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Monday, 11 May 2009

G1/Android News: Is Cupcake Better For Your Battery?

Image representing Android as depicted in Crun...Image via CrunchBase

Answer: No, it's bloody not.

Well, that was easy.

One of the most eagerly anticipated benefits of the Android 1.5 update, apart from the soft keyboard, was an improvement in battery life.

I got my over-the-air update last week, fully discharged and recharged my battery to make sure it was calibrated, and took a careful note of the time when I took it off charge, eagerly awaiting a nice long runtime from Cupcake's much-lauded efficiency improvements.

I kept my configuration exactly as before - GPS, 3G and Bluetooth off, and exactly the same screen timeout. The time to beat was roughly twenty-four hours, my usual average time between charges before the update.

Twenty hours later, my battery was dead.

This is just my experience, and there may be something specific in my configuration which makes the new improvements irrelevant. Prove me wrong, somebody, please! Leave your own experiences of post-Cupcake battery life in the comments.

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Thursday, 7 May 2009

G1/Android: The Cupcake Analysis

Image representing Android as depicted in Crun...Image via CrunchBase

So, the 1.5 update to Android downloaded to my T-Mobile G1 yesterday morning, and I've been playing around with it for a fair bit of the last 24 hours.

My first impressions: The tweaks to the interface are very nice. Everything feels a little more solid and easy to use, including the use of paler backgrounds in a lot of applications (the calendar in particular is a lot easier on the eyes).

The new rotation feature, where the display switches to landscape mode when you rotate the phone (instead of when you slide open the keyboard) looks smart. The fade over from one mode to the other is an obvious attempt to distinguish it from the iPhone's spin effect - it looks snappy, but can be a little slow.

The new windows animations (which you will have to turn on from Settings - they're not on by default) giving a slide from one screen to another - also very smart. They're shiny without being too distracting. The new dialogue boxes which pop up to the screen look good too.

I've only used the soft keyboard a couple of times, but I'm very impressed. It's very precise despite the small keys - I've yet to hit the wrong key - and pops up fast when it's needed. There are a few features which aren't immediately apparent, and are only explained in the System Tutorial which is hidden in Settings/About Phone: You can hold a letter key to get a popup menu of accented versions, and hold the number/letter switch key to bring up some additional options.

The new camera and video camera (camcorder) are just excellent - Google have somehow managed to significantly improve the focussing speed, images are definitely sharper and there are more features, and the interface for both looks very smart.

Video comes out looking very good for the compact size of the device. The previous option for video recording - Android7.org's unofficial video camera hack - suffered from a very high rate of battery drain. Hopefully this integrated solution will be more economical.

On the topic of battery drain, I have yet to determine how much better Cupcake's power economy is. I discharged it fully yesterday afternoon and charged it to 100% in the evening to start a full power test, but stupidly left it on the cable this morning for an hour or so while swapping some files around, so I've had to start again. I'll give a full figure on average battery lifetime when I have it.

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Cupcake Rollout Actually Confirmed by Me (finally!)

Yes, the 1.5 Android update finally downloaded to my G1 this morning. I'll post a full report once I've had time to try it out a little - battery life test commencing shortly.

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Wednesday, 6 May 2009

Cupcake Rollout Actually Confirmed by a Human Being

Over on my Hubpages G1 article, loyal commenter Antient has confirmed that Cupcake downloaded to his phone this morning. Happy days! Looks like Talk Android weren't full of crap after all :)

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Thursday, 30 April 2009

G1/Android News: Cupcake confirmed, was the delay a marketing strategy?

T-Mobile G1 Google AndroidImage by netzkobold via Flickr

Following on from T-Mobile Germany's announcement of the Cupcake update rollout, T-Mobile have now confirmed worldwide Cupcake release in May via over-the-air update.

This ends a long saga of uncertainty, misinformation and seriously jumbled messages from both Google and T-Mobile which has made a sizeable portion of the G1 user base very angry and confused.

The first rule of customer relations is that the more information you give your customers, the happier they will be. But happy customers doesn't necessarily mean good marketing, and the months of vague and conflicting messages, speculation and false hope have created a vast amount of traffic and publicity for the newborn Android system.

Could it be that all this delay and vagueness were a cunning move to spread the Android buzz, in the same way product shortages create frenzies around consoles and toys? Share your views in the comments.
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Monday, 27 April 2009

G1/Android News: New Feature List for Android 1.5 (Cupcake)

Image representing Android as depicted in Crun...Image via CrunchBase

OSNews has a post about Android version 1.5 (commonly known as Cupcake from the development branch which has driven it), believed to be coming in a couple of weeks, with a list of features and tweaks. This is certainly one of the most complete release descriptions I've seen so far.

Of course, it's by no means guaranteed that we'll actually see all these features at release, even in the US and particularly in Europe. We've already seen the previous Over-The-Air update stripped of a lot of predicted features in Europe, rendering it largely a bugfix. Until the thing actually arrives on someone's phone, we just have to wait and see.
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Saturday, 25 April 2009

T-Mobile Announces Cupcake Rollout in May

(via TalkAndroid) T-Mobile Germany have announced on their homepage that they will be rolling out the Cupcake update for Android in May. Previous updates have surfaced in the US a couple of weeks before Europe, and in the UK about a week before the rest of Europe, so we should be seeing an update in the US very shortly with the UK following.
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Friday, 24 April 2009

G1 news: Google Latitude for the UK - only you can't have it

An interesting situation has developed regarding Google Latitude, the location-based social networking tool which failed to show up in the last over-the-air update to the T-Mobile G1. According to a Google employee answering this question on Google Mobile support, Latitude has now rolled out in the UK but due to a "code of conduct between operators" in the UK, it's not available for the G1.

To really rub it in, you can visit the Latitude web page on your G1, and you're even presented with a big blue "Launch Now" button, but pressing it just takes you to your regular Google Maps display. Aggravating.

My contact at the Google press office says that this is fully on T-Mobile's side of the fence, and they are now looking into this for me - I'll post here as soon as I have some news.
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Wednesday, 11 March 2009

Cloud Computing for Beginners, Part 4: Interesting Players in Online Storage

A brief look at three of the most interesting players in the fast-growing world of online storage.

Google

Image representing Google as depicted in Crunc...Image via CrunchBase


The big word is, of course, "G-Drive". There have been rumours that Google would offer online file storage since before 2006, and it's consistent with their business model (they have publicly stated the intention to index every piece of data on the planet) and their capabilities.

There doesn't seem to be current figure on google's data storage capacity, but over two years ago their total stored data, not including Gmail, was estimated at over one petabyte - one thousand million megabytes. Considering Gmail has tens of millions of users and offers over seven gigabytes of storage to each one, that figure has clearly now increased astronomically.

The belief that Google will soon offer an online hard drive is further supported by a buried passage in a package sent out to their translators, and the fact that their Picasa and Gmail services now offer the option to buy more space (up to four hundred gigabytes), indicating that Google are establishing the infrastructure of a storage-for-hire service.

A Google Drive is an exciting possibility because it can be expected to share the qualities of their other services - it's likely to be free (at least for a basic service, which will probably provide greater benefits than their competitors), innovative, and it will interconnect at a high level with other Google offerings, which have become the backbone of many people's connected lives.


Amazon

Image representing Amazon as depicted in Crunc...Image via CrunchBase


Amazon launched their Simple Storage Service (S3) in 2006, leveraging the huge server base they had established as the world's largest online retailer. S3 is not actually a consumer product - it doesn't have a user interface by which to upload and download data. Instead it is intended as a universal online storage solution which other companies can then use to create their own products - from data-heavy websites to user-friendly online hard drives - and many partners like Jungle Disk are now doing exactly that.

S3's most innovative characteristic is its fine-grained pricing model, which scales from (relatively) small to huge amounts of storage, and charges only for space and bandwidth (amount uploaded and downloaded) used rather than for the total space available. Prices currently start from fifteen cents a month per gigabyte stored, ten cents per gigabyte uploaded, and seventeen cents per gigabyte downloaded.


Dropbox

Image representing Dropbox as depicted in Crun...Image via CrunchBase


Dropbox has rapidly established itself as one of the most accessible and simple online disk drives, although in some ways it is really a backup and synchronisation tool rather than online storage. At installation time, a Dropbox folder is created or designated which is then synced in realtime with Dropbox's online space, any changes in the folder immediately mirrored (allowing for time to transfer data) in the online service. However, the files do remain on the user's computer, so this is not an option for moving ones data online to save hard disk space.

The most powerful aspects of Dropbox's service are the ability to create shortcuts in the Dropbox folder to files or folders elswhere, which are then also sychronised automatically, and the ability to install Dropbox across multiple systems. The Dropbox folders on each machine are then kept in sync (as long as they are online) providing access to one's files from any location. This is also one of the few online storage solutions to provide clients for Windows, Mac and Linux.
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Wednesday, 25 February 2009

Cloud Computing for Beginners, Part 1: Introduction


"Cloud Computing" is becoming one of the biggest buzzphrases on the Net, eclipsing the dreaded "Web 2.0" as a popular metaphor for the cutting edge in internet technology. But what does it really mean, and how can it benefit you?

Cloud computing is, in essence, just a step further in the development of worldwide computer networking. It's the process by which your data, and even your applications, are moved "online" (ie away from your desktop) into the "cloud", the mass of resources available to you on the internet.

Cloud computing has actually been possible since the development of the first modem. In fact, early networked computer systems were closer to cloud computing than our modern day desktop setup. Data and applications were stored and run centrally on huge mainframe computers, and users connected to them with a very simple "dumb terminal" which was too low-powered to run programs by itself, and merely took keyboard input from the user to the mainframe and brought back text to display on its screen. The terminal might be connected directly to the mainframe, or over a phone line using a modem.

Over time, desktop terminals became Personal Computers, capable of running their own programs, storing increasingly large quantities of data and in time becoming thousands of times more powerful than their room-filling mainframe predecessors. Mainframe computing became largely obsolete.

But now, as the internet has become ubiquitous, storage capacities in bytes-to-the-buck have increased exponentially and very high speed net connections have become widely available and affordable, the offsite/centralised approach to computing has become practical and interesting again under the name of Cloud Computing. Google, with their millions of highspeed servers and vast data storage facilities (and most of all the fact that they give most of their services away for free) have pushed the field forward dramatically.

In this series of articles I'll explain some of the practicalities of cloud computing as it stands in 2009, and give examples and how-tos of how you can use CC in your work and life. I'll address some of the concerns and limitations of the technology, and cover some of the exciting possibilities which will be opening up in the future.


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Saturday, 21 February 2009

The Hitchhiker's Guide to the G1 Google Phone: Part 3, General Applications

Alternate logo.Image via Wikipedia

In this article, I'll try to cover a range of the most useful applications for the G1 smartphone and other Android phones. All these apps are available in the Android Market.

For the regularly updated version of this article, check out my hub.

Barcode Scanner

Barcode Scanner uses the G1's camera to read barcodes on pretty much any product, then run a Google Product search based on the data. This allows you to compare prices on books, music and movies which interest you, or just find out more about them with a quick search.

Jotnot

JotNot uses the G1's camera to take an image of a piece of text you wish to store, then applies some clever processing to render it as clear and clean as possible, essentially turning your phone into a scanner. The image can then be stored or converted to text via an OCR application.

Loot

Loot is a very featureful money management program, supporting multiple customisable accounts, transfer between accounts, transactions that are switchable between Budget and Actual, and purging. It updates regularly and is, for my money (sorry) the strongest contender in this category.

My Collection

A powerful database allowing you to organise all your movies, books, music and other media in one place, My Collection can use Barcode Scanner (if you have it installed) to quickly add items to your list, as well as do intelligent searches and tag items you have loaned out (and who you've loaned them to). Updating regularly.

Shazam

Already wellknown on other platforms, Shazam identifies tunes heard over the G1's microphone from an online database.

Skymap

Even if you don't already have an interest in astronomy, Skymap is a dazzling demonstration of the capabilities of the G1. It uses GPS, the internal compass and accelerometer to display a map of constellations and other celestial bodies depending on which way you are pointing the phone, providing an explorable virtual sky mapped to your real location.

TTS Translator

Translates any word or phrase to or from ten different languages, and with TTS Service installed it can speak the translated phrase aloud.

Wifiscan

A new-technology version of the venerable wardialer, Wifiscan records the location and details of wifi nodes in your area, and displays them on a Google Map. You can toggle Open and Secured nodes on and off, and export the resulting data to use in other applications.
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Wednesday, 18 February 2009

The Hitchhiker's Guide to the G1 Google Phone: Part 2, Core Applications

Alternate logo.Image via Wikipedia

These are your must-have applications to get the best use of your G1 Android phone. Some are entirely new applications, others replace the basic apps on your G1 to give you additional features and better functionality.

For the regularly updated version of this post, see my Hub.

They're mostly available in the Android Market - for those that aren't, I've posted website links. Some of them are still pretty flaky because they're very new out, many are updated several times a week (or even a day) so if one isn't working for you right now, wait for the next update and see. Some of these programs are interesting mainly because of what they WILL be shortly.

I'll be updating this page regularly. If I'm missing any program you think is really essential, or if you can't find an application to do what you want, leave a comment and I'll see what I can do.

Please note: I take no responsibility for any damage caused to your phone, data or extremities by this software. Use at your own risk.


Power Manager (added 16th of February)

This excellent application gives you full control over most of the power-draining features on your g1 - wifi, gps and cell location, 3g, bluetooth, screen brightness and so on. You can manually turn features on and off via a handy dashboard, or turn the Monitor on and PM will automatically select a profile depending on whether your G1 is plugged in by USB or mains power, running on battery or running low.

Wifi File Transfer: Discover

Discover provides an elegant and powerful interface by which to transfer files between your computer and your G1 over a wireless network. With Discover running on the G1, you just direct your computer's browser to the designated IP address (you can find it under Discover's "Server Info" menu option) and you'll see a fast web-based interface through which to manage your files. It should work on any operating system, and you can assign passwords to protect your files from hostile action.


Onscreen keyboard: Softkeyboard

A minor triumph of the open source model, this free application from the Market allows you to enter text via an onscreen keyboard without opening the slide on your G1, one of the most exciting features of the much-delayed Cupcake update.

It's pretty easy to use but not immediately apparent - I had to go and dig through android7's boards before I figured it out.

When you run Softkeyboard, it loads in the background and appears in your Notifications list. Whenever you want to enter text, slide down the notifications bar and choose Softkeyboard. You need to enter your text, click on the Return icon in the lower right corner and then (this is the part I couldn't figure out), long-press on the text box and choose "paste" to enter the text. Job done!


aTrackDog

The Number 1 must-have application for Android. aTrackDog finds and lists all your applications, then checks them all for updates in one go, even if they're not in the Market. Updated versions are brought up in a list, and you can tap on any one to go straight to the Market or the developer's website and download an update. Since many Android apps are updated several times a week, this is your most important piece of software.


Improved Camera: SnapPhoto

Developed by one man, SnapPhoto is a new Camera application for Android and adds most of the features you're missing - adjust the white balance, night mode, take multiple shots, etc. etc. Best of all, it uses the phone's accelerometer to judge when there's a stable moment to take the shot - you focus, push the button, then hold it as still as possible, and SnapPhoto will take the shot at the very moment the camera is most still, getting you the clearest possible picture.

It's updated steadily, and has become very stable and featureful. Bookmark the developer's FAQ Page to keep track of the latest changes, they're not listed in the Market entry.


Video Recording: Video Recorder/Video Camera

This application gives you the ability to record video on your G1, a much-desired feature. It will drain your battery really fast, and it's still in beta and a little buggy, but overall it's working well for me. There's no sound as yet, but that's scheduled for an update in the very near future. Overall, a very exciting third party offering.


Picture Uploading

There are a few applications to give you easy picture uploads to the web. These are, in my opinion, the two best.

Picasa, which is the official release from Google, lets you upload any picture to your Picasa web albums. This is essentially a new addition to the core Google apps bundled with Android - the fact that it has to be downloaded from the market may mean development ran a bit behind, and this may be bundled with later Android phones, even newer G1s.

PixelPipe is a remarkable service. With clients for pretty much every desktop and device under the sun, it provides quick photo upload to over 50 websites, including blogs, photo hosts and many others. You'll need to sign up for a free account to use it.

Because both these applications appear in the "share" menu, they'll let you upload photos from any app that supports it - new camera applications like SnapPhoto, for example.


Instant Messaging

Out of the box the G1's Android operating system supports Google Chat, the Instant Messaging system which has grown out of Google's Gmail email service. You can view your Buddy List at any time, appear available whenever the phone is in network range and messages from your Buddies come up as notifications in the bar at the top of the screen. US users have support for other networks, although I am informed that they pay for use - the price of a text for every message.

Facebook Chat is so far supported only by andFBChat, a Google Code project. It's not yet in the Market, so you'll have to install from the website. It's also pretty buggy and frequently fails, but may improve soon - I'll be keeping an eye on it and posting here, as this is one of my must-have applications.

There is good support for AIM with Hello Aim! and Myspace with MySpace Mobile, As yet, I can only find support for ICQ, Yahoo, Jabber, and MSN in Meebo and IM+ - see below for details.

The only multi-protocol messengers for Android that I've found so far are Meebo and IM+.

Meebo connects to AIM, Google Talk, ICQ, Jabber, its own Meebo protocol, and the MSN and Yahoo networks, and should support Facebook Chat soon - this feature is being worked on in collaboration with the Facebook team. However, it's still very buggy, and you have to log in to each service each time you load it - it doesn't even save your details.This may be improved soon.

IM+ supports AOL, MSN, Yahoo, Google Talk, Jabber, ICQ and Myspace. It's got a much better interface, automatically logs into all your networks when open and is more stable, but it's paid software, costing $19.95 after the 7-day trial. There is no word as yet on when it will support Facebook Chat.


To Do lists: TooDo

This insanely featureful to-do list manager has a slick interface, the ability to sort your lists by all kinds of categories and create your own customized smartlists, and every option you could hope for. It also synchronizes with the web-based to-do list managers Remember The Milk and Toodledo, giving you both a backup of your tasks and a set of lists you can access from anywhere.

I've tried several to-do list programs for Android and I think this is the best by a significant margin. Personally I use Toodo for keeping track of my tasks when I'm out of the house, Remember The Milk for managing the details and the RTM plugin for my Google Homepage to give me a quick overview of what I have to do.

You can check out the Toodo Development Plan to see all the features they're planning to implement. This is a textbook open source project - hardworking team, total transparency, keep their users up to date.


Ringtones: Rings Extended and Ringdroid

Between them, these programs give you full control of your G1's ringtones. Rings Extended allows you to use any audio file on your G1 as a ringtone, and Ringdroid allows you to edit any audio file, via a very easy to use drag-and-click interface, cutting it to whatever length you want - so you can clip out your favourite sections of a track and use them as ringtones or notification tones.

Note: Ringdroid also allows you to convert any audio file into Android ringtone format, but you won't need this feature if you have Rings Extended installed.


Music playback: TuneWiki and Last.fm players

This program's been causing a storm on the iPhone for some time, so it's got a fair amount of development work behind it, as well as having gathered a slew of awards.

TuneWiki works as a featureful audio player, indexing and playing all the audio files on your G1 and letting you build playlists on the fly. But it's also a social network in its own right, allowing any user to create and edit lyrics, gathering the community's favourite tracks, and incorporating geographical data to show you when your favourite bands are playing nearby. It also has a built-in Youtube search which allows you to save your favourite music videos to a library.

As a jukebox application, TuneWiki is rock-solid, and the ability to build playlists on the fly is very neat indeed. I hate to admit, but with a bigger SD card and better battery life, the G1 and TuneWiki could easily replace my 80Gb iPod.

There are two good contenders for access to Last.fm's streaming music. The third-party application known just as Last.fm has a good feature set, with the ability to search for artist information, manage playlists and select between several recommended tracks from each radio station. Unfortunately it's still very unstable, in fact I can rarely get it to play a track without failing. Definitely one to watch as it becomes more reliable, though.

Last.fm have now released their own Android client, listed in the Market as "Last.fm - Personal Radio". It has a more basic feature set, but includes good solid Notification area integration, and it is rock-solid stable in my experience.


Podcasts and RSS: Podweasel and PureRSS

Two simple programs that do two simple (but important) jobs.

Podweasel grabs the latest episodes of your favourite podcasts, saves them and plays them back. To be honest, I'm hoping that Tunewiki will be adding this feature in the future, and save me an application. There's no word on that yet, but I'll keep watching the news and post here if it does. For now, Podweasel does the job nicely.

PureRSS keeps you up to date with your favourite RSS newsfeeds.


VoIP: Skype, iSkoot and truphone

One of the most exciting possibilities for the G1 would be a VoIP client, allowing you to make free calls whenever you have a data connection, as you currently can on your desktop via Skype and other applications.

Skype Lite has just been released in the Android Market, but it's really not what most people are looking for. For some bizarre reason (presumably to avoid ticking off T-Mobile) it makes a local call to connect you to Skype instead of using your data connection for free, and requires Skype Credits to receive calls. That makes it barely more cost-effective than just using the phone. This may be remedied in a later release, but business reasons seem to be driving the decision.

iSkoot is a third-party client for the Skype network, which does make free calls over a data connection although it still (according to their website) uses Skype credit to pay for incoming calls. So far it has only been released in the US, so it's unavailable to me in the UK - this may change soon.

Truphone have now released a client in the Android Market, which uses their own network for free calls already (as well as several IM networks), and will be adding Google chat voice and Skype shortly. But again, it uses a local call to make the connection.

What's missing is a real Android port or third-party version of Skype, or a client for one of the other VoIP networks (Google's own VoIP feature in Google Talk would be an obvious choice). There is no reason this can't be developed under Android, so there's every reason to believe it'll be along soon. Watch this space.


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Tuesday, 17 February 2009

The Hitchhiker's Guide to the G1 Google Phone: Part 1

A one-stop guide for the T-Mobile G1 phone, running Google's Android mobile operating system. Android is an open source project, designed specifically to make it easy for developers both professional and amateur to create their own applications which access every part of the phone's hardware.

For the regularly updated version of this post, see my Hub.

Interim Update (starting 5th of February)

From Android Talk (3rd of February):

"To ensure a great experience with the T-Mobile G1 with Google, customers with these devices will receive an Over the Air (OTA) update to their devices between February 5 and February 15. This OTA will include new system enhancements such as the ability to save pictures or files to file by long-pressing an item, check for system updates, and use the Google Voice Search feature. The OTA will also fix a number of known issues. New G1 activations will receive the OTA up to three days after service has been activated."

This update seems to be pretty much as listed above, adding the ability to save pictures and files with a long press, fixing a few minor bugs (none of which I've personally experienced, but which have been bothering other people) and adding Voice Search (which is apparently pretty cool). It's come to a bunch of customers in the US but there's not much more in terms of information about it, probably because it's pretty basic. There seems to be some concern about Voice Search becoming available in the UK - apparently it has a problem with our accent! This may delay or alter the UK release. More word when I know.

If you don't want to wait for the push from T-Mobile, there's a trick to allow you to force the G1 to check for updates, courtesy of a poster on the Android Talk forums. You'll need Anycut installed from the Market. Now long-press in a blank space on your screen, and choose Shortcut/Anycut/Activity/Device info. When you tap this shortcut, it'll take you to a screen with a bunch of interesting system info. Scroll all the way to the bottom, and there's a button to check for updates! If you click it and it just says "CHECKIN_SUCCESS", there's no update yet.


Coming Update - Cupcake

The official Google position is still that it's ready when it's ready, but is targeted for the first quarter of 2009. We do know that a very early version was released to application developers around the 16th of January, and that T-Mobile have taken note of the flood of emails and calls about the issue and are trying to push this forward as fast as possible from their end.

So what is this coming update to Android? It comes from the development branch called Cupcake, and will include a bunch of fixes and improvements and add a lot of features to your phone. It should download straight to your G1 over the air and update easily.

Some predicted features for this update are:

  • Option to save pictures and attachments from text messages
  • Ability to copy and paste text in the browser
  • Search-within-text for the browser
  • Improved video support - video recording, better playback and thumbnails
  • Stereo bluetooth support
  • Onscreen keyboard, so you can type on the screen rather than having to slide the keyboard open
  • A reduction in battery drain, mainly through more efficient use of processing power.
  • Screenshots of a development build have shown some kind of local daylight time application with a 3D globe, which seems like more chrome than a practical feature.

The soft keyboard is one of the most eagerly-awaited features of Cupcake - the ability to enter text via an onscreen keyboard, without having to open the slide on the G1. This feature is now provided by a third party application - dotphone.org's Softkeyboard, available in the Market now. See the entry in Part 2: Applications if you want more details and some information how to use it (the functionality isn't immediately obvious).


Features: What works, what doesn't, and how to fix it

Headsets

Bluetooth headsets seem to work fine on the whole, but the device doesn't yet support stereo over bluetooth, so any audio playback will be mono sound only. This will be fixed with the Cupcake update.

The wired headset that comes with the G1 gives good sound quality, but the limitation of the phone is that it doesn't have a regular headphone/earphone socket, so for wired accessories you have to buy those that are specifically designed to be compatible with the phone.

However, in the US the G1 now ships with an adaptor which allows you to plug in a regular 3.5mm headset. This is not yet the case in the UK, but T-Mobile have told me that if they receive enough feedback they make well change this policy and even ship out adaptors to existing customers. If you are a UK G1 customer, go to T-Mobile's Contact Us page, scroll down to "send us an email" and fill in the form to let T-Mobile know their customers want this accessory!

I got a response to my own form, telling me that T-Mobile have no plans to make this change in the UK. That basically means they haven't had enough complaint emails/calls to make this an issue - let's get on this, people!


File Transfer

As yet, disappointingly, Android doesn't support file transfer between the phone and your computer by Bluetooth. This should be added with the Cupcake update. Because this feature is actually missing from the underlying structure of the operating system, it's almost impossible for somebody else to add it (through a downloaded application for example) until the update.

File transfer over the USB cable works fine, although the method has changed from the Quick Start guide that comes with the phone, which has confused some people (me included). When you plug the USB cable in, a prompt will come up on the G1's notifications area (the pulldown at the top of the screen), saying "USB Connected - select to copy files to/from your computer". Tap the message, and when the next box pops up on screen select "Mount". After that, your computer will see the G1's SD card as an external drive, just like a Flash drive.

Everything the phone has stored on your SD card is organised pretty clearly, and your digital photos are under the folder called "dcim". You can copy your music, photos etc. into any folder and the G1's software should find them.

File transfer over wifi is now available using the Android Market application Discover. It's very easy to use and powerful, does the job nicely. See the relevent section in Part 2: Applications for more details.


Synchronizing With Your Applications

The G1 is designed to synchronize seamlessly and continuously with Google's own solutions for calendar, contacts, email etc. Therefore there are unlikely to be direct solutions from Google to sync your G1 with your Windows, Linux or Mac desktop over Bluetooth or a cable.

However, there are a number of ways to sync Google's online services with your desktop, giving a two-stage solution. I'm not going to go into them here because I feel they're outside the scope of this article, but they're well documented on Google's own help pages and on the web. If you're really stuck, drop me a comment and I'll see if I can help.


Using Your G1 As a Modem ("Tethering")

Hooking up your G1 to a laptop or desktop computer, so the machine can access the phone's internet connection: Again, this isn't yet directly supported by the operating system. However, there is a workaround which will let you do it, as long as you don't mind tweaking a few settings. "Tetherbot" by Graham - a guide to tethering your G1 as a USB modem. Note: The easiest way to point Firefox to the proxy is to install the Foxyproxy plugin.

It's still experimental and tricky, but now it's been proved possible, someone will no doubt make a friendlier easy-to-use solution very soon. When there is one, I'll post it here right away.

June Fabrics are in the early stages of developing a tethering solution for Android phones, and an Android version of WMWifiRouter is also in development. Both will be commercial (but affordable) solutions to the problem, and (if they work like both companies' previous releases) will effectively turn your G1 into a wifi hotspot without needing any other software installed, making them compatible with any desktop operating system. Further news when I have it.


Audio Playback and Recording

At the moment Android can play audio in the following formats: AAC, AAC+, AMR-NB, MIDI, MP3, Ogg, WMA and WMV. Playback is pretty good and stable in my experience. See my separate post on applications for more information. Other formats may be added with future operating system updates, or new applications may expand that list.

The G1 can record audio, and a few applications already use the functionality.


Video Playback and Recording, and Flash

Right now the Android only supports video in MP4 format and from YouTube (not through the browser but through dedicated programs, which are actually grabbing MP4 versions of the YouTube videos), and it has to be in quite a restricted format. You can use any video converter compatible with the iPod Touch or iPhone to make videos which will play in Android - Videora is very good.

Other video formats will probably have to wait for an operating system update, although someone may figure out a way to add formats with an application. Although Android doesn't yet officially support video recording, a third party application does now provide this feature. This is exactly why an open source phone is an exciting proposition - the potential for unofficial third party projects to fill the gaps in the available functions!

Dotphone.org's Video Recorder/Video Camera, now available from the market, provides recording of video to the SD card and playback with some efficiency. It's still in beta and a little flaky, but works pretty well for me - although it will drain the battery in minutes!


The Battery

The big failing of the G1 is battery life. Between the big screen, multiple wireless connections and heavy processor use from the constantly running background applications, the installed 1150mAh battery doesn't last long.

Current word from T-Mobile is that they have no plans to release an improved battery for the G1 in the UK. Some G1 users in the US have been shipped replacement batteries - an internal memo has apparently instructed their helpline advisors to do so in response to complaints - which increase battery life by 22% without increasing the size of the phone.

If you are a UK G1 owner, I recommend going to T-Mobile's Contact Us page, scrolling down to "send us an email" and filling in the form to let T-Mobile know their customers want this service. With enough users pitching in, we can demand a better device for our money.

Managing your wireless features can help. The Power Manager application from the Market allows you to control bluetooth, wifi, GPS and cell location in one screen, and flip from 3G to 2G, all of which extend the charge on the battery.

The big drain is the 3G - the G1 wastes a lot of power searchingfor a 3G connection when one isn't available (hopefully this will be improved with the Cupcake release). I'd suggest turning it off when you're not actually browsing/downloading - your email etc. will still sync just fine, and if you get notified that, for example, a podcast is downloading in Podweasel, you can flip it on. This added almost 50% to my battery life immediately.

Many users can also improve things by calibrating the G1's Lithium Ion battery. It turns out that Li Ion batteries have internal electronics that keep track of their charge level, but sometimes need calibrating, and the G1's battery often doesn't ship ready-calibrated.

To calibrate your battery, let the G1 run all the way down, past the warning messages about low battery charge, until it turns itself off. You may need to turn it on again a couple of times - keep going until it won't power up at all. Then recharge to full and leave on charge for at least a couple more hours. You should find a significant improvement in battery life. This may need repeating every month or two, but don't do it too often as fully cycling the battery causes extra wear (mostly due to heat).


The Camera

The G1 is fitted with a 3.2 megapixel autofocus camera, although unfortunately it doesn't have a flash. The onboard camera application is currently pretty limited, although it is predicted to improve with the Cupcake update. A much better camera app is SnapPhoto, available from the Android Market - see Part 2: Applications for more information.



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