Monday, September 10, 2012

Cerberus Security App Review


I have been using Cerberus (play store) for around a month now. I have been really impressed with the feature set that this app gives you. I purchased it or $4.95NZ, I though this was a real bargain price.

I purchase high end phones, I am a tech geek after all, and for under $5 to potentially get back my phone if it gets stolen....easy choice. But the other feature that is really important to me is remote lock / wipe. My phone builds up some serious personal information about me, so it is important that I have full control over it.

I am quite interested in security in general. So this app is also a good fit for me, I use keepass to keep my all my passwords safe. I will review keepass later.

The available tools on the tracking site are:

  • Start / Stop Tracking - this is based on the GPS position of the phone and is accurate 
  • Get device info -IP Address, WiFi network ID that it is connected to, network operator, network subscriber ID
  • Get location history - this is pretty awesome, it can be opened directly in Google maps and it shows heaps of data on your phones travels.
  • Lock device with code - this is fairly self explanitry, send a unlock code to your phone. As another feature if the code is entered incorrectly you can set it up to take a picture....great if you have a front facing camera, snap a pic of the thief.
  • Unlock - remove the unlock code.
  • Start an alarm with a message - just what it says, start an alarm....display a message, as rude as you please, it then takes a picture using both cameras....very cool.
  • Display a message - this does the same thing as the previous one with no alarm, but it is way funnier because there is a "speak" tick box....I may have got my phone to say rude things. Takes pictures also.
  • Get call log - as you would expect.
  • Get SMS log - as you would expect.
  • Call phone - Calls a phone from your phone, to a number you specify, not sure how useful this feature is.
  • Send SMS - send an SMS to a phone number you specify. Not really sure how useful this really is.
  • Record Audio - very cool, you specify a time; max 300s; and the phone records audio. You then download it and can listen in on what the thieves are talking about. 
  • Take picture - takes a picture, you can choose to use the back camera, the flash and to take the picture immediately. 
  • Capture video - as with audio except max 30s
  • Grab Screenshot - emails you a screen shot of your phone.
  • Start / Stop Emergency Mode - Emergency mode will make the device send its location periodically. You can specify the frequency of the alerts. It allows you to send a SMS also.
  • Hide from app draw - this is really useful, hids Cerberus from the app draw. Thieves wont know that it is installed and therefore wont know to do anything about it. You can setup a special number to dial from the phone that will get you into the app.
  • Show in app draw - Just makes Cerberus show up again.
  • Wipe device memory - I guess it does what it says...didn't try this one though.
  • Wipe SD card - I guess it does what it says...didn't try this one though.
  • Reboot device - Yep, causes the phone to reboot.


Logging into the https://www.cerberusapp.com/ website is easy, it is really important that this isn't the weak point in your security. This app gives some serious control over your phone. Set a strong password!!!

This app is also one that is greatly improved by having root access on your phone, if you have root you can install Cerberus to the system partition. This means that the app is far harder to remove, normally any app is nuked if you do a factory reset, however a factory reset doesn't reset the system partition. A theif would have to have a much better knowledge of android to remove it. They would need to flash a new ROM.

Security is a concern with a app that has so much access to your phone, but if you have a social media app such as Google+ or Facebook with location services enabled then they have basically the same access as Cerberus does. I have read over their privacy policy and detailed it below. There is nothing particularly menacing about it, but have a quick read if you are interested. And you probably are if you have read this far into a review of a security application for your phone.

Security / Privacy main points from their privacy policy:

  • You allow the app to use your location to track the device! To be expected since that is one of the main features.
  • You consent to the app sending SMS messages, which means that it could cost you money. But this feature needs to be triggered by the user. Not much of an issue here. Unless someone hacks your account and makes you send really expensive text messages. But I also believe that SMS messages can cost to receive in some places in the world, so this could be more of an issue in that case, it is not relevant in NZ.
  • You consent to the app being able to use mobile data, you wont be able to track your phone or do any of the main functions if a data connection is not available.
  • As part of this LSDroid, the people that make Cerberus don't accept any liability for charges incurred. This is not a surprise at all.



  • The sign up info that the privacy policy details is fairly standard, i.e. your sign up info is kept, and data is transferred to your computer.



  • Now on to the interesting stuff, LSDroid says that it does not use your information for marketing purposes which is great, because this app has the potential to locate you down to the best possible accuracy. They do use your info to improve their services and functions, but all developers do this so no big deal there.
  • They will email you for "non-marketing or administrative purposes", but from my experience over the last month of using it I haven't had any emails from them.



  • LSDroid does release aggregate log information to "interested third parties" which basically means marketing firms. This means that the data they collect on all users is rolled together and general trends and patterns can be determined. It does not mean that any personally identifiable information is released, though a determined data mining effort can usually get far more information then is intended to be released, see this description at Securityfocus.com



  • LSDroid states also that they will take all commercially reasonable steps to protect your data, but take no responsibility should there be a breach. Which is not surprising.



  • In the event of "MERGER, SALE, OR BANKRUPTCY" as a first course they will try to keep the services running and therefore the users should notice no difference in service or privacy of information policy. If they are merged or sold the information you have provided will be moved to the new owner / merged entity.

Friday, September 7, 2012

SGSIII for a day

My dad decided that it was time to finally step into the smartphone game, his main motivator was to be able to access his spreadsheets on the go. He gets a lot of calls about products, the details of which are all stored in a few spreadsheets.

I'm glad he asked me for advice, because he wanted to be able to read spreadsheets I told him that screen size should be his biggest buying factor. I gave him the choice to get either the Galaxy Note, the SGSIII which he ended up getting and the HTC One X.

Once he picked up his new phone he made a trip down to me to help him get setup and show him a few things that his phone can do.

The apps I installed for him:

  • Swype beta....I have posted on this before, awesome. Dad was swyping in less then a minute.
  • HandyCalc, probably the best calculator program on Android, much more then he needs but still does the basics well.
  • Dropbox already installed just needed an account, this is another thing that he really wanted....not dropbox specifically but the function that it provides, I could have gone with Google Drive / Ubuntu One. But dropbox comes with 48Gb with the SGSIII.
  • Torque, I also had a bluetooth OBD2 adapter that I gave him. This one really blew him away, he just had no idea that it was even possible to read the data from the car computer with you phone. He is a mechanic and always thought that you had to get the very expensive proprietary tools, which is true for older models. But you can get all , kinds of data using the adapter and your phone.
  • Polaris Office was already installed, this is what he uses to open and read the spreadsheets. It is a fairly good mobile office suite. I didn't really use t much.
  • ES File Manager, just so he can browse his files. And it let me put a direct link on his home screen to his most used spreadsheet.
  • Google account, so he could access the play store.

I also showed him Ceberus, the phone security suite, which also amazed him the capabilities of phones is really stunning to those who haven't kept up with the state of the tech. I will post with an in depth review later about Ceberus.

It was interesting to help dad and see a different use case to what I'm used to, being a "power user" I shop on specs / modability. His last phone was all txt and call, he has jumped into the smartphone game at the top. The SGSII is one of / arguably the best phone in the world for now. But he didn't buy it because it is the best, but because it has a big screen and his use case requires more stuff to be displayed at once.

Now one geeky thing...is it better then my HTC One S? No, they are both really really polished bits of hardware. The software is not much of a comparison, I am running CM10 Jellybean and the SGSIII is running ICS with touch wiz. I have never been fond of touch wiz, I think it looks far too simple and boring. But I also don't like Sense by HTC as it is too bloated. CM10 is not completely finished but is in a daily driver state, which is what I am using it for. The SGSIII is big though, really big, I wouldn't want to carry it round all the time but it was not as bad as I expected. I wonder what the Note 2 will be like with its 5.5" screen.

Another thing that is interesting is he wants to know more about the tech but has really not kept up with it at all, other people that I deal with who have the same level of knowledge don't want to know anything about the tech they just want a phone that "does internet and email"

Friday, August 24, 2012

I was missing Swype and other input thoughts.

So I was using Swype on my phone for a while before I installed CM10. I have read that it installs on the Galaxy Nexus that is running CM10, but I was unable to get it to install on my One S running CM10.

Swype was one of the best apps that I have ever used, it makes the phone usable when inputting large amounts of text.

Overall CM10 is working out well, I like the clean look and consistency of the stock interface, sense is just too much "bling" and "oooh shiny" for my liking. HTC in my opinion makes great hardware and one of the better software addon packs, but it is not to my taste.

LibreOffice looks like it is coming to android which is awesome, so technologies like Swype will become more important as we move towards an ever increasing mobile lifestyle. Add on devices will never be popular, carrying keyboards and other devices along with your phone will never really take off, having just the phone will be the main usage mode. Therefore new interface techniques will become more and more important.

Swype takes the pain of typing on a small screen and turns most of your input to gesture based input. This is a great idea, I tried 8pen and I really liked the idea of gesture based input. The issue with 8pen is the learning curve is way too steep, after typing on a physical keyboard (as a programmer) for years moving to the 8pen interface was too much of a mission. I was getting quite competent at using it after a few weeks, but I could never give my phone to a friend to send a text or search the web without switching back to the standard keyboard. Swype allows for the "hunt and peck" style of typing and also the time to teach someone to "Swype" is minimal. I taught my boss (in his 50's) to "Swype" in less then a minute.

As I finished typing this I thought yea, I will try to install it again (for about the tenth time)....it has started downloading....never got this far before....here is hoping. Maybe Swype has updated the installer for better Jellybean integration. Unfortunately the installer gets to the end of the downloading bar and just stops there, but after about 5 minutes the install dialogue pops up. Once installed I got kicked back to the downloading screen. I closed the app when to the "Language and Input" settings and selected the Swype beta keyboard and selected the input method form the notification area when typing something.

I have watched the video at AndroidAuthority on keyboards, they review the Adaptxt vs SlideIT vs SwiftKey vs The stock keyboard. I don't know why they didn't review Swype vs these other keyboards as I think it would have beaten then quite well.

Saturday, August 18, 2012

CM10 Unofficial on my One S, I now have Jellybean :)

Ok so I was going to wait till there was an official build of Cyanogenmod for the One S before I installed it. But I am just too impatient for that, I have been following the progress of the devs at http://ville.giev.de/

I finally decided to go for it a few days ago after seeing a build in the Clockwork Mod lists, it didn't work so I started looking deeper into the state of the build. Turns out that the Clockwork Mod list has a much older build (as much as 2 weeks is "much older").

So I downloaded the latest available build from http://ville.giev.de/ which was CM10 20120815 which is conviently linked on the page. It contains the insecure boot image that you will need to flash using fastboot.

Just drop the whole zip file on your phone and also extract the boot.img into your fastboot folder. You should also download the gapps (Google Apps) zip file if you want to be able to connect to your Gmail and the Play Store. Drop the gapps zip on your phone.

THIS is VERY IMPORTANT, because there is no removable SD card it is much harder to fix your phone after you started if you don't have a working system image already there!!!!! Just maker sure that you drop the .zip file on to your phone before you install the boot.img file.

Boot your phone into fastboot, see that the red fastboot icon changes to fastboot USB. In a terminal window navigate to your android SDK folder and then to your platform tools folder where you dropped your boot.img file earlier.

Run the command:

  • sudo ./fastboot devices

You should see your device ID, I always do this to make sure that I have comms to my phone.

If this has worked then the next step is to flash the insecure boot image, this allows you to install new kernels aka the Jellybean kernel, so run the command:

  • sudo ./fastboot boot boot.img

It will only take a few seconds to complete. Basically you are writing the file boot.img into the boot partition of your phone.

Once that is done you can now install the latest CM10 build, on your phone go back to the bootloader and then into recovery.

Select install zip from sdcard
Choose zip from sdcard
Naigate to where you dropped your zip file earlier and select it
Scroll down to Yes install cm-10..... .zip

The system will install, it doesn't take too long, you will then be dropped back to the recovery prompt, you can follow the same format to install the gapps zip file.

Reboot your phone. You should see the CM9 boot animation (this is on the low priority list of fixes). After a little bit your phone should boot into CM10, you will see the Jellybean lock screen.

That is it.

Ok now my conclusions, I have only had my phone for about 2 months now, I have never used stock ICS. I was running HTC Sense 4.0 on top of Android 4.0.3. Now I am running CM10 which is based on Android 4.1.1.

The phone is now faster then I have had it so far. My main test for this is Temple Run, which used to studder when first starting when running Sense ICS, it is smooth all the way through now. I know this is not the most scientific testing method but the studder was repeatable on the Sense ICS build and I haven't seen it yet on the CM10 JB build!

There are still a few things not working on CM10 but overall it is in a stable daily usage state now, I will follow the development as they do the final polishes on it. Maybe then it will get the official stamp and become part of the main CM line.

The One S is a great piece of hardware, just needed a software upgrade in my opinion.

Wednesday, August 15, 2012

Loving backup and restore!!!

One problem with the HTC One S and any other phone without a removable SD card is that it is more difficult to recover your phone from terminal meddling.

Today I tried to install the unofficial CM 10 20120801 from the ClockworkMod website, I read a bit about this ROM from around the web and one issue that people are having is that the phone wont boot sometimes, well this is exactly what happened to me.

I tried to install the new image from the GUI first, then from recovery but it led to the same unbooting state, luckily I choose to backup the current ROM before the install, so I was able to use the awesome backup/restore function to go back to a state like nothing had happened.

This is a little life lesson when working with anything, not just slightly experimental phone builds....ALWAYS MAKE A BACKUP and if at all possible automate this.....how much was that last weeks worth of work worth to you? (Doc, Spreadsheet, CAD, Program......) how much work would be required to recreate it if your computer died?

For all my (and my Boss's) work data I have an automated backup just using SyncToy and a scheduled task! It is pretty basic, but it works well and it has saved out bacon once or twice already. There are much better solutions but it works for us.

Friday, August 3, 2012

Why unlock and root your phone?

A friend of mine asked me "what's the advantages vs disadvantages of even unlocking an Android phone system? You can build apps with tools. Configure the interioir as standard???"

For me the first reason to unlock and root my phone is to have full control over my own devices. It allows me to install a completely new version of android as I did with my Nexus One, I ended up with Cyanogenmod 7.1, which expands the capabilities of the phone significantly over the stock system. And it makes you feel more like a owner rather then just a user.

The second reason is the ability to have a complete backup of my current working system, if this is the only reason that you want root access then it is worth it. I use ROM Manager by Clockwork Mod, to backup my system and load new ROM's in an easy manner. The backups produced include all your data and system partitions, so if you nuke your phone by installing a dodgy app or getting a bad virus (not many around yet). You can restore your phone to a known good state, rather then back to factory default.

The third reason is some apps require root access to install and use. I'm looking forward to ubuntu for android, I hope once the research phase is finished that anyone can install it, not just those running "approved" phones.

The fourth reason is you get a much better understanding of your device when you unlock your device (assuming you do it yourself), doing a little research and understand how some of the underlying technology works.

Thursday, August 2, 2012

Root access update

Well sometimes it is good to be stubborn, I tried the superboot again. I got the same result and messages but this time I have gained root access.

Not sure exactly what changed, looked the same and nothing I did was different but this is great.
Read my previous post for the full run down.

<======= REPOST OF PREVIOUS POST, I PUT IT IN THE WRONG BLOG======>


Ok so I have been home a few weeks now and decided to unlock my phone and get root access. This is quite a long post, but it is the sequence I followed and I have an unlocked bootloader....no root though.

Just over two years ago I did the same thing to my Nexus One, this time it was much easier to unlock the bootloader. Last time I gave up and booted into windows and used the tools there, it was my impatience coming through.

This time I was determined that I wouldn't use windows, two reasons. One I don't have any windows partitions to boot into on my various computers, so I would have to borrow my partners win7 laptop, which is worse then using my own back up win install. And two, the documentation seemed to be much better this time around, so I was fairly confident that even as an advanced amateur I would be able to succeed.

There are a few things that you need first on linux, I'm running Linux Mint 12, if you want to root your phone from your linux install.
  • sudo apt-get update
  • sudo apt-get install ia32-libs
Then you will need to get the android debug bridge (ADB) software, this is part of the SDK most forums and tutorials I have read on the net suggest installing the whole thing, this can take a long time depending on your connection speed.

To get the ADB software you will need to grab the SDK install from the official website this will come down as a .tgz archive. Extract it to a useful file, mine is in /home/adam/Programs/AndroidSDK.

The easiest way to get what you need for this is just install the "android sdk tools" and the "android sdk platform tools", that is all and it will only take a few minutes to install.

Once you have gotten this far you are most of the way there, connect your phone to your computer, go to the developer options and tick the "usb debugging" icon. Open a terminal and run:

  • lsusb

You should see an entry that looks something like this:

  • Bus 001 Device 003: ID 0bb4:0cec High Tech Computer Corp. 

The "0bb4" identifies HTC, other manufacturers have different numbers, and the "0cec" is the device identifier, so all One S phones should have the same number, there may be differences for different versions of the phone, I'm not sure.

Next navigate to the {path}/platform-tools/ folder in your terminal. Then make sure that ADB can see your device by running:

  • ./adb devices

The output should look something like this:

  • List of devices attached 
  • "A serial number"

If not try running the command as root:

  • sudo ./adb devices

Next reboot your phone to the bootloader by powering it off then holding the volume down button when you turn it back on. Select the fastboot option, there should be a red area on the screen this should show "fastboot", and "fastboot usb" when plugged into your computer.

If your phone shows "fastboot usb", in your terminal run:

  • sudo ./fastboot devices

The output will look something like this:

  • "A serial number" fastboot

If you have gotten this far you are about 80% of the way to unlocking your bootloader. You will need to head over to HTCdev to get your unlock code. But to speed you along, run:

  • sudo ./fastboot oem get_identifier_token

The generated token is used to get you your unlock code. You are going to have to sign up which is annoying, but this is the easiest / safest way to unlock your bootloader.

Once unlocked when in bootloader mode, it will show unlocked.

Now using the superboot method it is supposed to be really easy to install permanent root on your phone, this has not worked for me. This is the forum post I followed at XDA I had the success message after running the two commands as root (sudo) in my terminal, but alas no root.

This happened on my Nexus One, since I already had the bootloader unlocked I installed CM6 at the time which already has root built in.

This is what I plan to do with my One S, not sure what system I am going to use since there isn't an official CM for the One S yet. But I will keep updating this blog with my progress.

Monday, June 25, 2012

HTC One S Battery Life

Ok I have had my new HTC One S for 9 days now, so I have been using it quite extensively. Between playing games, my current favourite is Temple Run, I finished all the current stuff for angry birds space which is also very cool.

So on to battery life, I am used to charging my phone nightly, the Nexus One wasn't particularly good on battery life. Over all I have been quite impressed with the battery life, I missed charging it one night and it lasted through the next day till about 7pm. My usage pattern is fairly heavy, with lots of stuff going on. Emails, games a little bit of video and a blog post or two when I was testing out the swype beta (very very big improvement over the standard keyboard).

I'm sure that once updates come out for the phone battery life will improve some more. I am happy with my purchase, sense 4 is not really my cup of tea, but it is very polished.

Friday, June 22, 2012

So I got an HTC One S

I have had my new phone for a week now.over all it is really nice. The hardware is really good, I love the feel of it.

Having the bigger screen is great, it is super clear and bright compared to my old nexus one.

On the software side it is a bit of a learning curve coming from Cyanogenmod 7 to sense 4. Sense isn't bad, but I'm used to the more open nature of CM. My brother had the nexus S, android 4 is really nice and I want something close to that. I also feel that sense of slowing the phone down, the animations are nice but I always prefer function over form.

Once there is an official Cyanogenmod port for the One S I will install it, this phone is a bit new for that yet. I really like that HTC makes unlocking the bootloader quite easy. Just go to www.HTCdev.com and follow the instructions.

I also just got the Swype beta, out is absolutely awesome. It makes typing on my phone fast and easy, I have typed this whole post on my phone, I would never have done this with the standard keyboard.when Swype comes out of beta I will buy it. The link below will take you to the Swype website, follow the instructions to install it.

http://www.swype.com/get-swype/how-do-i-get-swype/

Wednesday, June 13, 2012

Galaxy Note

I had a few minutes with the Samsung Galaxy Note today (5.3" screen). I was surprised by how "small" it felt in my pocket. I guess it was because I expected it to be massive and unwieldy, where I was hoping the HTC One X would feel small. It didn't, it felt not much bigger then the HTC One S, I guess perception plays a big roll in how we experience things.

Would I buy one? The prices have dropped since the SGSIII came out. Probably not, it is certainly a phone you need to use a bluetooth headset with, you look like a tool holding something that big to your ear. It is still super huge in the hand, and is the perfect phone for those that consume a lot of media on their phone.

The screen is very nice, the little stylus is kinda cool but gets old quite quickly.

I do wonder what size the Note 2 will be, if the screen will grow like the Galaxy phone did.


Sunday, June 10, 2012

Am I asking too much from phone manufacturers?

I have been watching the press and tech sites quite closely since the SGS III release, the numbers being stated (benchmarks) for the SGS III vs HTC One X vs HTC One S are all very impressive.

Fans and haters alike would have you believe that either the SGS III kills the One X or visa versa, turns out that in different ways both are best. Surprisingly the One S with the Snapdragon S4 does very well in some of the reviews even coming out on top in a few. This will make for some interesting devices come the S4 Quad which is slated for release sometime in Q4 2012.

I have read most of the reviews (Engadget has a good one) that are available on the net and discounting the obviously biased ones, the new Exynos Quad is a fine chip powering its way through the benchmarks giving some seriously impressive numbers (supercomputers passed 150MFLOPS in about 1975-76).
Super computer speeds (10^8 = 100MFLOPS) (thanks Wikipedia)

From the various reviews, it looks like the Mali400 GPU in the SGSIII isn't really a match for the Tegra 3, but the Exynos is a better CPU. There is a lot to like about the SGSIII but not more so then the One X.

I feel the main thing holding back the SGSIII is the stupid TouchWiz 4 skin. HTC Sense 4 is no longer the bloated pig that the older versions were, it is much closer to stock android (why the manufacturers don't just ship stock is beyond me). TouchWiz is clunky and old looking where Sense looks sleek and polished. 
Well that and the fact that it is f-ing huge, these are supposed to be portable 
computers, and not in the way that a laptop is portable, but a pocketable computer.

I want a hybrid of the SGSIII and the One X in the form factor of the One S, and this is probably asking too much. Maybe when the Snapdragon S4 Quad arrives. I want the microSD slot from the SGSIII but the proper ICS buttons from the One X/S. I want the user replacable battery from the SGSIII (or bigger) and the forward looking UI from the One X/S, or better yet stock android. I want the IPS screen from the One X at 1280 x 720 but in the size of the One S but it should be Gorilla Glass 2 like the SGSIII.  Both phones have 1GB of RAM, this is probably enough, but by year end I expect to see phones coming out with 2GB.

Tuesday, May 29, 2012

HTC One X - too big

So I went down to the local Vodafone shop to have a look at the HTC One X.

Where I was pleasantly surprised with the One S because it felt smaller in the pocket then the Nexus One, where it has a 4.3" vs 3.7" screen. The One X felt huge in the pocket.

The 4.7" screen of the One X means it isn't particularly "pocketable", I like the bigger screen while I'm using it but when carrying the phone in a pocket it is important that it fits comfortably.

This leaves me wondering, is someone going to make a quad core version of a One S size phone. I have said before that I want a top spec phone, just not a massive slate in my pocket.

I can imagine the SGS III will be similar in size and feel to the One X, the SGS III having a 4.8" screen will probably feel even bigger.

Sunday, May 27, 2012

Useful data visualisation

Here is a good link to some useful data on ExtremeTech it really shows some good comparisons between phones.

Also I have had some more time with the HTC One S, comparing it directly  my current Nexus One. If anything it feels smaller in the pocket the the Nexus One. Even though the dimensions are bigger, it is thinner and "disrupts" the pocket less.

I am going to take some time soon to go to the local vodafone shop and play around with the HTC One X it is significantly bigger then the One S and I expect that no matter how thin it is it wont feel the same size in the pocket as the Nexus One.

Now that I have had a really good play with the HTC One S I am happier about going up to a bigger screen size, as long as the phone is thinner. I would not have expected this.

Just a note, I was testing this in my hip pocket on my jeans. Walked around a bit.

Thursday, May 17, 2012

HTC One S

I have just had a quick play with the new HTC One S.

Quick thoughts:

1/ It is big but not too bad.
2/ Only takes micro SIM so that is a bit annoying but you can mod your current SIM to fit.
3/ Screen is just awesome; compared to my Nexus One, which isn't bad at all.
4/ The new Sense skin is not too intrusive, but then I haven't played with stock android 4.
5/ It is super thin and somewhat light, since I am used to the Nexus One.
6/ Seems very smooth in all the transitions that I tried.

Would I buy one? Well maybe, if my phone died, it is not too big. The price is not too bad...but since my phone still works fine. I will hold off. These are the first round of android 4 phones, there will be a few more coming soon.

Monday, May 7, 2012

SGSIII Reviews

I have been reading a lot of reviews of the SGSIII, most note that even though it is 4.8" that it doesn't feel bigger then the SGSII. Not too sure about that, there are some significant differences in footprint between the two.

Well according to the spec sheets for the two devices:
SGSII: 66.1 × 125.3 × 8.49 mm
SGSIII: 70.6 × 136.6 × 8.55 mm
So the SGSIII is 6.8% wider, 9% longer and 0.7% thicker.

But in saying this the HTC One X, probably the closest phone on the market in spec to the SGSIII is: 69.9 × 134.4 × 8.9 mm, the foot print is in between but slightly thicker, for a given value of "thicker".

Another review said to stop thinking of these new phones as phones, start thinking of them as portable computers that have a phone app. I don't think I'm there yet, maybe after I get my hands on a One X or SGSIII, being roughly the same size, I'll change my mind. Probably not though.

Thursday, May 3, 2012

SGSIII 4.8" Wow

Ok just a quick one, there are heaps of reviews of the SGSIII running around the net at the moment.

At 4.8" the new SGSIII just has to be eating the potential market for the Galaxy Note, does that 0.2" make the older Note more appealing to the people for whom size is king.

Maybe Samsung will release an updated Note (5.5" maybe 6" anybody). Where does it stop, in 2 years will we be hearing about the new SGSVI at 7"?

Well for what it is worth, I am still looking for a phone that has top specs and around the 4.0" mark. I may step up to 4.3" but I will need to get my hands on one to see how it feels in the hand and pocket first.
I love pricespy when I'm looking for tech stuff. You can filter all the available things in the category and ignore all the other stuff that doesn't meet your requirements.

I use it all the time when looking for phones and other things, like components for my new file server that I am planning on building.

It also lets me keep an eye on the price trends of the products I'm interested in, and there is a massive range of products on the site. From CPU's to washing machines.

Price spy -> mobile phone -> Android 4.0 filter applied: PriceSpy; Android 4.0

Wednesday, May 2, 2012

Specs and things

Must haves
1/ Android 4.x
2/ new Snapdragon S4 or Exynos 4 Quad or Tegra 3
3/ 1Gb min ram
4/ 16Gb on board + microSD slot
5/ qHD or 720p Res
6/ max 4.0" screen
7/ easily unlockable boot loader

Nice to haves
1/ Ubuntu for Android
2/ 8MP camera, though these are fairly standard now.
3/ Better then 3G, though I live in NZ so not much use here, but could be when I travel.
4/ Curved glass screen like the Nexus S and Galaxy Nexus

The Exynos Chip: Android Central
One set of S4 vs Tegra 3: Android and Me
Another set: Droid life

Tegra 3 beats the S4 in a lot of things but I think the S4 is still a better design overall. May have to wait till for a little while before all my "must have" specs are met. By then the Exynos will have been out and properly benchmarked against the other two, and then we will see which is best.

The Ubuntu on android would be interesting, would be kind of cool to have a "full desktop experience" from a phone just by plugging it into some peripherals.

Tuesday, May 1, 2012

My Current Thoughts

Well I have been using my NexusOne for almost two years now. It is a great phone except for the hardware fault that means the touch screen sometimes gets itself out of calibration. It is a little annoying but not something that was a deal breaker.

I liked the solid feel of the phone, it is a lot heaver then the current offerings. At 3.7" the screen seems small by the standards of the new top spec phones coming out. But I like this screen size, the problem is that all the new phones coming out consider this size to be in the lower end of the performance market....this seems strange.

I have had a good play around with a mate of mines Galaxy S (4.0"), and another friends Galaxy SII (4.3"), also with my brothers Nexus S (4.0" curved screen). I have also spend a little time with the newish Galaxy Nexus (4.65" curved screen). Admittedly after playing with the Nexus S I felt that the 4.0" screen wasn't too big, I think it is the slight curve that makes it feel smaller then it really is. The 4.0 flat screen of the Galaxy S is big in the hand, the 4.3" screen of the SII is just too big all around for my hand. I'm sure if you have huge hands then it would seem fine.

The next phone that I am eyeing is the HTC One S, but I'm having second thoughts because of the 4.3" screen, it has the specs that I want: Snapdragon S4; 1GB of RAM; qHD screen etc..Why couldn't they make a phone with the same specs available with a 4.0" screen preferably curved.

I may wait to see where the market heads in the next couple of months. I want a "superphone" i.e. a phone with the top specs available when I buy it, and I want it in a phone that will fit in my pocket easily.