Saturday 13 September 2014

Decision made!

After watching the Apple Keynote this week I have to confess that it all had my mouth watering! After a year away from the iPhone and finding out that the roses in the garden of Android smells a little bit farty I decided the time has come to return to the world of Apple!

Despite the problems O2 had with their website I've preordered the 64Gb iPhone 6 to collect next Friday and cannot wait!

Now that the deed is done I've been thinking about what it is about the Note 3 and the Android experience it has provided!

Firstly the wireless chip in the Note 3 is awful, I regularly lose wireless connection in both our kitchen and bathroom even though our router is in the next room! Other handsets have no problem at all so it can't be the signal strength from the router.

I get the impression that Samsung are spending too much time trying to cram as many flashy features and wizardry into their phone and OS and in doing that they've neglected the basics! Apps shouldn't regularly crash, the signal strength should allow calls to be made in more places than not - I could go on!

The concept of the s-pen is great however to me its not something I like using. The apps which use it aren't the greatest so I spend more time typing or dictating rather than write it out then watch while it tries to translate my scrawled handwriting because it's quicker!

I think I've mentioned it in another blog but I think taking stock Android, then adding Touch whiz then adding apps, widgets, themes, launchers, icon packs is all very lovely but it really make it feel like a very fragmented experience and takes away the togetherness and seamless experience I imagine you get from stock Android on a Nexus phone for example! Yes Android rolls out features first and yes Apple adopt them later but for me that helps Apple get them right!

So no doubt there are a loaf more things and reasons but I've made my decision and am very pleased I have! Next Friday can't come soon enough!

Sunday 7 September 2014

Back to what I know

Over the last year when it's come to technology and general home gadgets I decided to leave a couple of providers who looking back I had no issues with other than I think I was getting bored with and wanted to see what it was like 'on the other side' away from them. When I make a decision like this then I spend quite some time reading, watching and generally researching everything that the other provider can give me. The first instance was with our home broadband, phone and TV provider, where I live the internet was always something in the 3mb download speed range and when along came BT waving their fancy Infinity in my direction I had to move over. BT were the first provider to offer fibre internet and so I moved everything over to them. Now hindsight is a wonderful thing and I think in real life I should have waited a month or so until Sky hooked up their equipment. I'm now in the position where I still have BT for my phone and internet but I have gone back to Sky for my TV - there's only so many signal issues, box freezes I could put up with, not to mention the slow speed of the box and the distinct lack of decent channels.

I think I can put my move from iOS over to Android in with this kind of decision too. I'd definitely got bored with iOS and from the research I had done I was well and truly sold that Android was the future and was the mobile OS for me. It is clear for all to see that a lot of the 'new features' Apple add to the iPhone etc have already been around on Android for one, maybe two years before. It was this and the promise of endless customisation which I think make me move over. Now I have tried life on both sides I think my argument may be that yes Android do implement idea before Apple however that doesn't mean to say they are as seamless and polished as they should be. I have yet to find a keyboard for Android I really like - I'm currently using the Android L one but I am fed up of accidentally adding a comma every time I press space. Given that I'm using a massive screened Note 3 you'd expect that even my sausage fingers could glide beautifully round the keyboard and not accidentally hit the same key every time. The customisation available with Android is great and any element of the experience you want to change you pretty much can. After getting used to the phone through Touchwhiz I tried every Launcher and as I've said before I settled with Nova and GEL but what I've noticed is that although there are umpteen themes out there I could use I seem to have set my home screen up just like I would have on an iPhone - no widgets, fancy clocks or scrolling bars - just apps and folders. Now I have never made the decision to do this and I hadn't realised until about 10 mins ago that I'd done it. I've tried the widgets etc but they annoy me and get in the way. 

I think what I'm trying to say is really that my holiday in Androidland has been a good one, and I have learned a great deal about other phones, OS and how they work - however I have to admit that no matter what Android changes, adds or removes I'll always be an iPhone kind of guy. iPhone 6 here I come!

Saturday 30 August 2014

More thoughts

Since my last blog I've been thinking a bit more about what I do and don't like about Android. One of the things which I'm finding more about Android is that it feels fragmented. Instead of the overall feel of it being the 'Android Experience' it feels more like a series of apps or interactions which are all made by different people and then thrown into a central melting pot and given the Android touch. One great thing is that they all do seem to interact with each other and the number of different options you are presented with when pressing Share is fantastic - although some of the options seem a bit strange.

This fragmented feeling may be caused by the fact that the experience I'm having isn't the stock Android one - it's the Samsung Touchwhiz version and I am yet to be convinced that this is a good thing. I've never tried the HTC version Sense 5 but I get the impression this is probably similar.

Thursday 28 August 2014

10 months in....

Last October I made the switch from being a staunch iPhone user to an Android user and at the time I was very enthusiastic about entering the open source world on my newly acquired Note 3. Almost ten months down the line I think I'm now trying to make a decision as to whether I like Android or not?

The reasons for me switching were boredom with the iOS operating system, the locked down nature of it all where you can only do what Apple wants you to do; plus the attractions of Android looked like a whole world of fiddling, customising and new features! I thought the idea of widgets interesting and thought I'd have loads.

Ten months in I think I've now got to know Android well enough to make an assessment of my use of it and whether I like it or not.

The Note 3 I got obviously comes with the Samsung Touchwhiz skin loaded with the usual bloatware, I stuck with this for a while until I got used to the phone but I very quickly wanted to change. Thanks to the option to download new themes I immediately began trying out all the different ones and settled on Nova however I have subsequently switched to the Google Experience Launcher. One of the great things about Android is the App Store, more often than not if you can think of something you want your phone to do there's an app for it. The Android app store reflects the open source nature of Android and allows any kind of app but still had rigorous checks provided by Google to make sure it's not a danger to the handset or user. One thing I really like about the app store is that you can get a refund on any app if you don't like or in the first 5 mins (I think it's 5 mins) and before you install any app the Play Store lets you know exactly what the app needs to access on your phone.

One common comment I get is about the size of the Note 3, for me it's fine as I have large hands but the general comment is "that's massive". I think one of the issues and things I now dislike about Android are the number of niggly errors which keep happening which I think are connected to the Samsung build of Android rather than the stock version. There are issues with WiFi connection - the regular appearance of 'your network connection is unstable' is very annoying and now music, YouTube videos are pausing for no reason - each update of Samdroid seems to fix some issues but create the same amount of new ones!

Having an OS which is issued by Google but then changed by each of the handset makers for their devices to me dilutes the experience and opens up an opportunity for faults and issues!

Now I've got my phone set up for me I have no widgets on my screen, I never use the S-Pen, and often find myself searching Google for Android equivalents of iOS apps!

So I'm thinking, do I like Android - stock version yes, skinned versions - not really! do I like my Note 3 - not really, are there other handsets on the market currently I like - not really!

Guess I'll see what comes out over the next few months and make a decision! Is the grass greener? Definitely not!

Friday 7 February 2014

Compen

There is something which has seemingly become part of British society which I have to say really annoys me, the expectation that if a person has something which wrong then they should be compensated for it. It is a part of life that not everything goes either as expected or on a rare occasion genuine mistakes will made, it annoys me that as soon as a part of a process goes wrong there is an expectation that compensation should be paid. In my eyes compensation should only be paid out to people who have actually suffered loss or damage and not purely as a good will gesture, companies are too eager to hand out vouchers etc just to keep customers happy. The rise of the blame claim culture and the exposure all of our opinions (regardless of whether they are right or wrong) have through Social Media terrifies businesses, it's so easy for one negative message, status update or comment to be seen by hundreds of people in only a few minutes and in doing so feed the expectation Joe Public has of receiving a hand out.
 
In the long run I guess the more people do it then the business will have to compensate for the free money they give out by putting prices up - and that hits us all!