What's in your phone?
Jan. 4th, 2012 01:55 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Having just gotten the new phone, and upped my available space manyfold, I am doing a lot of reviewing of apps, and thinking about what else to get. Here are my newest must-haves. What apps do you consider particularly great for an Android phone?
WidgetLocker: I loves me my Android 4.0, don't get me wrong. But they removed exactly one feature from 2.x that aggravates the snot out of me: stock 2.0 had a little slider on the lock screen that let you quickly and easily silence the phone. Since I'm in and out of meetings all day, this really matters to me. But it was removed from 3.0 on the tablet, and turns out to be just plain gone from 4.0. Humph.
Still, this is Android, and *every* problem has a solution. In this case, that's WidgetLocker, a super-configurable replacement lock screen. It lets you put more or less whatever you want on that initial screen, including my much-loved silence slider.
So far, I'm generally liking WidgetLocker, although it isn't quite perfect. I gather it needs to sit on *top* of the system security, and my phone (by company mandate) needs a pass-pattern, so I have to drag to unlock it and then input the code. And it appears that switching to Airplane Mode doesn't work correctly until I unlock WidgetLocker.
Still, being able to make things more or less as I like them is a win. Four out of five stars for this useful toy.
JuiceDefender: Battery life on the Nexus isn't bad -- with LTE turned off, I get about a full day of moderate use. Still, I was often finding myself on the edge, and it was a constant struggle with the old Droid.
See "every problem has a solution". In this case, JuiceDefender seems the right tool for the job. This is a powerful system tool that is built around the theory that your phone's battery is *mostly* getting eaten by the radios. Besides the phone radio itself, you're running 3G, Wifi, Bluetooth, and all that stuff -- most of which isn't really *doing* anything most of the time aside from looking for new data.
So JuiceDefender gives you deep control over those radios. It comes in three flavors: a free version, a fancier version that costs a few bucks, and an "Ultimate" version that is expensive only by Android standards (at five dollars, well worth the money). Ultimate provides three levels of control. You can accept one of the three built-in profiles; you can go for "custom", which lets you manage a few high-level knobs yourself; or you can go for "advanced", which provides you with a ridiculous number of switches to make your phone behave exactly as you like. I've barely scratched the surface of the really cool features, like the one that changes the radio profile based on your current location.
No question about it -- this is a power tool, and it isn't a simple panacea. By the nature of what it's doing (turning off your data connections at various times), it means that you get notifications slower under at least some circumstances. And the Ultimate version is certainly more powerful than most people need, although I think it's worth supporting the program just on general principles.
But it does what it claims. At the cost of getting IMs and things a little less promptly, it claims to be doubling my daily battery life, and that matches my anecdotal observations. Well worth getting, and I plan on fiddling with it to get it "just so".
Enjoy Sudoku: Hands down, this is the best sudoku implementation I've ever come across. The UI is easy and intuitive -- better yet, it optimizes for the device you are using, using the extra real estate of a tablet well. It hooks up to an online database of layouts, and shows you how you do against other people who are playing the same layout. If you like Sudoku, this one is a must-have.
Drop7: At any given time, I find the need to have a current "tetris". You know: the annoyingly simple game that nonetheless eats your brain? You can always tell that you've fallen for one of these games when you find that you are dreaming about playing it?
Drop7 is one of those: another little drop-things-into-a-grid puzzle game. But this one has a fine twist: you are dropping numbered blocks in, and each block disintegrates when it is in a row or column with exactly that many blocks in it. It would probably be entirely beatable, but sometimes you wind up dropping in grey shells with no visible number. If a block next to one of these shells disintegrates, it cracks; after another, it opens and shows the number inside, at which point you can start to eliminate it. After each "level" (a certain number of blocks dropped), a row of grey shells pushes up from the bottom.
Very simple time-waster, with a pretty clear limit to how long you can play a game: each level is shorter and shorter, so eventually the grey shells overwhelm your ability to crack them open. And so, in that classic intermittent-reinforcement way, you wind up playing again and again.
WidgetLocker: I loves me my Android 4.0, don't get me wrong. But they removed exactly one feature from 2.x that aggravates the snot out of me: stock 2.0 had a little slider on the lock screen that let you quickly and easily silence the phone. Since I'm in and out of meetings all day, this really matters to me. But it was removed from 3.0 on the tablet, and turns out to be just plain gone from 4.0. Humph.
Still, this is Android, and *every* problem has a solution. In this case, that's WidgetLocker, a super-configurable replacement lock screen. It lets you put more or less whatever you want on that initial screen, including my much-loved silence slider.
So far, I'm generally liking WidgetLocker, although it isn't quite perfect. I gather it needs to sit on *top* of the system security, and my phone (by company mandate) needs a pass-pattern, so I have to drag to unlock it and then input the code. And it appears that switching to Airplane Mode doesn't work correctly until I unlock WidgetLocker.
Still, being able to make things more or less as I like them is a win. Four out of five stars for this useful toy.
JuiceDefender: Battery life on the Nexus isn't bad -- with LTE turned off, I get about a full day of moderate use. Still, I was often finding myself on the edge, and it was a constant struggle with the old Droid.
See "every problem has a solution". In this case, JuiceDefender seems the right tool for the job. This is a powerful system tool that is built around the theory that your phone's battery is *mostly* getting eaten by the radios. Besides the phone radio itself, you're running 3G, Wifi, Bluetooth, and all that stuff -- most of which isn't really *doing* anything most of the time aside from looking for new data.
So JuiceDefender gives you deep control over those radios. It comes in three flavors: a free version, a fancier version that costs a few bucks, and an "Ultimate" version that is expensive only by Android standards (at five dollars, well worth the money). Ultimate provides three levels of control. You can accept one of the three built-in profiles; you can go for "custom", which lets you manage a few high-level knobs yourself; or you can go for "advanced", which provides you with a ridiculous number of switches to make your phone behave exactly as you like. I've barely scratched the surface of the really cool features, like the one that changes the radio profile based on your current location.
No question about it -- this is a power tool, and it isn't a simple panacea. By the nature of what it's doing (turning off your data connections at various times), it means that you get notifications slower under at least some circumstances. And the Ultimate version is certainly more powerful than most people need, although I think it's worth supporting the program just on general principles.
But it does what it claims. At the cost of getting IMs and things a little less promptly, it claims to be doubling my daily battery life, and that matches my anecdotal observations. Well worth getting, and I plan on fiddling with it to get it "just so".
Enjoy Sudoku: Hands down, this is the best sudoku implementation I've ever come across. The UI is easy and intuitive -- better yet, it optimizes for the device you are using, using the extra real estate of a tablet well. It hooks up to an online database of layouts, and shows you how you do against other people who are playing the same layout. If you like Sudoku, this one is a must-have.
Drop7: At any given time, I find the need to have a current "tetris". You know: the annoyingly simple game that nonetheless eats your brain? You can always tell that you've fallen for one of these games when you find that you are dreaming about playing it?
Drop7 is one of those: another little drop-things-into-a-grid puzzle game. But this one has a fine twist: you are dropping numbered blocks in, and each block disintegrates when it is in a row or column with exactly that many blocks in it. It would probably be entirely beatable, but sometimes you wind up dropping in grey shells with no visible number. If a block next to one of these shells disintegrates, it cracks; after another, it opens and shows the number inside, at which point you can start to eliminate it. After each "level" (a certain number of blocks dropped), a row of grey shells pushes up from the bottom.
Very simple time-waster, with a pretty clear limit to how long you can play a game: each level is shorter and shorter, so eventually the grey shells overwhelm your ability to crack them open. And so, in that classic intermittent-reinforcement way, you wind up playing again and again.
(no subject)
Date: 2012-01-04 07:00 pm (UTC)Is that gone as well?
(no subject)
Date: 2012-01-04 07:30 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2012-01-04 08:06 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2012-01-04 07:18 pm (UTC)My main apps:
Key Ring - replace store loyalty cards
Timeriffic - schedule WiFi & ringer on/off times
MyFitnessPal - Diet Tracker
Evernote - sync notes between machines
My games of choice: Cut The Rope & Peggle
(no subject)
Date: 2012-01-04 08:09 pm (UTC)I do have Evernote, and thought about listing it here. Still ramping up on using it, but it is the new home of the all-important Poker Variants notes.
I'll have to check out the rest -- thanks!
PvZ
Date: 2012-01-04 08:22 pm (UTC)Well, it is, via the Amazon Appstore...but Amazon doesn't bother to check device compatibility. I have it on my GN, but it crashed the first time I ran it. (Worse, it kept playing the music, and the only way to stop it was to reboot.) I tried again, and it was fine, but it did put a damper on things.
Re: PvZ
Date: 2012-01-04 09:00 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2012-01-04 08:40 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2012-01-04 08:46 pm (UTC)Apps have to specify what screen sizes they work with, and can't specify screen sizes that didn't exist in the SDK version they were built for, so the upward creep in phone sizes does tend to leave older apps behind. It's not necessarily hard to update them, but it's not always automatic.
My inventory
Date: 2012-01-04 07:46 pm (UTC)Let's see, what have I got:
Re: My inventory
Date: 2012-01-04 08:59 pm (UTC)Flashlight: which one? There are several, and my handy old FlashDroid doesn't seem to work on the Nexus, so I'm looking for a replacement.
NFC Reader: interesting. I assume that the Nexus has the hardware, even though Verizon stomped Google Wallet. (Grr.) NFC Reader itself looks like a cute toy, but likely won't motivate me enough.
Task Manager: I recently picked up System Monitor instead, which looks likely to fit my needs better. (Very nice CPU monitoring.)
Amazon: thanks for the warning. I don't use the app often, but it's occasionally useful.
HDR Camera: intriguing, and possibly very useful. And they're currently selling the ad-free "Pro" version for all of $.99, so I think I'll just give that a try. (Ditto for Camera Zoom FX and Paper Camera -- Android apps are cheap enough that I'm willing to just buy them if they're well-reviewed.)
Plants vs. Zombies: not for the Nexus yet, I'm afraid. Sadness.
Words with Friends: I have several friends who are very into it (read: Niki really wants to play it with me), so I'm using it a moderate amount. I do have a tendency to forget about upcoming turns if I get distracted, though.
And Fanarona! Need to go get that...
Re: My inventory
Date: 2012-01-04 09:05 pm (UTC)Let's see...here we are: Tiny Flashlight+. (Sorry, the UI on the device didn't show the full name.)
Yes.
Yeah, I haven't looked very hard on this front; I stuck with Good Enough.
Re: My inventory
Date: 2012-01-04 09:07 pm (UTC)Excellent -- that's the one I was considering picking up. (Actually already have a tab open to it.)
Re: My inventory
Date: 2012-01-04 09:08 pm (UTC)Market link for the free version. (I don't know if you remember, but the free version is identical to the pay version; after making about 10 sales in 6 months, I gave up and took the ads out of the free version.)
Re: My inventory
Date: 2012-01-04 09:14 pm (UTC)Re: My inventory
Date: 2012-01-04 11:08 pm (UTC)from the other end of pocket telephony
Date: 2012-01-04 08:20 pm (UTC)High use Apps
Date: 2012-01-04 09:15 pm (UTC)Catan: Not a great version of Settlers, but hey, Settlers!
Doubletwist: I have a few ways to play mp3s. Not sure why this is my standby, but it is.
Opera Browser: My choice for full website browsing.
Gmail, facebook, G+ & ElJay: Mostly used for lurking
Zedge: I am leery of ringtone sharing sites, but I decided I needed to bite the bullet and try one. Zedge had reasonable reviews and has been reliable. Great for those, "I wonder if I can find a ringtone for X?" moments.
There are a lot of honorable mentions; Bank of America app, Magic 8-Ball, Cut the Rope, Flashlight, Pandora, Out of Milk, Skype mobile, youtube, Amazon MP3... ...these don't get the daily treatment, though.
Re: High use Apps
Date: 2012-01-04 09:19 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2012-01-05 02:24 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2012-01-05 06:54 pm (UTC)Calengoo
Date: 2012-01-05 11:21 pm (UTC)