Monday, July 25, 2011

Google Music Beta

Hey there guys, I can't write a full post today for I have a test tomorrow but that doesn't mean I don't have anything for you guys!
I just got an invite for Google Music Beta and am currently uploading my music library to their servers...big whoop right...But I live in Brazil!!!!
And now Google has "opened" Google Music Beta for people outside of the US, but there's still the tricky part of getting an invite. That's what I'm going to tell you how to do...
You need to be in the US to get the invite.... no, I'm not suggesting that you hop on a plane, register and go back home... :-)
All you need to do is pretend you're there... you can use a website like www.hidemyass.com or an app like Hotspot Shield which I highly recommend... Use any of this two tools and go to http://music.google.com/ and request an invite, then it's just a matter of waiting...
You'll get your invite in a week or so and then the fun starts...

The one thing you'll not be able to get though is the Android app but here you go!! Google Music Beta

Enjoy!

Sunday, July 24, 2011

Android Open Source Project!!!

My Xperia X10 was my main phone, mainly because of better battery life and a more comfortable form factor. But after I got CyanogenMod 7 on my Motorola Milestone the battery life gap was closing and fast!
The biggest flaw of the X10 though was the painfully outdated Operating System (OS). It was still running Android 1.6 Donut! I had Android 2.3 Gingerbread running in my, older and not flagship phone, Milestone!
Something had to be done about that, and it was a long time and after a lot of broken promises and delays from Sony Ericsson that finally Android 2.1 arrived to the Xperia! Yes Android 2.1!!! That's not exactly ideal but it's much better than 1.6. From 1.6 to 2.1 there's a great leap performance wise and with battery life.
But right after getting Android 2.1 to my Xperia it was slower than when I had 1.6 on it! Yes, again Sony dropped the ball and really bloated up the OS making it sluggish and disappointing...
But then the X10 developers started to pick up the ball that Sony dropped...
The XDA forums had the answers again, and some great developers started tweaking the 2.1 release from Sony to get a good experience on our phones. One of the best 2.1 ROM's can be found here.
But that wasn't what we wanted, we wanted more, we always want MORE!!! So the great Jerpelea and the great zdzihu started working together and managed to get Android 2.2 Froyo working on our beloved Xperia!! That was great news... Although 2.3 is a nice upgrade there are no major features that you don't have on 2.2. 2.2 on the other hand had Flash support that 2.1 lacked!! That's big, just ask any of your friends that have an iPhone or an iPad that can't access some sites because they don't have flash...
But that wasn't all they did, it wasn't a Sony Ericsson 2.2, with bloatware, Timescape, Mediascape and other things that slow your phone more that it helps, it was Android Open Source Project!!! That means it was a clean, nothing but pure Android!! That's what the Milestone had when I bought it almost a year ago by then, but that was a much lighter better looking phone with a better hardware with it!! This ROM completely revitalized my X10 and made using it an enjoyable experience again!! And that was not all, for now I could change pretty much anything I wanted to make my phone look and act the way I wanted it to...

PS: Sorry for the long gap between posts, I'll try and get back to a post a day, but I've been a bit busy lately...
PPS: The app I'm recommending today is Total Commander for Android, it's still beta but it's one of the greatest file managers for Android out there, it's free and has no ads!! Click here for a more detailed description.
PPPS: I still have Google+ invites if any of you guys want it...

Thursday, July 14, 2011

Google + invites

Today I can't make a proper post but to make up for it I have google+ invites to go around, just make a comment  with your email and I'll send it to you guys!

PS: Swift key X just left beta state, I've been using it for a while and it's one of the best, if not the best keyboard available out there, now also available for tablets, I highly recommend it! Phone version and Tablet Version

Wednesday, July 13, 2011

CyanogenMod for the win!!

Ok, so custom ROMs were not yet available to the Xperia X10, so I let it be for a while and went on to play with my Milestone...
As some people already know the Motorola Milestone is the international version of the Motorola Droid, the biggest difference being that the Milestone has a locked bootloader :-( whereas the Droid has an unlocked one...
For custom ROMs this makes a huge difference, first big difference is that Cyanogenmod does not support devices with a locked bootloader. And you really want Cyanogenmod if you're planning to use custom ROMs. It's the most popular custom ROM in the Android scene. It offers some nice performance and interface improvements. But not all hope was lost because of the best part of having an Android phone is that you have a great developer community behind it...
So thanks to Kabaldan and other great developers a port of Cyanogenmod was made for the Motorola Milestone!!
And as an added bonus Kabaldan's port was of CM (CyanogenMod) 7, which is actually Android 2.3 (Gingerbread)!! Now that I managed to get my Milestone to run CM7 the battery was better than ever, was incredibly fast thanks to the ROM and to the great overclock for the processor which made my measly 500Mhz processor turn into a 900Mhz machine!!
My Xperia was starting to feel like a bad phone, and it was sluggish in comparison, and it has a much better hardware on it! That just goes to show how much difference can exist when you have Android 1.6 (Donut) instead of the latest and much more modern Android 2.3 (Gingerbread)! But I wouldn't just give up on it...

PS: In homage to the MLB All-Star break (congrats to Robinson Canò for his Home Run derby win and the National League for the All-Star game win) here is a nice app to play a little baseball on your Android, is on sale and I like it a lot! Homerun Battle 3D. Hope you guys like it!
PPS: Thanks a lot for all the visits guys, yesterday there was a boom in the visits thanks to my previous post with the new Android Market app, if you didn't grab it yet go ahead and download it!

Tuesday, July 12, 2011

New Android Market app

A nice little "gift" for you guys, the new Android Market App!! just install the .apk file!

Now the real fun starts!

I've managed to get paid apps to work on my phones and I've got root access, now it's time to start messing around big time!
I've started really reading the XDA  forums and started to understand how Android works. I had a Motorola Milestone with Android 2.2 (Froyo) and my Xperia X10 with Android 1.6 (Donut). The Milestone had stock android and was running smoothly, but the battery life was very bad. I had real problems getting through the day with it. The solution came from one of the greatest apps I know in the market: Titanium Backup, with it I could freeze and uninstall system apps. Freezing an app is a less definitive solution to uninstalling. It stops the app from working without actually removing it from your system folder, so if you have a problem after freezing an app you can just defrost it...
So I started freezing the bloatware that was installed on my phone. After I froze a hole lot of apps I've never used and some lame games my battery nearly doubled!! Now was time to address the X10 problems...
The Xperia was laggy and also had a bad battery life, but this time the biggest blame was on the Timescape interface, if sucks battery like there's no tomorrow!! So I froze a hole lot of it, the Timescape app, the Mediascape, and other pointless apps. But the one thing I froze that made the biggest difference to me was the face recognition for the camera, I never used and it worked non stop on the background eating away my battery. The full list of apps to remove after you get root access can be found here. Now that I have a much better battery life with my phones there's no way to improve it....or is there?? That's when I found out about custom ROMs...

PS: You can only freeze apps with the pro version of Titanium Backup. It's not the cheapest app on the market but you'll not regret getting it for a second!

Monday, July 11, 2011

So THAT's how you do it...

Now that I managed to find this great source of knowledge, my beloved XDA forums, I could start messing around to try and make my Android phones better.
One of the first things I started reading about was root access. For those of you who don't know what that is I'll try to explain in a simple way. Root access is what you need to change your android device in deeper ways, it's almost the same as having the freedom to change any file you want in the Windows system folders... For those that want the more technical approach this link has a nice explanation. At first I was put off by the complex tutorials and DANGER signs all over. But then I found this app: the Universal AndRoot, which was supposed to be safe to use, no danger of bricking your phone. So I got my Milestone and tried it......... And voilà!! I had root access to my Motorola Milestone! With that I got more confident about messing around a bit more with my phones. So I got my Xperia X10 and installed the same program and also got root access to my X10!! Now things were starting to look good. With one little detail left, I still couldn't get paid apps...
But then I found this: the Market Enabler. This nifty app allows you to "fake" your location so the Market believes that you're in the US or Europe, or any other place that has paid apps! This app still works for those of you guys who live in countries without paid apps or even without Market!
Since then I could now use my phones to their full potential!!

PS: From now on I'll try to squeeze at least one tip on each post to help you guys, especially those new to android!
PPS: I've made an app for my Blog and it's already in the Market, you have the link right under the title and here is the QR code, enjoy!

Sunday, July 10, 2011

How my mother's phone changed my life

So there I was, I had my android but had no idea how to actually make the most of it.
My mother had a Samsung Omnia, which had Windows mobile 6, and was not quite happy with it. It wasn't easy to personalize, there wasn't a market to get apps to make your phone work the way you wanted like Android or iOS and my mother is the kind of person who likes things her way... And she had to do things the Omnia way. I'm talking about my mother's phone right now because that changed my Android life forever... she saw everything I could do with my phone and how I could change things to adapt to my liking and quickly decided she wanted one too, but she didn't want a phone with a physical keyboard - like my Motorola Milestone.
By this time our mobile operator was offering the Sony Ericsson Xperia X10 and I thought that it would fit her needs. So we went to our mobile operator store to get one for her. When we got there the attendant showed it to us - yes, I went with her, I always go with her to anything that regards technology to help her out - she liked it and said that this was what she wanted. Then she told us the price and my mother got immediately deflated. She doesn't like to spend too much money on gadgets, but then the attendant told us that there was a way to pay less. Because we had unlimited data plans we were VIP costumers and could schedule a meeting to discuss pricing and get special discounts. So when we got home I went and scheduled a visit to their VIP section for both me and my mother. By then the idea was to get a new phone for her but with back to back appointments there would be more time to negotiate. I had no clue at that point that I wouldn't need a lot of time.
The day we went for our VIP appointment we got there early and waited a bit. When the meeting started I explained the situation: the back to back appointments, the phone my mother wanted, and that I was there mostly to help her, but that I wouldn't mind getting a new phone myself. The moment that the attendant told us that we both could get the Xperia X10 for FREE, we couldn't believe it and gladly accepted it!
And just like that, almost as accidentally as I got my first android I got my second one. Now that I had two androids I could afford to crash one of them! So I started going around the web to see how I could make my brand new Xperia X10 even better. I quickly found out about debranding. And how that would release from the "curse" of having a device in a country that doesn't get much attention from manufacturers. After a hole lot of googling around I found XDA and their forums. And then, and only then, a good six months after I first got my hands on an android, I started understanding how much I could do with it...

Saturday, July 9, 2011

Android 101

Coming back from the store I got home and immediately plugged my brand new Motorola Milestone to a wall outlet and started configuring it. Got my Google login in it and booted it up, I was immediately impressed by the fact that by then it had already done half the work as my email, calendar, contacts, were all perfectly inside my phone and ready to be used...
I then went on the Android Market and started looking for nice cool apps to make my phone be more like I wanted... Customizing an Android phone to make it work just like you want is a very satisfying experience, you can change pretty much anything you want in it...
The sad part is that I quickly started noting that there were a lot of things that I wanted to do but there were no apps for it... When I went to google.com and started looking for answers as to why my phone, which was supposed to be customizable in every way, wasn't living up to that promise...
I soon discovered that the apps existed and were in the Android Market, except I couldn't access them because I live in Brazil... and Brazil didn't have paid apps available - don't get me wrong, there are a lot of great free apps on the Android Market, but when you're just starting and don't know much about it you don't get the full experience without the paid apps.... - that really bummed me out, I knew what apps I needed and they existed, but I couldn't use them...

So there I was, a complete newbie in the android scene, without paid apps and no root access - although by then I only had a faint idea of what that was and that it was dangerous to get.
I had bad battery life, struggling to get through the day with a single charge, my phone was filled with useless, and irremovable, apps but I still loved it and knew that I was holding in my hands a little piece of the future...

Friday, July 8, 2011

Let's start at the beginning...

I live in Brazil, and I got my first android phone pretty much by accident...
I had a Nokia N95, but it was getting old and a little beat up - plus I'm an electrical engineer student, therefore I love gadgets - so I decided: it was time to get a new phone. I loved Nokia phones and they were pretty much all I knew, so for me the obvious choice was to get a N97 - keep in mind that this was the beginning of 2010 - it had all the specs, looked good, nice tilt screen. I had two problems with it though, it was unavailable in most stores from my mobile operator and it was expensive, really expensive - around U$1000,00.
By that point I've heard of android but hadn't really read a lot about it, only that it was new and had potential...
When I got to the store that allegedly had the N97 they told me it was out of stock and they had no timeline to receive it... and then they offered me a Motorola Milestone. It was cheaper, they had in store and I had a gut feeling about android that told me that I should go for it... So I decided to take a look at it. The woman who was helping me went and got one so I could try it a bit.
When she got back and gave it to me I got the battery in it and turned it on...
Then the magic began... It was pretty much love at first sight, it was a beautiful phone, pure android experience, no skins, no "enhanced" interface, nothing, just plain and simple android...
I played around with it for a bit and decided to go ahead and get it....
It wasn't cheap, but it was a lot cheaper than the N97 - which I eventually found out was a much inferior cell...