gnr_2
Well-known member
- Oct 13, 2012
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24 hours is nothing. See my signature? I've had my phone since Sept and learn new things daily. My Avast security app hands down beats Find my iPhone. It will scream, take photos of the perp, lock itself down even if the SIM card is removed, require a passcode to uninstall any apps. I might not get my phone back, but the other person won't be able to use it either.This is what I'm finding on my One as well. Though my early impression (read very early, as in 24 hours) of Android is that it isn't nearly as customizable as its billing. I'm finding things that were easy on my jailbroken iPhone to be impossible on Android. That isn't to say that there aren't a lot of things that I can do now that I couldn't with iOS, I'm just finding that it isn't the end all be all of mobile OSs. I was hoping to have all my pain-points with iOS solved with Android and, so far, they aren't. I also have a new found appreciation for the simplicity of iOS.
Again, it's way too early for me to pass any judgments, and I won't yet. I'm still very excited about this new device and the chance to learn a new OS.
Re home screens. You don't have to have every app you own on the home screen. That's what the app drawer is for. In Google Play undo the option to automatically add apps to the home screen. Then you just add the ones you use all the time which leaves plenty of room for widgets. The others can easily be accessed because they are in alphabetical order in the app drawer. Widgets include having the weather right there without opening something else, my day's schedule showing without opening the calendar (and let's not get started on the crap that is the iOS calendar), important reminders pinned, my to-do list, all without opening anything. If you like a widget but it doesn't quite have what you need or you can't figure it out, email the developer and they'll add it or help you with your problem. Big difference between Apple free apps that can be upgraded to paid is that Apple users upgrade to get rid of ads. Android users upgrade to support the developer for creating an awesome product.
Now let's talk notifications. I can read my email from the notification bar. I can read my texts too. Yes you can do that with the iPhone but you can't decide who you don't want to have notifications from when they text you or who's text you might only want to see the name and not the message for privacy concerns. And you can customize the LED to flash or show certain colors depending on the type of notification. Email: gold, slow. Text: magenta, fast. Silent or airplane mode: steady white. You can even have it customized by contact so you know without picking up your phone if it's someone you need to call back or if it can wait.
I can put shortcuts to absolutely anything on my screen. I have shortcuts to open each of the accounts in my email app so I don't have to go to the app and select the account. I can even pick a particular folder to open if I need to get more specific.
Now some of these aren't out of the box, but most are free or really cheap apps. If you tell us your hangups in iOS we can tell you how to fix it in Android. There is so much Android can do. Things you never even thought about can be done, like changing your keyboard. Yes. That's right, the keyboard. And once you learn to swype instead of type, you'll be in heaven. I've changed the theme of my phone this month alone from Easter (and Easter Egg icons), to cherry blossoms with flower icons, to Earth Day with a nature background.
Sorry so long but Android phones are something that you are always discovering things about. Not the 24 hours it takes to learn how to use an iPhone.
Sent from my totally awesome Sprint Galaxy Nexus, even if I don't know all its secrets yet.