Technology Android

dilla

Trumpfan17 aka Coonie aka Dilla aka Tennis Dog
why not the new nexus 7 that is supposed to be coming?
Because I want to use my tablet as a tablet and not as a branching-off of my phone. That's how my tablet is being used currently, since both run Android. I haven't even bothered to look at Android's subscription methods for newspapers and magazines, but I'm sure you're aware of these new subscriptions I'm getting, such as Wired magazine and ESPN Magazine. All of these have apps that would allow a user to read the magazine on the go. Sure, Android has a whole section of magazines, but not for the ESPN app and setting up the Wired magazine free subscription, which came with the physical magazine as a code, was a nightmare and I ended up giving up. It wanted a credit card on file, or some shit. Again, the ESPN Mag app had its own app which would notify you of an update when the new issue was out. It was not through some shit third-party app, like Zinio or something.

I dunno if you can get newspapers I read on Android like the WSJ and the Chicago Tribune. I always see ads for the iPad apps, but never for Android. Which segues me into my next issue and that is that iOS seems to have a more streamlined approach to delivering content. Forget games, I'm talking getting books and newspapers. My interests have changed, and no longer is it relevant to me that iOS usually gets the latest and greatest games first. It's that my OS is reliable that I can count on it to synchronize my subscriptions with me having to have any input. I can't even get my Android apps to update automatically, despite having the option checked in the Settings. And it's not those dumb manual updates, it's all of them.

Hardware performance is not that big of a deal. I already mentioned I knew the parts of the Mini were "old." I think the iPad 2? It's the OS that I like when using it somewhat like a PC when on the go. I like that I wouldn't have to suck dick to find accessories for it and said accessories would be bountiful when I searched for them on Amazon. I've just grown used to iOS for some things. I can't do the Android music app. I just don't like it. Like I said, I don't care about hardware performance. If I did, my TouchPad is fine for me, performance wise, and it eats the dick of both the Mini and the N7. I just don't like Android for productivity and media. Sure, Google services are nice and Drive is just getting better and better, but iOS has an app for that too. Office is due out for iOS too, right? Android will get that too.

Maybe my feelings will change later on, but more and more medical students are carrying tablets when learning in the hospital and if/when I get to that point I'm gonna need one too. Most of the students, from what it seems, use iPads. A friend of mine uses an N7, as per my recommendation, but he was looking for a cheap but solid option.

While both tablets are probably built well and to the same standards, I just like iOS better in this situation. For my phone, Android is much better, but for more serious use than playing Temple Run 2 on my phone, I think the iPad is more professional. It integrates well with my Mac too. While the price difference isn't big enough this time around, I said I would wait for the Mini 2 vs the next best Nexus tablet and hope for some better internals in the Mini and quite possibly the Retina Display as well.

Android tablets seem to always just tout their hardware specs. Aren't we at the same point with tablets that we are with phones? Who needs a desktop-caliber GPU in their tablets? When it comes to playing media, the Mini has better battery life by about an hour over the 7. Same with web browsing. That's huge for me too.

If not, I will always still have my ghetto-rigged Android TouchPad to throw around. This bitch has seen some abuse the last 18+ months being my video players and account hacker. Hijacked Facebook sessions of people over our WiFi on the island. It was great. Couldn't do that with iOS.
 

dilla

Trumpfan17 aka Coonie aka Dilla aka Tennis Dog
No. Droid Sheep. Faceniff likes social networks, it seems, but doesn't go after anything else. Droid Sheep gets me Yahoo and, I think, GMail as well and other services. It doesn't discriminate like FaceNiff seems to.
 

dilla

Trumpfan17 aka Coonie aka Dilla aka Tennis Dog
Yup. I think Google, and therefore GMail, force encrypts connections, right? So maybe I don't get GMail accounts. I definitely get Hotmail and Yahoo accounts, which, sadly, people still use. I was able to freak my friend out by getting access to his Yahoo fantasy team.

Best thing is, I can save the log in and use it later on, so long as the user doesn't change the password. That's actually how a few people and myself really exposed and fucked over a kid in our class that really pulled some shady shit by screencapping his conversations with other students that too were shit talking.

It was right before an exam too, the night before, where we hijacked a girl's Facebook and posted the imgur link to over 50 screencaps of conversations between her and this douche nozzle talking shit about 80% of the students in our class, name-by-name.

In hindsight, it really made em look stupid and probably wasn't worth it, but it was good for a laugh when the whole school knew who these people were and what they said. It definitely set the score even between me and that guy, in my mind at least.
 

dilla

Trumpfan17 aka Coonie aka Dilla aka Tennis Dog
Is there an app that uses GPS points to activate features or profiles based on location? For example, as I move away from my house, my phone knows to shut off WiFi so I'm not searching for networks while I'm driving on the road where there are none. Then as I near my house, it turns WiFi back on automatically.

This is kinda of like that NFC tile thing, but I don't want to stick them on my bed side table or in my car and ruin them. But I may have to.

But I read about an app similar to this when I got my Droid Eris back in late-2009 and there was some Android awards and that was one of the apps a dev made that was considered one of the most exciting.
 

Pittsey

Knock, Knock...
Staff member
Is there an app that uses GPS points to activate features or profiles based on location? For example, as I move away from my house, my phone knows to shut off WiFi so I'm not searching for networks while I'm driving on the road where there are none. Then as I near my house, it turns WiFi back on automatically.

This is kinda of like that NFC tile thing, but I don't want to stick them on my bed side table or in my car and ruin them. But I may have to.

But I read about an app similar to this when I got my Droid Eris back in late-2009 and there was some Android awards and that was one of the apps a dev made that was considered one of the most exciting.

There is.... But I've forgotten what it is called. I think Cooper, on here, recommended it to me.
 

masta247

Well-Known Member
Staff member
The first benchmark scores for the Exynos 5 Galaxy S4 emerged today:






It's not as amazing as I expected but it's still a fair 20-30% faster than the second next this year's flagships running the Snapdragon 600.
 

dilla

Trumpfan17 aka Coonie aka Dilla aka Tennis Dog
Tasker seems too complicated. I'm not really sure what I want done is even available.


After searching on Amazon, I came across some reasonably priced NFC tiles. Like 15 for $10 or something. My mock could use them too on her Galaxy Nexus. I may just use NFC then. I just want simple functions like turn off WiFi or silence at a specific time like when I go to sleep.
 

Pittsey

Knock, Knock...
Staff member
Tasker seems too complicated. I'm not really sure what I want done is even available.


After searching on Amazon, I came across some reasonably priced NFC tiles. Like 15 for $10 or something. My mock could use them too on her Galaxy Nexus. I may just use NFC then. I just want simple functions like turn off WiFi or silence at a specific time like when I go to sleep.

Try Tasker. I haven't used it, but it supposed to give you a lot of control.
 

masta247

Well-Known Member
Staff member
A typical NFC transceiver draws ~50mA of current when powered up. For reference, this equates to around 25% of the total consumption of a typical smartphone with the screen powered on.

However, there are optimization techniques that can significantly reduce the effects of NFC on battery life. For instance, the Android NFC subsystem carries out the following:
Intelligent polling - Android doesn't leave the NFC transceiver running at all times, instead it polls for tags at a rate around ~10Hz to conserve battery life. Maybe a feature in future ROMs would be the ability to change the polling frequency down to 1Hz.
Polling disabled on screen lock - when the screen is locked Android ceases to poll for tags, however card emulation continues (this is how
Google Wallet functions even when the screen is locked) .
Screen off = NFC off - the NFC radio is powered down when the screen is locked.
.

I also replied to a topic on XDA a while ago, to quote myself, lol:

"Your average NFC receiver will drain about 40-50mA of power when active. Now whether it's active or not depends on the software, but most of the time when it's "on" in your settings it will poll a couple of times a second. So yeah, it drains the battery. But how much exactly?

Contrary to previous suggestions it contributes more than a GPS receiver when your maps/location services are off, because that's when the GPS receiver itself is not on because it doesn't have to poll for satellite activity, obviously. The NFC chip has to be in stand-by though, in case another device wants to use it. When the software is properly programmed it might be a couple mA, spiking up to ~50mA during use. This means it contributes little to overall battery usage, but at the highest level of abstraction it does add up to it."
 

dilla

Trumpfan17 aka Coonie aka Dilla aka Tennis Dog
I'll live. I charge it at home and I charge it in my car when I'm out and about. My reception in my house is shitty so the battery drains quickly as it is so I've adapted my day accordingly.
 

Shadows

Well-Known Member
honestly, dont care about the new improvements, just that it's got a better camera, and better battery life than my phone.

so i'm going to be getting the s4.

My phone just dies after 4 hours of not being charged, almost just there, on stand by. smh

every time a phone does an update, the battery life becomes horrible.
 

dilla

Trumpfan17 aka Coonie aka Dilla aka Tennis Dog
I believe he has the Photon 4G from Sprint. And it could be the battery or even the way you charge it. Doesn't letting it deplete completely constantly ruin these types of batteries?
 

masta247

Well-Known Member
Staff member
I believe he has the Photon 4G from Sprint. And it could be the battery or even the way you charge it. Doesn't letting it deplete completely constantly ruin these types of batteries?
These batteries are very fool proof these days. When the battery dies it still has a couple percent of its capacity left. It would screw up the battery when it's left to discharge to total 0. To make that happen you'd have to discharging the battery fully in your phone and then store the discharged battery for a few months so the remaining power is gone. That's how you kill the battery.

Li-ion bateries these days are pretty fine with lots of charge and discharge cycles, even in heat which doesn't serve them well and it doesn't matter how often you charge them so it's hard to shorten their lives that quick. I'd say if a phone dies after a few hours in stand by something else is at fault. Might be software making the CPU go 100%, or maybe the connectors for example on the motherboard or in the battery compartment are short circuited.
 

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