Android Apps

Posted by: mlord

Android Apps - 20/07/2012 00:46

Okay, now that Android handsets seem to be achieving World Domination, the quality of the Apps is also improving. Here are most of the ones I've discovered/installed for my own use thus far:

AdFree Android
Downloads a crowd-sourced advertising blacklist, redirecting in-app adverts to localhost.

Adobe Reader
PDFs at the beach: life is good! smile

Advanced Task Killer
Nuke leftover tasks to save battery, bandwidth, and reduce snooping.

Android Assistant
Swiss-Army-Knife grab bag of useful tools, most of which I've now replaced with better standalone ones.

Android Terminal Emulator
The dreaded command-line.

Barcode Scanner
Google Goggles
RedLaser Barcode & QR Scanner
Vivino Wine Scanner
Scan and identify just about anything, get in-store price comparisons etc.

Battery Indicator
Show battery level as a percentage, along with a notification tray item.

BusyBox Pro
More command-line stuff, but some apps rely on it too.

Call Control - Call Blocker
To reduce the carpet-cleaning calls to a dull roar.

Canada Topo Maps Pro
Free backcountry GPS navigation, world-wide (not just Canada).

Canadian Weather
Graphics and text straight from the Environment Canada website.

Crossword Solver
SWMBO does a lot of crosswords, and this helps keep me sane.

Data ON-OFF
A widget for those of us on finite data usage plans with exorbitant overage charges.

File Manager
The current BEST file explorer/manager app (I've tried many others).
Can even browse/transfer files over wifi to/from Samba servers.

Flipboard: Your News Magazine
News and stories, beautifully presented.

Free Dictionary Org
A really good online/offline english dictionary.

GCC - GeoCache Calculator
A heck of a lot more than just "Geocache" calculations.

Mobi Calculator Free
RealCalc Scientific Calculator
More useful number crunchers.

GPS Status & Toolbox
Mandatory app: see the sensors on the phone do their tricks.

IMDb Movies & TV
Okay, not useful, but entertaining. smile

K-9 Mail
For non-Gmail email. The built-in email client sucks worse.

Lux Auto Brightness
Way, WAY better than the default "auto-brightness" app from Jelly Bean.

Ottawa Citizen
My local community news.

Permission Friendly Apps
Permissions Denied
Figure out which apps might be snooping, and put a stop to it without uninstalling useful things.

Smart Magnifier
Flashlight & magnifier card -- works well enough.

Smart Tools
More clever tools to measure things with the camera etc..

Smart Screen Off PRO
Automatically turns the screen off when in my pocket or face down on a table.

Smooth Calendar
Great calendar/reminder widget (not a full calendar app, just a widget).

Titanium Backup Pro * root
The gol^H^H^Htitanium standard for backups. I back things up locally within the Galaxy Nexus,
and then copy the backup off over Wifi to my server.

TuneIn Radio
Internet Radio. Good app.

Voice Calendar
Really, really good voice-entry system for use with the Calendar app.

WiFi File Explorer PRO
Exports the droid's filesystems over Wifi for access from any other computer's web browser.

Wifi Analyzer
A really, REALLY cool Wifi access point detector and reception analyzer.

Wifi Toggle Widget
A simple touch widget to toggle wifi on/off -- other similar widgets available for bluetooth etc..

Wikipedia
My external memory. smile

ConnectBot
SSH client -- I'm actually running the latest development snapshot which is less buggy than the one at the Play store.

Blik Calendar Widget
A really cool Calendar manager with activity icons. Except it just hangs when I try it here. I want it though!

Openvpn for Android
If you need to use OpenVPN, then this is the modern way to do it on Android 4.x, rather than the old way that required rooting the phone.

I've also tried about twice as many other apps, and uninstalled them afterwards again. Didn't keep good enough records to list them here though.
Posted by: wfaulk

Re: Android Apps - 20/07/2012 01:01

Originally Posted By: mlord
Advanced Task Killer
Nuke leftover tasks to save battery, bandwidth, and reduce snooping.

Don't use a task killer. They are counterproductive. If you have a misbehaving app, find a replacement. I could go into why, but a quick Google will explain better.
Posted by: Shonky

Re: Android Apps - 20/07/2012 01:13

Yep some common ones there. I have an Galaxy S III (ICS) and in the pull down it has toggles for things like data, wifi, bluetooth etc. Does Jellybean not have that? This may be a Samsung customisation but plain Android installs I've used on my HD2 had them also.

I'm yet to find a good data usage counter by app. I have "Traffic Counter" and "Traffic Monitor Plus" and they're not quite what I want.

A few from me.

Agenda Widget (calendar widget that scrolls etc - very customisable)
https://play.google.com/store/apps/detai...24uYWdlbmRhIl0.

Battery Monitor Widget (good battery logger):
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=ccc71.bmw

GPS Logger (logs GPS tracks in to kml files)
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.mendhak.gpslogger

Lightflow (paid)
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.rageconsulting.android.lightflow

Paw Server (good webserver type app for access to the phone over Wifi)
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=de.fun2code.android.pawserver

SMS Backup+ (backs up SMS to Google mail account):
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.zegoggles.smssync

Torque (reads vehicle error codes via BT - Lite but there is a paid app)
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=org.prowl.torquefree
Posted by: mlord

Re: Android Apps - 20/07/2012 01:19

Originally Posted By: Shonky
Yep some common ones there. I have an Galaxy S III (ICS) and in the pull down it has toggles for things like data, wifi, bluetooth etc. Does Jellybean not have that?

JB has that, but the Mobile Data toggle is buried really inconveniently deep in the submenus. Bluetooth and Wifi are more accessible.

Quote:
I'm yet to find a good data usage counter by app.

My turn: isn't this built-in, or is it just Jelly Bean that has it? smile
Posted by: Shonky

Re: Android Apps - 20/07/2012 01:35

Originally Posted By: mlord
Quote:
I'm yet to find a good data usage counter by app.

My turn: isn't this built-in, or is it just Jelly Bean that has it? smile

You know what? That's actually pretty useful and I hadn't really looked that closely at it. It does data by app and I can select the date range (although only to a maximum of a month). I had played with ICS on the HD2 but not much. Before that it was Gingerbread mainly. Not sure whether the data app was that useful or not in Gingerbread. Perhaps it was and I just didn't look hard enough... Ooops. Thanks for pointing me at it... smile This will probably do.
Posted by: mlord

Re: Android Apps - 20/07/2012 01:36

Quote:
Quote:
I'm yet to find a good data usage counter by app.

My turn: isn't this built-in, or is it just Jelly Bean that has it? smile
Posted by: mlord

Re: Android Apps - 20/07/2012 01:46

Originally Posted By: mlord
Flipboard: Your News Magazine
News and stories, beautifully presented.

Oh, and with the odd quirk that it thinks I'm in the UK, because my system language is "English/UK". Useful that, as I'm currently following British/World sports (football, cricket, etc..) far more than USA style sports these days. smile
Posted by: mlord

Re: Android Apps - 20/07/2012 02:00

Originally Posted By: Shonky
Battery Monitor Widget (good battery logger):
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=ccc71.bmw

Perfect. Installed the pay-version here now.

Thanks.
Posted by: MarkH

Re: Android Apps - 20/07/2012 04:44

May I chip in:

Seesmic, for Twitter

Voice Note, to send yourself a voice memo by email

Songkick, reads your MP3s, creates an artist list, tells you when they’re in town

HulloMail, if you are charged per message for voice message retrieval by your carrier (might only work in UK)

FolderSync, automagically syncs to a variety of cloud stores

Sipdroid, best of the SIP phones [I haven't tried the JB stock one yet so it may have improved]

Elixir Widgets, control and toggle widget manager, has a companion app called Elixir 2 for all sorts of phone info and stats

WifiMatic, watches your location by cellphone towers, and turns your wifi on and off accordingly. Excellent battery saver.

Moxier, the least bad connector to Exchange/Outlook, from a crowded field of bad choices. This is the only one I could find that would successfully sync Notes and Tasks.

Market Enabler, allows you to come into the market as if you were from a different country

Gesture Search, quickest way to look up contacts, with an added warm glow of Palm Pilot nostalgia
Posted by: andy

Re: Android Apps - 20/07/2012 09:08

Originally Posted By: mlord

File Manager
The current BEST file explorer/manager app (I've tried many others).
Can even browse/transfer files over wifi to/from Samba servers.


Oh dear. I installed that as the first file manager I found when searching, thought "ok so it is functional but a bit crappy, I'll find a decent one later".

I hate to think how crappy the worse ones are wink
Posted by: Dignan

Re: Android Apps - 20/07/2012 10:58

Originally Posted By: andy
Originally Posted By: mlord

File Manager
The current BEST file explorer/manager app (I've tried many others).
Can even browse/transfer files over wifi to/from Samba servers.


Oh dear. I installed that as the first file manager I found when searching, thought "ok so it is functional but a bit crappy, I'll find a decent one later".

I hate to think how crappy the worse ones are wink

I much prefer Astro, which can do those things as well.

Originally Posted By: MarkH
Voice Note, to send yourself a voice memo by email

I prefer using built-in functionality to installing an app to do it. If you initiate a voice command in Android and simply say "Note to self" then say what you want, it will automatically attach a recording of that message to an email, with the subject line containing the translation. I use it several times daily.

Originally Posted By: mlord
Originally Posted By: Shonky
Battery Monitor Widget (good battery logger):
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=ccc71.bmw

Perfect. Installed the pay-version here now.

I should point out that ICS has a good version of this, too.

Originally Posted By: mlord
Originally Posted By: Shonky
Yep some common ones there. I have an Galaxy S III (ICS) and in the pull down it has toggles for things like data, wifi, bluetooth etc. Does Jellybean not have that?

JB has that, but the Mobile Data toggle is buried really inconveniently deep in the submenus. Bluetooth and Wifi are more accessible.

Mark, I think you might be misreading what he said. He's saying there's toggles in the notification shade, not as a widget on the home screen. AFAIK, there are no toggles in ICS on the notification shade, and this is something I've seen on Samsung devices in the past (though as usual, they don't do it very well). The app I just started using is this one, which has tons of customization options: Notification Toggle

Originally Posted By: mlord
Wifi Analyzer
A really, REALLY cool Wifi access point detector and reception analyzer.

I use this thing ALL the TIME for work to troubleshoot WiFi networks and sort out which WAPs are having issues. I love it. The only negative I have about it is that you need a plugin in order to connect to networks through it, which includes the ability to connect to specific WAPs. I've noticed on previous phones that this plugin is a little flaky and messes up my WiFi connection, and things improved when I uninstalled it. So I use WiFi Analyzer purely for scanning now, which is fine because it's great at it.
Posted by: mlord

Re: Android Apps - 20/07/2012 10:59

The link for Market Enabler does work from here. Is this one of those apps to re-enable the unknown sources check box, which some carriers remove/disable by default?

The "unknown sources" check box works fine on my GN w/stock Jelly Bean.

EDIT: Oh, wait.. found it with Google Search, located here.

Originally Posted By: Developer
Market-Enabler is an application to fake the phone's location and access markets from other countries. Android market is separated into regions (country and carrier specific) and some apps are just enabled for a specific country and not available to the other Countrys.

This site is a work in progress and should get a FAQ about MarketEnabler with the most common problems and missunderstandings.


Looks potentially useful, that.

Posted by: mlord

Re: Android Apps - 20/07/2012 11:08

Originally Posted By: Dignan
Originally Posted By: mlord
JB has that, but the Mobile Data toggle is buried really inconveniently deep in the submenus. Bluetooth and Wifi are more accessible.

Mark, I think you might be misreading what he said. He's saying there's toggles in the notification shade, not as a widget on the home screen.

I don't see a "toggle bar" in the JB notification shade. Mostly all that's there is a quick access link to the Settings screen, where the Wifi and BT toggles are located, and where two more menu levels gets me to the Mobile Data toggle.

And those toggles don't toggle easily -- some fumbling about seems to be necessary to get them to switch.

I'll try the app you suggested and see if it works on JB or not.
Posted by: mlord

Re: Android Apps - 20/07/2012 11:20

Originally Posted By: mlord
I'll try the app you suggested and see if it works on JB or not.


Okay, I gave Notification Toggle a test drive, and it's not for me. I need to see the status toggles right up front, not hidden away. And using discrete toggles shows me more information (eg. Wifi SSD) at a glance too.

In theory, the very top line of the screen has microscopic status icons on it (stock JB feature), but I can't see those without reading glasses on. smile

So I'll pass on that one for now, useful as it is. Thanks.
Posted by: mlord

Re: Android Apps - 20/07/2012 11:23

Originally Posted By: mlord
those toggles don't toggle easily -- some fumbling about seems to be necessary to get them to switch.


Pilot error -- even though they're drawn as "slider switches", they're really "tap" buttons. Doh!
Posted by: MarkH

Re: Android Apps - 20/07/2012 11:33

Originally Posted By: Dignan
Originally Posted By: MarkH
Voice Note, to send yourself a voice memo by email

I prefer using built-in functionality to installing an app to do it. If you initiate a voice command in Android and simply say "Note to self" then say what you want, it will automatically attach a recording of that message to an email, with the subject line containing the translation. I use it several times daily.


There was some odd restriction in GB and ICS that meant that some non-US phones didn't get access to Note-To-Self as one of the available voice commands. Just tried it on my JB phone and it does work.

However it doesn't seem to be configurable to do what I use Voicenote for, which is to create Outlook tasks while on the move. One button press gets a series of events where Voicenote converts my speech input to a mail, which is sent to my Outlook, which parses it and drops it into a task list (which is then synced back to my phone!)
Posted by: wfaulk

Re: Android Apps - 20/07/2012 16:18

Originally Posted By: Dignan
I much prefer Astro, which can do those things as well.

I got tired of Astro expiring all the time (usually when I needed it and didn't have time to update) and getting progressively huger, so I changed to OpenIntents File Manager, which is not great, but it's small and it works consistently.
Posted by: RobotCaleb

Re: Android Apps - 20/07/2012 20:17

The paid version of Torque is WAY different from the lite version. It's well worth the purchase.
Posted by: Dignan

Re: Android Apps - 21/07/2012 00:34

If you're a sports fan, I would recommend an app made by Google, but sadly it doesn't exist anymore! I LOVE the app Scoreboard, which Google first made sometime in early 2009, I believe, but seemingly went without updates for the last two years.

It's funny, the app worked like crap on my G1 and Nexus One, despite being a pretty simple app (it just notifies you of scores for teams you ask for). But now that I have my Galaxy Nexus it works beautifully, and way more reliably than it used to! Very weird.

Fortunately, it gets reinstalled when I log into a new phone. When I recently wiped my GN to put Jelly Bean on, it was automatically pulled back down when I logged in, which is pretty neat...
Posted by: mlord

Re: Android Apps - 21/07/2012 00:51

A few more:

Vplayer
Excellent video player for Android. Supports way more formats than the included player handles, and the paid version is only a quid or so right now.

Droidwall
A point and click interface to the Linux kernel's excellent Xtables firewall packet filters. Use this to restrict data access (wifi and/or mobile-data) on a per-app basis. Excellent.

Jota Text Editor
A very useful text editor, with available plugins for speech input and spell checking, all English and all FREE!

And one I'm dithering about: looks excellent, but I just don't have a real use case for it at CAD$5.90:

Android Office
For MS Word, Excel, and regular text files, with PowerPoint and others promised for future versions.
Posted by: mlord

Re: Android Apps - 21/07/2012 00:54

Mmm.. so Android veterans..
What categories of apps am I missing out on through ignorance right now? smile

EDIT:
Also, I'm looking for a Calendar front-end which is easy to see and interact with on a 4" screen. The built-in Google app sucks -- fonts too small and it's just dumb in many other ways.

I want something like the PalmOS calendar I've been using for years here. Readable, and thought-out.
Posted by: mlord

Re: Android Apps - 21/07/2012 01:18

Originally Posted By: mlord
And one I'm dithering about: looks excellent, but I just don't have a real use case for it at CAD$5.90:

Android Office
For MS Word, Excel, and regular text files, with PowerPoint and others promised for future versions.

I've gone for a free app instead:

Kingsoft Office
View & Edit DOC/DOCX/TXT/XLS/XLSX/PPT/PPTX files etc.
Posted by: Dignan

Re: Android Apps - 21/07/2012 01:27

Originally Posted By: mlord
Also, I'm looking for a Calendar front-end which is easy to see and interact with on a 4" screen. The built-in Google app sucks -- fonts too small and it's just dumb in many other ways.

I want something like the PalmOS calendar I've been using for years here. Readable, and thought-out.

Like the attached? smile

I'm not sure exactly what you're looking for. Have you tried pinch to zoom on the default calendar?
Posted by: Dignan

Re: Android Apps - 21/07/2012 01:46

Originally Posted By: mlord
A few more:

Vplayer
Excellent video player for Android. Supports way more formats than the included player handles, and the paid version is only a quid or so right now.

Hmm, hadn't seen that one. Have you looked at Moboplayer?

Originally Posted By: mlord
Mmm.. so Android veterans..
What categories of apps am I missing out on through ignorance right now? smile

My favorite app of all time, one I use every single day, sometimes for several hours a day:

Doggcatcher

You will never shake my faith that this is the absolute best podcast player in existence. I adore this app for so many reasons:

Customer Input:

The developer might be the best developer on the platform in terms of customer input. He's worked with his users from the very beginning, listening to all their bug reports and feature suggestions. I've even had a suggestion or two put in. And even with that much customer input, it's still a fantastic app smile He's amazing and really puts a lot of work into this app.

Options? You've got options.

I've spent ages in the settings pages, getting everything just perfect. The player pauses when I unplug my phone from power or disconnect headphones or bluetooth. It also resumes playback when I reconnect just my headphones. If I wanted to do the opposite of that or anything in-between, I could. I can set to download podcasts only on WiFi, or only when plugged in, or both, or neither.

I can adjust how each feed downloads independently. Car Talk downloads every episode, but the 7-minute news podcast from NPR only downloads the most recent episode.

Best of all, when I wanted to wipe my phone, I was able to export all my settings and import them when I had the phone set up again, so everything was just how I liked it.

Playback

It's so easy to skip around and select new episodes. You can order your unlistened episodes several ways, you can set (independently) how far the FF and REW buttons will scrub through your podcasts, you can play back at different speeds (requires a plugin), and the app ties into Android for lock screen controls like Play Music does.


I could go on and on about this app (and I have, sorry). This is far and away my most used app and also my absolute favorite. I could never give it up.
Posted by: MarkH

Re: Android Apps - 21/07/2012 05:37

Originally Posted By: mlord
I want something like the PalmOS calendar I've been using for years here. Readable, and thought-out.


I used Datebk from Pimlical on my Palm, and that guy has now got an Android version out.

Also take a look at Touch Calendar and Calengoo.
Posted by: Dignan

Re: Android Apps - 21/07/2012 14:01

Originally Posted By: MarkH
Also take a look at Touch Calendar

Ah! My apologies. I was so focused on praising my favorite app, I completely forgot about this. I second Touch Calendar. I used that all the time on Gingerbread until they improved the default calendar in ICS. It's not bad in terms of appearance, either...
Posted by: mlord

Re: Android Apps - 21/07/2012 14:34

Originally Posted By: Dignan
Like the attached? smile


Yeah, that's the one. Here's a side-by-side comparison in "Month view", at the size/distance I'd typically be viewing them.

Which of the two is more readable ? smile
That's what I want on my Android handset.
Posted by: mlord

Re: Android Apps - 21/07/2012 14:41

Mmmm.. Ancal is almost exactly what I want -- except it doesn't appear to sync with Google Calendar. If it did that, things would be perfect!

But I think I'll go with it, if I can now figure out how to import the calendar from the Palm (easy if Ancal did Google sync).

Edit: Or maybe not.. it only saves "start times", not durations or end-times. And while it does have the ever so valuable "snooze alarm" feature, it's a global setting rather than a per-task setting.

So near, and yet so far..


Posted by: mlord

Re: Android Apps - 21/07/2012 15:13

The source code is available. I've never formally learned Java, but it all looks reasonably simple and clear -- not a pile of spaghetti like some apps.

There appears to be support for activity "Duration" in the code, but it's just missing from the "Edit Appointment" screen (or whatever that's called). So I guess I'll put that aside as yet another project to work on if/when I ever stop being so darned busy with paid work. smile

Edit: There's also j2cal, which is a fork of ancal that adds Duration to the GUI along with other minor tweaks. Unfortunately they've broken the "Day" view -- teensy tiny font on my handset. That's probably easy to fix though, if I can find the source code.

Posted by: mlord

Re: Android Apps - 21/07/2012 18:45

Okay, I've purchased CalenGoo to use as the Calendar interface. It syncs with gCal, has built-in "snooze", and can be customized to resemble a poor imitation of the Palm Calendar app. smile

Seems to work well enough.
I've tried about a dozen other apps before settling on this one.
Posted by: mlord

Re: Android Apps - 21/07/2012 20:07

Screen Off Utils
Prevents screen from turning on when power is connected or disconnected. Well, actually, it FORCES the screen OFF under those conditions. Not 100% perfect, but good enough.
Posted by: Dignan

Re: Android Apps - 22/07/2012 01:35

Originally Posted By: mlord
Screen Off Utils
Prevents screen from turning on when power is connected or disconnected. Well, actually, it FORCES the screen OFF under those conditions. Not 100% perfect, but good enough.

While it doesn't necessarily bother me, I can definitely see how it would bother someone else, and I'm surprised there isn't an option for it either.

But this reminded me of an app to recommend to you, Mark. And I can't believe I neglected to bring this up earlier!

Tasker
Mark, this one might be your kind of thing. Tasker is incredibly powerful, and can automate pretty much anything on the phone. Weirdly enough, it can't seem to do what you're wanting, but for many other things, Tasker takes the place of a lot of utilities.
Posted by: mlord

Re: Android Apps - 22/07/2012 01:40

Originally Posted By: Dignan
Originally Posted By: mlord
Vplayer
Excellent video player for Android. Supports way more formats than the included player handles, and the paid version is only a quid or so right now.

Hmm, hadn't seen that one. Have you looked at Moboplayer?

Wow.. that one seems to have been around longer.
So I tried to install it, but it refused to run -- insists I download/install a "codec package" first. So I did that, installing the exact package it wanted, but it still refused to run, insisting I install a "codec package" first, ... and so on .. NUKED.

-ml
Posted by: mlord

Re: Android Apps - 22/07/2012 01:49

Originally Posted By: Dignan
Tasker
Mark, this one might be your kind of thing. Tasker is incredibly powerful, and can automate pretty much anything on the phone.

Mmm.. perhaps, perhaps.

I was thinking about finding a GUI scripter that could automate the door-knock sequence required prior to VPN'ing through the firewall here. I wonder if this is up to the task? Hard to know, as there's no demo version, and the price (only $6) is the most expensive of any apps I've installed thus far.

Perhaps, perhaps.. smile
Posted by: MarkH

Re: Android Apps - 22/07/2012 05:39

Originally Posted By: mlord
Originally Posted By: Dignan
Originally Posted By: mlord
Vplayer
Excellent video player for Android. Supports way more formats than the included player handles, and the paid version is only a quid or so right now.

Hmm, hadn't seen that one. Have you looked at Moboplayer?

Wow.. that one seems to have been around longer.
So I tried to install it, but it refused to run -- insists I download/install a "codec package" first. So I did that, installing the exact package it wanted, but it still refused to run, insisting I install a "codec package" first, ... and so on .. NUKED.

-ml


There's also BS Player, and VLC is in beta.
Posted by: Dignan

Re: Android Apps - 22/07/2012 15:22

Originally Posted By: mlord
Wow.. that one seems to have been around longer.
So I tried to install it, but it refused to run -- insists I download/install a "codec package" first. So I did that, installing the exact package it wanted, but it still refused to run, insisting I install a "codec package" first, ... and so on .. NUKED.

Yeesh! My apologies! That is not a good experience. I'm still hoping for VLC to get better, since that's always been my go-to for video on Windows. No worrying about stupid codecs there...

Originally Posted By: mlord
Hard to know, as there's no demo version, and the price (only $6) is the most expensive of any apps I've installed thus far.

Perhaps, perhaps.. smile

Yeah, I'm a little surprised there's no demo of Tasker. And unfortunately I'm not sure how to check on that ability for you.

I think my least favorite change that Google made with Android was to reduce the 24-hour return window on the App Market to 15 minutes. That was the most bone-headed move they've made so far, and I'm disappointed that it stuck. 15 minutes is simply NOT long enough to tell if you'll like an app. It's barely long enough to tell if your app will even work on your device, which I guess is the only reason they have a window at all anymore. I would have been fine with a 12 hour window, 9 hours, 6 hours, even 3 hours. But 15 minutes? Bad move.

Anyway, that said, I still think Tasker is pretty awesome smile
Posted by: mlord

Re: Android Apps - 22/07/2012 21:59

I believe the Google Play store actually has a 48-hour return window. But beyond the first 15 minutes it requires more than just a click. You have to go to the site and fill out a webform.

There was an article on how to do this just recently somewhere.

Edit: oh, wait.. they seem to reserve the right to refuse it after the first 15 minutes.

Cheers
Posted by: Dignan

Re: Android Apps - 22/07/2012 23:42

Yeah, I don't count that smile For the first 2-3 years, you could install an app and uninstall it at any time in the next day with zero penalty. It was fantastic, and I really think it made me buy more apps than I would have otherwise. Now I'm afraid to try out paid apps.

My bet is that developers complained because some of them were having a lot of uninstalls and refunds. My response would be: make better apps. I know that's easy for me to say, but there's a lot of crap out there, and not all of it is free.

What I'll say in Google's defense is this: their phone support for the Play Store is excellent. A few months ago I bought a Slingbox, and along with it I purchased both of their $30 apps for the phone and the tablet. It wasn't until using it for a week that I realized how bad the apps were, and that's where I most wanted to use the service. I returned the device, but was worried I'd be out $60 for the two apps. A 10 minute call to the support line for the Google Play Store resulted in a full refund. I was very impressed.
Posted by: mlord

Re: Android Apps - 25/07/2012 14:23

Paper Camera
The most fun I've had with a camera in ages, all for a mere $2!

PrintBot
The only full CUPS printing software I've found thus far. Auto-detected my printers and profiles (over wifi), includes all of the needed drivers (2800+ printers), and just plain works easily. The free version is limited to a single printer (at a time), and no more than 3 photos/PDFs monthly; the paid version has no such limits.

Bluetooth Smart Printing
Wow.. this app installs itself as a file-sharing destination in Gallery and other apps. When selected, it pops up a menu of Bluetooth devices, including my BT-enabled HP printer, and simply works without any configuration whatsoever. C00L! cool
Posted by: mlord

Re: Android Apps - 25/07/2012 19:58

Swiftkey 3 (30-day free trial)
I had been resisting this one while getting familiar with the built-in Android keyboard. No more. Swiftkey reads my mind and just Works Better.
Posted by: mlord

Re: Android Apps - 28/07/2012 13:36

Ultimate Rotation Control
Allows the Home Screen to rotate to landscape mode, gives per-app control over screen rotation, etc..

StickMount
Automounts USB Storage devices connected to the OTG USB port.
Posted by: mlord

Looking for a simple script-lauch widget. Anyone? - 08/08/2012 14:26

I want a widget (or a 1-click app) that simply launches a script, and then quits automatically when the script completes.

I'll supply the (shell) script.

Anyone know of something that does exactly that?
Most of the apps I've found open menus, browse filesystems, etc.. to launch a simple script.

Others open terminal windows (not optimal, though acceptable) but then don't auto-close them when the script exits.

I just want a very simple widget (or 1-click app).
I will write an app to do this if necessary, but surely someone already has one out there??

Thanks
Posted by: Shonky

Re: Looking for a simple script-lauch widget. Anyone? - 08/08/2012 19:48

Tasker? It supports scripting. I've never tried it though. What sort of script do you want to run?

Not free but I own it and I'm happy to try something if you like.
Posted by: mlord

Re: Looking for a simple script-lauch widget. Anyone? - 08/08/2012 20:00

Yeah, tasker might work. I just want a simple button on the desktop that I can press, and it runs the script and returns to the desktop. Single click.

Any script. One that does i=1 would be fine.
Posted by: mlord

Re: Looking for a simple script-lauch widget. Anyone? - 08/08/2012 20:07

This is for my doorknocker.
Here's a simplified version of what I need the script to do:

Code:
#!/system/bin/sh
ipaddr=$(ping -c1 google.com 2>/dev/null | sed -n -e 's/^PING google.com (\([0-9.]*\).*/\1/p')
telnet $ipaddr 1234 &
sleep 1
kill $!
exit


The ping command is the only thing I've found thus far on Android for resolving a hostname to an IP address. The telnet command I have here demands IP, not hostname.

The script I have works, as does the sample script above.
And I've managed to tie it to a widget (desktop button), but clicking it opens a terminal window that must then be closed manually.
Posted by: canuckInOR

Re: Looking for a simple script-lauch widget. Anyone? - 08/08/2012 20:46

Originally Posted By: mlord
And I've managed to tie it to a widget (desktop button), but clicking it opens a terminal window that must then be closed manually.

Have you checked if there's a config setting for the terminal that controls whether the window stays open when the last command exits? IIRC, OS X's terminal behaves in this same manner. I think so you can see if there's any errors before the window goes away.
Posted by: mlord

Re: Looking for a simple script-lauch widget. Anyone? - 09/08/2012 00:57

It's an internal terminal gizmo that's part of the app I was trying out. No auto-close that I've found so far.
Posted by: gbeer

Re: Looking for a simple script-lauch widget. Anyone? - 09/08/2012 04:24

What about having the script kill its parent?
Posted by: Shonky

Re: Looking for a simple script-lauch widget. Anyone? - 09/08/2012 06:45

I'm slightly struggling with the script bit actually. I managed to get a command prompt and can change folders, ls etc but that's about it. I can't change permissions on the file. Running it manually (i.e. "sh file") and most things in your example don't work.

Tasker seems to expect to SL4A to be installed too. SL4A seems to have some issues with my phone.

Sorry don't have a lot of time right now. Thought this would be a bit easier to test.
Posted by: mlord

Re: Looking for a simple script-lauch widget. Anyone? - 09/08/2012 15:16

I found that my script cannot be on the /sdcard if I want it to be marked as "executable".

So I stuck it into /sbin instead:
su
mount -oremount,rw /
cp my.script /sbin/
chmod 0755 /sbin/my.script
mount -oremount,ro /
exit
Posted by: mlord

Re: Looking for a simple script-lauch widget. Anyone? - 09/08/2012 15:19

My sample script may well be using things that don't exist on a stock phone -- I've installed the BusyBox utilities on mine, so it has a lot of extra commands.

Just use this for a script:

#!/system/bin/sh
i=0
Posted by: mlord

Re: Looking for a simple script-lauch widget. Anyone? - 09/08/2012 15:21

If tasker can't do it, then I'll just have to write my own app or something. It doesn't look particularly difficult, though I know next to nothing about java.

Cheers
Posted by: Dignan

Re: Looking for a simple script-lauch widget. Anyone? - 09/08/2012 16:19

Mark, Bitt made an Android app in the past (which was awesome), so maybe he can help?
Posted by: mlord

Re: Looking for a simple script-lauch widget. Anyone? - 09/08/2012 16:39

I'd like to hear more about that, if Bitt is willing.
Posted by: mlord

Re: Android Apps - 09/08/2012 23:22

Call Confirm
Triggers a confirmation pop-up whenever the phone dialer wants to dial a call. This functionality should be built-in, but isn't.
Posted by: wfaulk

Re: Looking for a simple script-lauch widget. Anyone? - 10/08/2012 00:02

I don't have a lot of spare time these days (new job), but developing for Android isn't too bad. Just go over to http://developer.android.com/ and follow the instructions for installing their stuff into Eclipse, and then run through some basic tutorials. I can't imagine you'll have much of a problem.
Posted by: mlord

Re: Looking for a simple script-lauch widget. Anyone? - 10/08/2012 13:41

Originally Posted By: mlord
I just want a simple button on the desktop that I can press, and it runs the script and returns to the desktop. Single click.

Any script. One that does i=1 would be fine.


Script Manager-SManager(NoAds) does exactly what I want (and more).
The free version does not, however, just the "(NoAds)" version. $2.10, worth it.

The SMWidgets add-on is the part I actually want/use now, not the main app.
Posted by: Dignan

Re: Looking for a simple script-lauch widget. Anyone? - 22/08/2012 01:12

Quick note because I didn't know where to put this:

I rooted my Galaxy Tab because Jelly Bean is just too good and Honeycomb is not. Also, I was friggin' fed up with Samsung's horrendous crap they put on top of Android.

I recently got the official Samsung ICS update for the Galaxy Tab 10.1. Well what do you know, this one was even worse! Yikes! It was horrendous!

So I waded through the horrible guides out there and pieced together the steps to get Jelly Bean onto my Tab, and now I'm thrilled.

Seriously, this tablet runs at least 50% faster now that all that Samsung crap is off there. Granted, part of it could be because it was just wiped and hasn't gotten bogged down by data and apps yet, but it's clear that this thing is going to sing now that the real thing is on there.
Posted by: sn00p

Re: Looking for a simple script-lauch widget. Anyone? - 22/08/2012 04:29

Incidentally there's a fix available now for Swiftkey so that it works correctly with chrome on the Nexus 7, I assume there's also an update for the non-tablet version.

I bought, installed and then refunded within about 2 minutes. The keyboard looks like it was designed by a 2 year old, with crayons.

I dislike where the backspace was, I've never used a keyboard where the backspace key is at the bottom!

The stock Nexus 7 (jellybean?) keyboard looks nice and clean.

If the swiftkey keyboard had the same look and feel then I'd have kept it.

Maybe I missed something?

Adrian
Posted by: mlord

Re: Looking for a simple script-lauch widget. Anyone? - 22/08/2012 11:05

I use the non-tablet version of swiftkey on both devices. I like the look better than the "tablet" edition of it.

Edit: there's a no-pay free-trial version of the non-tablet one -- makes it easier to try out.
Posted by: sn00p

Re: Looking for a simple script-lauch widget. Anyone? - 22/08/2012 14:04

ok, so I installed the trial and tried a different skin, was able to get it looking at least half decent.

I do like the auto correction, much much much better than the default keyboard.

What's weird is that the position of the backspace still bugs me. What's weirder is that it's in the same place on the keyboard as iOS, and that is second nature to me! Maybe it's the larger form factor or something.

Anyway, I'm giving it a good go this time. I'm guessing it'll be a godsend when I get an Android phone.

Adrian
Posted by: mlord

Re: Looking for a simple script-lauch widget. Anyone? - 22/08/2012 16:59

Nice thing is, if you pay for the app and use it on the tablet, then when you get a smartphone later the same app will work there too, without paying for it twice.

Cheers
Posted by: sn00p

Re: Looking for a simple script-lauch widget. Anyone? - 22/08/2012 17:09

Yeah. I couldn't quite work out what the difference between them was, I think I'd need to see them side by side to actual figure it out.

I know what the problem is with the backspace, it's the Nexus 7 form factor. When holding the device in both hands it's incredibly awkward for me to get my thumb to hit backspace when it's positioned so low, it's easier to hit the stock keyboards backspace because that it higher up and requires less contortions.

I gave it a another go for a while, but the backspace issue just makes the keyboard plain horrible for me to use (maybe it's my incredibly long fingers), that coupled with it insisting on trying to insert ".com" at the end of every word I typed into the "unified search/url" bar in chrome just drove me nuts.

I actually like it's auto correction when just typing in a editor, it's vastly superior to the stock keyboard. Soooooo close.

Adrian
Posted by: mlord

Re: Looking for a simple script-lauch widget. Anyone? - 22/08/2012 17:16

Yeah. I find the BS location curious too, but I'm okay with it. The tablet-specific app has a "split keyboard" mode among other differences. But I just use the smartphone version on both, to save money and avoid confusion switching betwixt them.
Posted by: Roger

Re: Looking for a simple script-lauch widget. Anyone? - 23/08/2012 06:41

Originally Posted By: mlord
Yeah. I find the BS location curious too, but I'm okay with it. The tablet-specific app has a "split keyboard" mode among other differences. But I just use the smartphone version on both, to save money and avoid confusion switching betwixt them.


I've got the tablet version on my N7, and the smartphone version on my SGS3. I tried the smartphone version on the tablet, and didn't like it. Horses for courses, I guess.

What I would like (occasionally) is a keyboard that's a bit more full-featured, for when I'm using SSH on the N7. Cursor keys (and a tab key) would be useful.
Posted by: mlord

Infoworld article with some cool app recommendations - 30/08/2012 20:33

http://www.infoworld.com/slideshow/62844/18-great-it-tools-android-201185