter for Android 2, seem familiar?"/>
</p>
<p>Moving onto jailbreak applications, my must haves were sbsettings,
   MxTube, and.. and.. well that was about it really at the end. sbsettings
   I do miss, mainly for the brightness control, as auto brightness (on
   either device) never seems to set brightness to the minimum, which makes
   using the device when it's anyway dark rather painful. MxTube had tons
   of equivalents on the Android market, and the one I went for is
   TubeMate. It's a bit clunky, but it'll do.
</p>
<p>I also found plenty of GBA emulators. While there was one on the iPhone,
   gPSPhone, which I used when it was free, I just kept the free version
   until I updated to iOS 4 which it no longer worked on. Since iOS 4 had
   performance problems, I never bothered with any emulators on it. There
   is also a PSX emulator, FPSe. It's very nice, and unlike on my iPod
   Touch 2G, it runs the games at an acceptable speed without ruining the
   sound. There is also psx4droid, which I tried, but putting a ROM on it
   took more than 15 minutes so I missed the refund window when I
   discovered it was too slow.
</p>
<p>An interesting fact about these emulators is that they are on the
   Android Market, and worked without rooting, unlike the iOS ones which
   required Cydia and a jailbroken device. Likewise, other jailbreak
   features such as custom themes and a slide down app launcher (part of
   sbsettings) are inbuilt into the software. Anything that saves on
   potental warranty voiding is always good.
</p>
<p>One of the nicest features of Android is how syncing works. Take files,
   drag and drop to device, either by plugging it into a computer or by
   using sftp over an app running on the device (I use SSHDroid but it was
   literally the first I found). No crapware programs, and none of the
   horribly painful bloat that is iTunes. On the negative side, this does
   make album art a bit more difficult to manage.
</p>
<p>All in all, I'm fairly happy with my new phone, though there are still a
   few teething issues, such as the close keyboard button placement, and my
   tendency to not use the search key in a lot of cases where I should.
</p>]]></content:encoded>
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