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The 10 Best Android Hacks

Barence writes "The Android vs iPhone debate will continue until the apocalypse, but there's no doubt Android wins on customability. PC Pro has listed its ten favorite Android hacks, which include the ability to open your garage door with your smartphone, install Ubuntu on your handset, and overclock your phone's processor. There's also instructions on how to replace your dashboard satnav with Google's version."

134 comments

  1. Customability? by msauve · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Well, if you make up words, I guess you get to define them to mean whatever you want. If "Android wins on customability," then iPhone wins on appleability.

    --
    "National Security is the chief cause of national insecurity." - Celine's First Law
    1. Re:Customability? by bazorg · · Score: 4, Funny

      Making up words? There's an app for that.

    2. Re:Customability? by Crudely_Indecent · · Score: 1

      You beat me to it.... I had to be sure, so I looked it up on dictionary.com and it's not there.

      I'm sure that it will be in the Urban Dictionary shortly though, right next to convertablization.

      --


      "Lame" - Galaxar
    3. Re:Customability? by Lazareth · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Congratulations, you're hereby declared inured to inspiration and in a state of linguistic stagnation. [flamebait]You would fit nicely in France.[/flamebait]
      A quick question, when you read this "non-word" did you have any speck of doubt regarding the meaning being carried by it? I didn't even blink at it before you started to nitpick over the word rather than the semantics of it.

      And now for a new challenge, present us with a word with the exact same meaning as this "non-word" that can be swapped with it without altering the grammar, meaning or flow of the sentence. Sure, it is most likely possible, but at least present us with the "proper" word before you begin criticizing.

    4. Re:Customability? by starsky51 · · Score: 4, Funny

      The first line of your comment reads like a limerick. I was disappointed when I read he second line :(

      --
      There are 2 types of people in this world. Those who understand ternary and those who don't.
    5. Re:Customability? by Captain+Segfault · · Score: 2, Informative

      And now for a new challenge, present us with a word with the exact same meaning as this "non-word" that can be swapped with it without altering the grammar, meaning or flow of the sentence.

      Customizability.

    6. Re:Customability? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Customization?

    7. Re:Customability? by JabberWokky · · Score: 1

      I'd take up your new challenge, but I already failed your first.

      What *does* it mean? That there are more custom abilities of the phone, or that the phone can be customized, or that there is a wider variety of custom phones (different brands)?

      Your point is often valid, and there are many legitimate reasons to synthesize new words (including for purely aesthetic reasons). In this case, however, there is a fairly large amount of ambiguity as to what the lexicomposer* is actually trying to convey.

      * Yes, I made that term up just to make you feel warm and fuzzy. The original term is uncertain in meaning.

      --
      "$30 for the One True Ring. $10 each additional ring!" -- JRR "Bob" Tolkien
    8. Re:Customability? by Lazareth · · Score: 1

      Touché. It fulfilled 2 out of the 3 points of the challenge.

    9. Re:Customability? by exploder · · Score: 1

      Here's a challenge for you: explain to us what exactly is so phenomenal about the "flow" of that sentence that merits using an imaginary word with exactly the same meaning as an existing one?

      --
      Yo dawg, I heard you like the Ackermann function, so OH GOD OH GOD OH GOD
    10. Re:Customability? by Lazareth · · Score: 1

      I think it can be derived from the context, but I agree with you and am glad that you took the time to politely point out the ambiguity that I missed.

      That said the 'proper' word customizability*, as pointed out elsewhere, feels extremely unwieldy to me. Might be because English is only my second language.

      * my spellchecker actually refuses it outright.

    11. Re:Customability? by Crudely_Indecent · · Score: 1

      uh...points of the challenge:

      1. present us with a word with the exact same meaning as this "non-word"
        • I think customizability would cover that, if the non-word had an official rather than a perceived meaning. All perceptions are not equal.
      2. that can be swapped with it without altering the grammar, meaning or flow of the sentence
        • Original: The Android vs iPhone debate will continue until the apocalypse, but there's no doubt Android wins on customability.
        • Corrected: The Android vs iPhone debate will continue until the apocalypse, but there's no doubt Android wins on customizability.
          • It looks like the new word can be swapped without altering grammar, meaning or flow.
      3. Surely there is a third point you were trying to make....

      Wait a minute, there are only 2 points to the challenge. I was promised a 3 point challenge!

      --


      "Lame" - Galaxar
    12. Re:Customability? by jaymz666 · · Score: 1

      try customisability then

    13. Re:Customability? by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 4, Funny

      I was going to get the first response to your post, but my alarm didn't ring...

      --
      Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
    14. Re:Customability? by Lazareth · · Score: 0

      Points of the challenge:
      1) grammar
      2) meaning
      3) flow

      Customizability succeeds on the first and second point, but it is both hard on the eyes and on the tongue. Also, to be as nitpicky as the GP, it only turns up on two online dictionaries thus far for me (with a z or a s) but neither in cambridge or in merriam-webster.

    15. Re:Customability? by Joe+U · · Score: 1

      Well, if you make up words, I guess you get to define them to mean whatever you want. If "Android wins on customability," then iPhone wins on appleability.

      Sounds perfectly cromulent to me.

    16. Re:Customability? by Crudely_Indecent · · Score: 1

      Counting your "same meaning" requirement, that makes 4 points.

      I rather think that correct words flow better than incorrect ones. As far as dictionary references, you'll find that many perfectly valid words are not presented in all of their possible permutations in the dictionary.

      -ability +
      (Latin: a suffix expressing ability, capacity, fitness, or "that which may be easily handled or managed")

      Presented as the noun forms of -able; forming nouns of quality from, or corresponding to, adjectives in -able; the quality in an agent that makes an action possible. The suffix -ible has related meanings.

      --


      "Lame" - Galaxar
    17. Re:Customability? by The+End+Of+Days · · Score: 1

      Not to be rude, but since you aren't a native English speaker, you aren't really equipped to decide what fits the language better. I was going to reply to an earlier response of yours asking if English was a second language, because thinking that a non-word flows better than an actual word is a pretty good sign. I see now I would have been correct.

    18. Re:Customability? by jeffmeden · · Score: 1

      The third point was, by my reading, "achieve levels of pedantry heretofore not witnessed among mere mortals"... You sir have passed the test!

    19. Re:Customability? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm still waiting for the sentient app that writes other apps. A little bird told me that it'll take the form of a Lisp interpreter for Android.

    20. Re:Customability? by MobileTatsu-NJG · · Score: 1

      I sent you an SMS but my boss got it instead. Now I have to meet with him and explain what "You're holding it wrong" meant.

      --

      "I like to lick butts!" by MobileTatsu-NJG (#32700246) (Score:5, Informative)

    21. Re:Customability? by VisceralLogic · · Score: 1

      Not to be rude, but since you aren't a native English speaker, you aren't really equipped to decide what fits the language better. I was going to reply to an earlier response of yours asking if English was a second language, because thinking that a non-word flows better than an actual word is a pretty good sign. I see now I would have been correct.

      This is a good point.

      In English, the -ability ending is added on to verbs. The verb would be customize (or customise), hence why customability doesn't work.

      --
      Stop! Dremel time!
    22. Re:Customability? by sempir · · Score: 1

      The third point was, by my reading, "achieve levels of pedantry heretofore not witnessed among mere mortals"... You sir have passed the test!

      Surely....."pedantrification heretofore not witnessed among mere mortals"....would have sufficed!

      --
      A closed mouth gathers no foot.
    23. Re:Customability? by Kit+Kat100 · · Score: 1

      If you read the whole article or even just ctrl+f you'll find that it never states Android having "customability". It says "...Google's OS wins out when it comes to customisation..." The article doesn't make up any words - only the post.

  2. My favourite android hack by neokushan · · Score: 5, Funny

    My favourite android hack is when I set the alarm last year and it still works this year!

    --
    +1 IDisagreeSoHeMustBeATrollOrAnAstroturferOrAShill
    1. Re:My favourite android hack by Dynetrekk · · Score: 1

      How do you do that? Because frequently, when I set the alarm, it doesn't go off. Also, there is no correlation to significant dates, so I never know when to prepare for an absent alarm. (I have an android phone, and I bitterly regret buying it.)

    2. Re:My favourite android hack by neokushan · · Score: 1

      Well what phone have you got? Are you using any dedicated alarm apps or the stock one?

      I have a HTC Desire and Sense's alarm never failed me once. Then I switched ROMs to one without Sense and use Alarm Clock Plus, which works just as well. It's even clever enough to up the volume if you happen to have your phone on Vibrate.

      --
      +1 IDisagreeSoHeMustBeATrollOrAnAstroturferOrAShill
    3. Re:My favourite android hack by Dynetrekk · · Score: 1
      Sony Ericsson Xperia Mini Pro. (Yes, it sucks.) Stock alarm app. If I need to buy an app to get an alarm clock, I guess I should have stuck with a cheap'n'crappy phone. Oh, and if I buy a 'good' alarm clock app, I'm still stuck with the old one, without the ability to delete it.

      Android is the new windows, someone said, and they were right.

      And what is a ROM?

    4. Re:My favourite android hack by Feinu · · Score: 5, Funny

      My favourite hack is the one which allows you to hold the phone any way you please.

    5. Re:My favourite android hack by nospam007 · · Score: 1

      "It's even clever enough to up the volume if you happen to have your phone on Vibrate."

      Waking my wife when I put it on vibrate under my pillow isn't very clever.

    6. Re:My favourite android hack by neokushan · · Score: 2

      You don't need to buy anything, the app I mentioned is free. There are many, many free Apps for Android, it's one of the things that really sets it apart from the iPhone app store.

      Sadly, Sony's Android offerings are....lacking...to say the least. They're not even 2.1 as far as I'm aware, so despite the fact that the phone is on sale in shops today, it's 4 versions behind!

      --
      +1 IDisagreeSoHeMustBeATrollOrAnAstroturferOrAShill
    7. Re:My favourite android hack by neokushan · · Score: 1

      It's a user configurable option. It's as clever as you are.

      --
      +1 IDisagreeSoHeMustBeATrollOrAnAstroturferOrAShill
    8. Re:My favourite android hack by neokushan · · Score: 1

      I should clarify: That alarm app in particular has a free version and a paid version. I use the free one.

      --
      +1 IDisagreeSoHeMustBeATrollOrAnAstroturferOrAShill
    9. Re:My favourite android hack by drunkennewfiemidget · · Score: 1

      Just to clarify: you're having a one-off issue with an application that nobody else has, and it's Android's fault?

      Right, just checking.

      When I set an alarm on my android, it even says, "alarm is set for hours from now."

      And then it goes off as planned.

    10. Re:My favourite android hack by Dynetrekk · · Score: 1
      Oh, they have a 2.1 upgrade. However, it won't work in virtualbox, although everything else in their 'pc companion app' works in virtualbox with XP. Of course, no support for mac or linux, so I'm stumped on that front. Upgrading apps just fails, I have never managed to upgrade any of the apps I installed. I could also mention that apps frequenly crash, for instance, the mail app will usually say 'oops errorz' and the wifi will fall out and come back in at random points in time.

      I wasn't an iPhone fanboy before, but after getting the Android phone, I'm seriously considering becoming one. I know the Desire is better, but I can't be bothered to be a make/model/android version number fanboy, it just won't fit the fanboy bill.

    11. Re:My favourite android hack by Dynetrekk · · Score: 1

      Well, there are plenty of issues with various apps, but I won't bother listing them all. The issues are mostly with the stock Android apps, so I would say yes, it's Android's fault. If Minesweeper crashed all the time on windows, I'd blame Microsoft, right?

    12. Re:My favourite android hack by stms · · Score: 0

      that one's your favorite? I like the Ubuntu installer finally I can do x264 encodes on my smart-phone.

    13. Re:My favourite android hack by neokushan · · Score: 1

      I know The Xperia phones have some issues, but that all sounds pretty serious. I'd have taken that phone back pretty quickly.
      It's also quite strange that they wont let you update the phone OTA, like the rest of the civilized world lets you.

      --
      +1 IDisagreeSoHeMustBeATrollOrAnAstroturferOrAShill
    14. Re:My favourite android hack by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Android phone made by Sony? There's your problem :) Those two probably repel each other..

    15. Re:My favourite android hack by Pojut · · Score: 1

      I currently have NonSensikal (which is a Froyo 2.2-based rom) running on my Droid Eris. My favorite feature of the alarm built into it (not sure if it's stock, but whatever): Even if you have headphones plugged into the phone, the alarm still comes through the speakerphone.

      Quite useful if I'm streaming Last.fm for sleep-time music.

    16. Re:My favourite android hack by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      But this seems more like the minesweeper crashes only on your computer, so I'd blame it, right?

    17. Re:My favourite android hack by Pojut · · Score: 1

      How do you do that? Because frequently, when I set the alarm, it doesn't go off. Also, there is no correlation to significant dates, so I never know when to prepare for an absent alarm. (I have an android phone, and I bitterly regret buying it.)

      I've got a Droid Eris that I plan on getting rid of when the Tegra-based models hit Verizon. I've used numerous custom roms on it (as well as the stock rom for a few months) and I've never had an alarm fail. I've heard this criticism a lot, but I've personally never experienced it. Have you tried a different rom/alarm app other than the stock one?

      Maybe it's only with certain phones...?

    18. Re:My favourite android hack by Dynetrekk · · Score: 1

      I don't even know what a ROM is, and I'm above-median interested in gadgets. If it's some sort of firmware, I have no idea how you upgrade it. As I said, I haven't even managed to upgrade the phone to android 2.1, after trying several PCs.

    19. Re:My favourite android hack by Dog-Cow · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The Apple App Store has thousands of free apps. I really don't understand what you're trying to imply. Unless it's just your ignorance.

    20. Re:My favourite android hack by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      My favorite Android hack is the one where messages are sent to the intended contact. Only trouble is, it hasn't been written yet.

    21. Re:My favourite android hack by neokushan · · Score: 2

      And the android app store has more. Even titles apps that are absolutely sure to sell tend to get free versions on Android. Angry Birds is a primary example. Android seems to run best off of ad-supported apps, whereas, the iOS App Store seems slightly more geared towards paying for apps.

      --
      +1 IDisagreeSoHeMustBeATrollOrAnAstroturferOrAShill
    22. Re:My favourite android hack by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow, another usage pattern that I, as a sleep apnea sufferer, would never have dreamed of: putting a phone under my pillow. Not throwing any stones here as I am sure (now that I read this) that you, and other people do this. I just could never do it. All the tossing and turning I do all night would guarantee that the phone was flung across the room (accidentally) or dumped unceremoniously behind the bed. I can see how a person who sleeps solidly through the night in mostly one position without tossing and turning could find it useful to place the phone under the pillow but would not have ever even thought of that usage pattern on my own.

    23. Re:My favourite android hack by Pojut · · Score: 1

      A rom is, in the simplest terms, the underlying operating software on your phone. Or, if it helps, just think of it as an operating system version. That's not exactly right, but it will keep things simple.

      Example: I'm running NonSensikal on my Droid Eris...NonSensikal is a Froyo 2.2 based rom that runs FAR better than the stock 2.1 Sense rom that the phone comes with. This is where Android phones show their true flexibility: you can change anything and everything, right down to the very operating system the phone uses.

      Considering your only experience with Android comes from a Sony phone (whose Android phones are notoriously lacking), I suggest you try checking out a different one. Either a Droid X or a Droid Incredible on Verizon, or an Epic 4G on Sprint.

    24. Re:My favourite android hack by Dynetrekk · · Score: 1
      Right, but would any old Android version fit the small Xperia Mini screen? It sounds unlikely, because several of the apps made especially for the Mini are still screen real estate hogs, and are not really useful. And then, how do you change the OS on the phone without using M$ Windows? According to Sony, there's no way. And again, what about drivers for the various sony specific stuff? I'm sure there must be some?

      I am not from the US either, so not all of those choices are possible for me.

    25. Re:My favourite android hack by Pojut · · Score: 1

      All of your questions can be answered at XDA-Developers. That's the go-to place for stuff like this. Check on the forums, I can 100% guarantee you the answers you need are there.

    26. Re:My favourite android hack by Chibi+Merrow · · Score: 1

      I wasn't an iPhone fanboy before, but after getting the Android phone, I'm seriously considering becoming one.

      Do what you've got to do, but it really sounds like your problems are completely unrelated to Android and solely down to Sony being incapable of making a good phone.

      As a (non-car) analogy, if you went to the store and bought a five dollar bottle of scotch that came in a tin can, would it be fair to say all scotch is bad, that it's unreasonable to expect you to look at the different brands, and you'll be sticking to tequila?

      --
      Maxim: People cannot follow directions.
      Increases in truth directly with the length of time spent explaining them
    27. Re:My favourite android hack by jo_ham · · Score: 2

      While I get up late due to dodgy alarm code, my favourite iPhone hack that I have to do in the afternoon is when I send an SMS message and it actually gets to the person I sent it to.

    28. Re:My favourite android hack by Dynetrekk · · Score: 1

      Do what you've got to do, but it really sounds like your problems are completely unrelated to Android and solely down to Sony being incapable of making a good phone.

      I'm sure you have a good point with your tequila analogy. However, what crappy windows machines won't run Windows Update? Do they even exist?

    29. Re:My favourite android hack by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're wrong, actually. There are several SMS apps available in the Market. Surely one of them must work properly.

    30. Re:My favourite android hack by XxtraLarGe · · Score: 1

      There are many, many free Apps for Android, it's one of the things that really sets it apart from the iPhone app store.

      There are more free apps in the iPhone app store than there are free & paid apps for Android...

      --
      Taking guns away from the 99% gives the 1% 100% of the power.
    31. Re:My favourite android hack by akzeac · · Score: 2

      If Minesweeper crashed all the time on windows, I'd blame Microsoft, right?

      Well, it seems the application crashes all the time on you, so I'd rather blame you.

    32. Re:My favourite android hack by lilo_booter · · Score: 1

      My favourites are Metal Detector and Lie Detector.

    33. Re:My favourite android hack by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Android is the new windows"

      "And what is a ROM?"

      Get the hell off slashdot.

    34. Re:My favourite android hack by neokushan · · Score: 2

      Perhaps I wasn't clear enough -

      http://www.cnet.com/8301-19736_1-20009717-251.html

      Over half of all android apps are free. For iOS, it's more like 25%. Yes, there may be more iOS apps overall, but when Android hits 300,000 apps (where iOS currently is), it'll still be about 50%. So I stand by my point - The android market is full of a lot more free apps, maybe not by raw number (iOS certainly has that covered in pretty much all areas), but in all categories.

      --
      +1 IDisagreeSoHeMustBeATrollOrAnAstroturferOrAShill
    35. Re:My favourite android hack by promythyus · · Score: 1

      And there are more red M&M's in my 1kg pack than there are total M&M's in my 100g pack!

    36. Re:My favourite android hack by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

      You can't do that right on the base OS? Poor you.

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    37. Re:My favourite android hack by jeffmeden · · Score: 1

      Android has so little to do with how it was written, and so much to do with how it was modified by the handset maker (and possibly wireless carrier) that it's rarely fair to say ANYthing conclusive about Android after trying out just one handset. There are, no doubt, little problems here and there with any given handset, but your blame rests squarely on the handset maker (Sony) and their coding choices. Google clearly did not code a fundamentally flawed alarm clock app, or it would be the one making headlines now instead of Apple.

    38. Re:My favourite android hack by Chibi+Merrow · · Score: 1

      I'm sure you have a good point with your tequila analogy. However, what crappy windows machines won't run Windows Update? Do they even exist?

      I think you seriously underestimate the capability of PC manufacturers to sell unusable crap to people.

      Remember that Wal Mart sells PCs.

      --
      Maxim: People cannot follow directions.
      Increases in truth directly with the length of time spent explaining them
    39. Re:My favourite android hack by Culture20 · · Score: 1

      I wasn't an iPhone fanboy before, but after getting the Android phone, I'm seriously considering becoming one.

      in case you're not aware, the OP was talking about the iPhone alarm bug that prevent alarms from working yesterday and the day before. FYI, it would prevent any alarm. I tried setting one for 2010/01/01-19:29 at 2010/01/01-19:27. It didn't go off proving that the alarm didn't have to extend over the year mark to be effected.

    40. Re:My favourite android hack by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "It's even clever enough to up the volume if you happen to have your phone on Vibrate."

      Waking my wife when I put it on vibrate under my pillow isn't very clever.

      There are better places to put it on vibrate for your wife if you're clever.

    41. Re:My favourite android hack by Culture20 · · Score: 1

      that one's your favorite? I like the Ubuntu installer finally I can do x264 encodes on my smart-phone.

      Make an app for that and you can distribute the render over a cluster of other people's phones.

    42. Re:My favourite android hack by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That'd be funnier if the day before Android didn't reveal a much more serious bug.

    43. Re:My favourite android hack by Kitkoan · · Score: 1

      My Sony Xperia x10 is 2.1. Been officially been Android 2.1 since Sony released the update in Nov.

      --
      Attention... all grammer nazi"s! Is they're anything; wrong with: my post,
    44. Re:My favourite android hack by VisceralLogic · · Score: 1

      From the "Important Notice" section of my new LG P509 phone:

      11. Hold the phone straight up
      Please hold the mobile phone straight up as a regular phone. While making/receiving calls or sending/receiving data, try to avoid holding the lower part of the phone where the antenna is located. It may affect call quality.

      --
      Stop! Dremel time!
    45. Re:My favourite android hack by BrokenHalo · · Score: 1

      Of course, no support for mac or linux, so I'm stumped on that front.

      I shared your frustration for a while with my Xperia X10 Mini pro, but now that I've been able to root it to get rid of my telco's crapware and enable tethering, I'm happy. Remember that Android itself runs on a Linux kernel, so the device is not by nature inimical to other *nix boxes.

      If you root your phone with z4root.apk (you might need to google for a working version of the app, some of the binaries are broken), you can use the adb shell from the android SDK on any Mac or Linux box in exactly the same way as you can on any XP box. For convenience I used my Macbook, since my Linux desktop box is currently headless, but I can't see that it would have made any difference. Or alternatively, download one of the terminal emulators from the market and use the command line from the device's keyboard.

      There's only one trick to it: The su command will give you superuser access, but the filesystem is read-only by default, so you will have to
      mount -o remount,rw -t yaffs2 /dev/block/mtdblock2 /system
      to make it read-write.

      HTH.

    46. Re:My favourite android hack by BrokenHalo · · Score: 1

      Over half of all android apps are free.

      Interesting. You wouldn't know that by looking at the Market. Whenever I pull it up, I find the majority of apps tend to be non-free or ad-supported, which is also non-free.

    47. Re:My favourite android hack by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Indeed, your anecdotal comment clearly trumps the above comment's cold hard fact.

    48. Re:My favourite android hack by BrokenHalo · · Score: 1

      Indeed, your anecdotal comment clearly trumps the above comment's cold hard fact.

      The "above" comment supplies no supporting data, so my comment based on an equally subjective impression has equal value. I have absolutely no interest in "trumping" other posts; I was making a simple observation on the nature of Android Market's search responses.

    49. Re:My favourite android hack by mcvos · · Score: 1

      And what is a ROM?

      No idea what the acronym means, but it's basically an Android distribution. Kernel, core apps, config, lots of tweaks according to the tastes of the creators, and you install it all at once on your rooted phone. (Except if it's god an encrypted boot loader like my stupid Milestone. Then you have to do everything by hand.)

  3. Changing rules by gmuslera · · Score: 0

    The first rule is too restrictive, specially now when saving money matters more than harming humans. So the best android hacks usually pass around changing the weight or deleting one of the 3 rules, or putting a zeroth rule in front of them, even if requires capabilities that the positronic brain should not get without a serious hardware upgrade.

  4. I have an Android phone .... by Jimpqfly · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ... but it could be nice to have anything usefull among those hacks, don't you think ?

    1. Re:I have an Android phone .... by Jon+Stone · · Score: 3, Funny

      ... but it could be nice to have anything usefull among those hacks, don't you think ?

      Like a spell checker?

    2. Re:I have an Android phone .... by Jimpqfly · · Score: 1

      Be nice, everybody's not english, here, you know ;)

    3. Re:I have an Android phone .... by Jon+Stone · · Score: 1

      My apologies, I just couldn't resist.

    4. Re:I have an Android phone .... by AltairDusk · · Score: 1

      Well if you root you can enable the wireless tethering that most carriers disable. I'm fairly surprised they didn't mention that.

    5. Re:I have an Android phone .... by Sky+Cry · · Score: 1

      Hence the spell checker. ;)

    6. Re:I have an Android phone .... by Octopuscabbage · · Score: 1

      Ubuntu and a faster processor for less money aren't usefull?

  5. In this war by mhollis · · Score: 5, Insightful

    In this war between Android and iPhone, the customer wins.

    The "Droid Does" (multitasking) ad campaign spurred Apple to develop iOS 4.x, which allows multitasking. The first Droid smartphones got Apple off the dime with cut and paste. Customers continue to win here, no matter which phone they purchase

    Personally I have an iPhone (4) and I like it. I had the original iPhone and retained it well past my contract with AT&T. I have a client who purchased a Droid Incredible and asked me to set up his email (from my server) on it. Took all of about a minute. I was very impressed by the phone and shall always retain that impression.

    I think the real losers here are RIM with the Blackberry and the Palm WebOS smartphones. While Palm has innovated, they have been passed by and are now in a niche. RIM is trying to play "catch up" and the only real difference they offer in their phones is complete integration with secure Exchange Servers. They have lost utterly in the easy app purchase field.

    Apple's biggest mistake so far in the United States has been the exclusivity contract with AT&T. Initially, it was a boon for Apple, but the Android smartphones are selling faster than the Apple smartphones because they are available on more networks. To the extent Apple stays with the phone company we all love to hate, they will lose market share versus the Android smartphones.

    --
    Gods don't kill people, people with gods kill people.
    1. Re:In this war by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They also come in a far far large variety, shape, size, colours and specs.

    2. Re:In this war by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      RIM is a looser? Isn't it the second most used smartphone in the world ? behind nokia ? I don't call that a looser ;p

    3. Re:In this war by drunkennewfiemidget · · Score: 1

      lose != loose.

    4. Re:In this war by msauve · · Score: 1

      RIM is losing market share to both Apple and Android-based smartphones. The number in use (installed base) doesn't matter as much as how many new ones they're selling (market share). Use caution when looking up the numbers - some research firms (Nielsen, for one) incorrectly label installed base as "market share."

      --
      "National Security is the chief cause of national insecurity." - Celine's First Law
    5. Re:In this war by Lunix+Nutcase · · Score: 2

      RIM is a looser? Isn't it the second most used smartphone in the world ? behind nokia ? I don't call that a looser ;p

      Yes, if you ignore the fact that both have been losing market share quarter after quarter since the iPhone and Android phones have been released. Symbian has gone from over 50% of the global market share to less than 40%. RIM has gone from around 20% or so to less than 15%. Secondly, your figures are off about RIM. They are now 4th in market share behind both Android and iOS.

    6. Re:In this war by boristhespider · · Score: 1

      Good luck teaching that to the world. I'm losing count of how many times I see that mistake made, and not always by non-native speakers.

    7. Re:In this war by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's usually the native speakers who make that mistake. Non-native speakers usually read/write more english than listen/talk..

    8. Re:In this war by Culture20 · · Score: 1

      Just be glad you're not lousing count.

    9. Re:In this war by LodCrappo · · Score: 1

      I think RIM's best move would be to port the things corporate customers like onto an Android based phone. Bring all the functionality of the BES server to Android and you've got a device that could *really* clean up in the business market. I'm not familiar with all BES can do, but our IT guys love it.. I guess it allows a lot of security, remote control, policy management, etc that isn't yet available on the other smartphone platforms. They'd have all the benefits of the Android system (huge array of software, popular with customers, etc) and be able to worry about a smaller portion of the software stack on the device.

      I guess it probably won't happen, but an Android device from RIM (assuming it did support all the management stuff) seems like a killer phone for the business market. I don't see how RIM can stay relevant using their own proprietary platform when it's losing so much market share.

      --
      -Lod
    10. Re:In this war by Skuld-Chan · · Score: 1

      Isn't it great that the iPhone gets all the features Android gets a year later? Its amazing how innovative Apple has become!

    11. Re:In this war by drunkennewfiemidget · · Score: 1

      Oddly, this one upsets me less.

    12. Re:In this war by mhollis · · Score: 1

      Mod this up!

      And hopefully RIM will get a clue.

      Their server technology is so secure that certain rather paranoid countries want them to give officials "back door" keys. And in this day of business espionage, that is a real plus.

      --
      Gods don't kill people, people with gods kill people.
  6. Re:Apple is going to do... by Algorithmnast · · Score: 2

    Wait - I thought [insert favorite-company-to-hate] did that!!

  7. not hacks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I was looking for hacks and all I found was uses... you would think slashdot would know the differences

  8. False dichotomy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    saving money matters more than harming humans

    Why either/or? I like saving money AND harming humans.

  9. Overclocking is nice but by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Overclocking is nice but dialing in the right voltage for your overclock is even nicer. There is an app for that http://www.appbrain.com/app/quickclock-advanced-overclock/com.jpapps.quickclockadvanced

  10. Enjoying WM 6.5 until the bitter end by Joe+U · · Score: 2

    I'm glad I held on to my WM 6.5 phone. Personally, I think having a phone you can hack is part of the fun of owning a smartphone.

    Most people who look at my setup give a 'WTF is that?!?' expression. But it works for me, and that's what counts. (Yes, it's stable, I just had to un-HTC ware the freaking thing and it became stable, cooking my own ROM is was part of the fun)

    My next phone will be Android based, because MS is too busy playing iPhone catch up to actually release a real smartphone. I'll most likely cook up my own Android ROM when the time comes.

    1. Re:Enjoying WM 6.5 until the bitter end by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How does it feel to be over the hill?

      You must be close to retirement/unemployment.

    2. Re:Enjoying WM 6.5 until the bitter end by mlts · · Score: 2

      I was in the same boat when my WM phone croaked last year. The WM phone was insanely customizable, had very good encryption, easy to back up, and the custom ROMS for it were excellent.

      Depending on the Android phone you get (Nexus 1 and Nexus at the top of the heap for ease of customizability, and a crapshoot with other phone makers, although HTC seems to suck the least), you might be able to find a really cool, stable ROM. Usually a stable one (that dispenses with the UI junk that phone makers and cellular carriers add on) is a good bet. Add to this nandroid for being able to make backups and restore them, as well as a overclock tool, and it makes using an Android device quite pleasurable.

      I wouldn't count MS out yet, but I rather wait a couple iterations and see how WP7 is going to turn out. If MS does it right, it can easily take over the Blackberry market with Sharepoint and Exchange support.

    3. Re:Enjoying WM 6.5 until the bitter end by Joe+U · · Score: 1

      How does it feel to be over the hill?

      You must be close to retirement/unemployment.

      38 is over the hill now? I guess I should give up cutting edge technology and just start making gobs of money off the stupid people now.

      So, what color would you like your database server in?

    4. Re:Enjoying WM 6.5 until the bitter end by GameboyRMH · · Score: 2

      If you haven't switched...see my sig. I stayed on PalmOS for a long time until Maemo came out, for a while I was worried I might have to strap a GSM modem onto some kind of handheld PC if I wanted an open phone. I also considered a rooted Android build, but Maemo is unquestionably a more capable OS.

      It's also the only mobile OS that's headed in the right direction - towards more openness instead of less.

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    5. Re:Enjoying WM 6.5 until the bitter end by dunkelfalke · · Score: 1

      WTF? I can relate to the GP, having flashed my WM6.5 phone to Android only two days ago and I am just 30.

      --
      "It's such a fine line between stupid and clever" -- David St. Hubbins, Spinal Tap
    6. Re:Enjoying WM 6.5 until the bitter end by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Red please, with a touch of blue, green and yellow. It should do one thing at a time because my 34 year old brain can't handle it. Oh yeah it should have some good locks.

    7. Re:Enjoying WM 6.5 until the bitter end by I8TheWorm · · Score: 1

      WM 6.5, still by far the easiest to develop apps for. As a test, I wrote a simple calculator for my son whose fuel gauge stopped working. On the Blackerry it took me 2 hours (fire up Eclipse, set keys, code, test, and deploy app). On the iPhone and Android it was about the same. WM 6.5 it literally took me 22 minutes, and that included a little bit of design.

      --
      Saying Android is a family of phones is akin to saying Linux is a family of PCs.
  11. This is stupid by rickb928 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Ok, in order:

    1. Um, connect your Android video-out-capable phone to your in-car video. If the hack is replacing yoru in-car satnav system, you did that with the Android phone without the video. Now, hooking up YouTube to your in-car video, that's a hack. And illegal in many states.

    4. Playing classic games on your Andriod? That's an *app*, not a *hack*. The controller hack is nice tho.

    7. Installing root-only apps? How about "Getting root on your android"? After that, well, the apps come.

    8. Controlling your Media Centre? Um, My Palm III did that. And that was before I *had* a mnedia centre.

    10. "Get the latest Android versions, fast" What? If you're referrring to getting custom ROMs from those intrepid developers out there, fast is relative. Getting Froyo on my G1 took waiting for Froyo to be released into SDK, then waiting for it to be ported to the G1 (which required waiting for the DangerSPL), then waiting for a stable candidate, then finally the 2708 hack to make it useable long-term. Now, this is admittedly faster than waiting for the OPTA release, cause neither TMO, HTC, or Google will ever release any Android 2.x for the G1, but that's sort of like saying it was a clever hack to play DNF at PennyArcade before anyone else, since for all purposes DNF is a DNF, but the demo is not a release. Well, maybe not quite like that, but calling an alternative ROM release 'fast' is relative.

    Stupid list. Mostly apps, not hacks. Show me the RAM stack hack for the G1 and I'm nominating it for #1.

    --
    deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
    1. Re:This is stupid by mlts · · Score: 1

      I agree with you about that -- there should be a difference between a hack (as in using the CDMA pulses so you can have a strata 1 NTP server on your phone), versus an app.

      On Android, apps have a lot more freedom. Take Exchange for instance. Even though Android is still lacking Exchange encryption, Touchdown from Nitrodesk provides this. Having Exchange in an app also separates it from the OS, so work and personal contacts don't end up merging.

      Ten candidates (IMHO) for best Android hacks, as in true hacks:

      1: Rageinthecage -- one of the most useful ways to get root.
      2: nandroid -- image based backups and restores -- great if swapping ROMS and want to go back to an older one without having to reload all your apps.
      3: Titanium Backup -- backs up app, app data, and market info. This way, a restore is easy.
      4: Modified busybox binaries which allow a lot more uses.
      5: Droidwall. If an app doesn't need to do more than phone home for licensing, it shouldn't have Net access unless part of its functionality.
      6: Utilities that scale clock speed with how the device is being used.
      7: Using unionfs to add space for apps in internal memory using an ext3 partition on the SD card.
      8: Support for LUKS in the ROM allowing for files to be stored encrypted on the SD card.
      9: Using FUSE, mounting a Gmail user as a filesystem using IMAP. Then using eCryptfs to ensure the contents are protected.
      10: Using iptables to block adsites by low level IP.

  12. Garage door by NetNed · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I read the garage door opener and was excited to see how it worked. It involves hooking a Linux box up to your door opener that is connected to the internet. That is kind of lame , certainly in environments where it would be impossible to put a pc in essentially a outdoor setting and I would suspect it wouldn't be that hard to do on other smart phones.

    1. Re:Garage door by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For some reason I get the feeling that it'd be easier to take a cheapie prepaid phone (VM's $20/3 mos, I'm sure there's cheaper out there), disconnect the vibrate motor, connect that to input of a solid-state relay whose output is in parallel with the door button, and changing the ringer settings so that when it's _your_ phone, the phone vibrates instead of mute.

      Call the number from your cell, garage door opens. Cost? $10-30 and the $20/3 mos tops. ...shit, I should've posted this at hackaday.

    2. Re:Garage door by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You could always use one of those lantronix network serial adapters instead of a pc!

    3. Re:Garage door by digitalhermit · · Score: 1

      You can purchase an inexpensive atom based motherboard (or ARM or Geode based) with Bluetooth for under $140... Since no real processing is required, there may be even cheaper systems that can be built based on older commodity processors. There were some non-MMU versions of Linux that might work.. don't know much about recent developments, but that would be the way I'd go if I were to build it.

    4. Re:Garage door by MichaelSmith · · Score: 1

      For some reason I get the feeling that it'd be easier to take a cheapie prepaid phone (VM's $20/3 mos, I'm sure there's cheaper out there), disconnect the vibrate motor, connect that to input of a solid-state relay whose output is in parallel with the door button, and changing the ringer settings so that when it's _your_ phone, the phone vibrates instead of mute.

      Yes I believe there are some guys in the middle east who are experts at that kind of hack.

  13. install Ubuntu on your handset? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Seriously? That's an important feature? For how many percent of users?

  14. I'm pretty underwhelmed too... by sean.peters · · Score: 1

    A couple examples:

    • the garage door opener. Yeah, that's really cool. But am I really going to 1) dedicate a linux box (in my garage, with temps pushing 100F in the summer), 2) buy the needed serial control interface, 3) spend hours hacking around on software, and 4) physically mount up and connect all this stuff, so I can 5) replace the garage door remote that I already have? I don't think so.
    • Changing the look of your interface is one of the "10 best" hacks? Really?
    • Overclocking my phone? Yeah, that'll end well.
    • Running Android on an original iPhone? Given that in the scenario, I've already replaced the old iPhone w/ a new one because I wanted better performance, it seems pretty unlikely that anything useful is going to result from putting Android on it. Besides, this is an iPhone hack, not an Android hack.
    • Running Ubuntu? Again, not an Android hack. And the article itself points out why this is not likely to be worthwhile.

    If these are the best hacks they can come up with, well... color me unimpressed. Seriously, there must be more exciting things you can do with Android than this.

  15. Re:Useful SECURITY & SPEED hack for ANDROID ph by Red+Flayer · · Score: 1

    Comment fail. Overuse of ALL-CAPS and bold typeface, it makes your post damn near unreadable.

    Try it again, but try to write like a grown-up with something useful to say. Experience tells us that most people who shit all over our displays like you did have nothing to say -- they need the bold and all-caps to get attention, because their ideas themselves have little merit.

    So please clean up your text, people like me might actually consider your ideas if it didn't look like an unstable person wrote them.

    And, FWIW, I do think you're unstable, from exchanges we've had in the past, and from exchanges you've had with others. But that's not the point -- the point is no one will take you seriously (well, among those who still *might* take you seriously) if you write like a lunatic.

    --
    "Trolls they were, but filled with the evil will of their master: a fell race..." -- J.R.R. Tolkien on Olog-hai
  16. Barely a hack by devnullkac · · Score: 1

    The garage door opener is labeled as "brilliant" by the article, but frankly I was hoping for something more inspired than networking to a PC-controlled garage door. A real hack would be to modify the firmware so that the cellphone antenna would send the right rolling code directly to the existing radio receiver in the garage door opener. Then there's no need for special "don't accidentally open the garage door if I'm in Japan" type safeties in the software.

    --
    What do you mean they cut the power? How can they cut the power, man? They're animals!
  17. Re:You favourite android hack doesn't work on mine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My favourite android hack is when I set the alarm last year and it still works this year!

    My alarms didn't ring on the 1st of January, actually. Android 2.1 on a Samsung GT-i5800 (Galaxy 3). Anyone else experienced the same problem?

  18. hacks vs apps by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I guess it says a lot about the users these gadgets are marketed towards that while an iphone article would use the rhetoric "10 simplest and best apps for your phone that would make you look super suave and impress your friends by you swiping your finger across the screen and then fancy looking useful stuff will happen", android would use a rhetoric as "10 most advanced hackk$$ for your phone that make you look super smart and impress your friends by hooking it up to a keyboard, typing a lot and getting lots of text scrolling very fast on your screen while you explain that you are now root" ..

  19. All RedFlayer, off topic & all, has is a mod d by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    LMAO @ - funny that, as "off topic" as YOU are "powerless mod", that ALL YOU HAVE IS AN OFF TOPIC REPLY ON YOUR PART, & AN EFFETE MOD DOWN, rather than disputing any points I had made to others here?

    Hahahaha...

    APK

    P.S.=> This is dedicated, to you, "powerless mod":

    ---

    THE "DOWNMOD SQUAD":

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kd85Qim_Z6A

    ---

    I can see it now!

    The white guy @ the start (Michael Cole) is getting loaded with malware and tracking him online, & he's SICK OF IT. He runs into the black guy (Clarence Williams III), who also tells him he's feeling the same & sick of it. Then, Michael Cole says "She's feeling that way too" as Peggy Lipton comes rushing onto the scene.

    They tell one another about HOSTS files & other methods to protect against that (or using HOSTS file to do other useful things for you)... & who comes "popping outta the woodwork"? CAPT. TROLL!

    Complete w/ his effete "down moderation" w/ no technical justifications behind it (as TIGE ANDREWS comes into the scene, lol)...

    HOWEVER: He needs a "thought balloon" that says:

    "I can't let others know how to stop my bogus machinations in maliciously scripted websites &/or adbanners. I have to either TROLL THIS, or down mod it and run!"

    LMAO!

    ---

    Downmods? Hey - they're not very useful & only show that's ALL you've got in "retaliation"... figures... apk

  20. This MIGHT "interest you" then... apk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://tech.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1932574&cid=34744394

    Enjoy (it actually WORKS, & for better online speed, AND security!)

    APK

  21. READ THIS, you judge... apk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://tech.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1932574&cid=34744394

    APK

    P.S.=> Sorry to be so "direct" & re-replying to you, but the trolls (& I suspect malware makers as well) are downmodding my post to try, I imagine, to "bury it" from your view here, & yes: It really works, & for better speed and security online (not only on a PC, but also ANDROID phones too, which is where I've done it) + is VERY EASY to implement really - too easy, in fact, 3 steps... apk

  22. This hasn't worked for a year now? by EETech1 · · Score: 1

    Would it have helped to have the alarm set for 2011 insteaf of 2010? Or did you do this test in your time machine?

    Cheers!

  23. Safety? by crimperman · · Score: 1

    FTA: "Satnav’s only the tip of the iceberg. Connect your phone to access your music collection, read your Twitter feed, check the latest headlines or perform any other function on your dashboard"

    As a motorcyclist I really hope I'm not anywhere near a car driver reading their Twitter feed or the latest headlines on their dashboard! It's bad enough when they're sending SMS or changing the song! Yes I know they probably mean that you should do this when stationary but to be honest for most of the drivers I see this means "while at the lights or in traffic". The last thing they need is more distraction.

  24. Re:Look everyone: It's the OFF TOPIC & powerle by Red+Flayer · · Score: 1
    Wow, you're really fucking crazy, aren't you?

    I posted a generally polite response as to why so many of us think you're unstable, and how you could address that.

    It was advice.

    And instead of taking it like a man and considering whether or not there were valid points, you go off the deep end with another rant written in a style sure to make other continue to consider you, as I do, a complete loon.

    Yea, you sure looked STUPID then, didn't you, trying to BLOCK ME FROM POSTING?

    What are you talking about, you crazy cunt? Then, as now, you had no idea of how slashdot works.

    --
    "Trolls they were, but filled with the evil will of their master: a fell race..." -- J.R.R. Tolkien on Olog-hai
  25. Re:Look everyone: It's the OFF TOPIC & powerle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    period!

    you know there's a key for that.

  26. More "Adhominem attacks"? LMAO! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Wow, you're really fucking crazy, aren't you?" - by Red Flayer (890720) on Tuesday January 04, @05:58PM (#34759578)

    No, but you're obviously delusional, thinking you're "the sidewalk psychoanalyst of /." (with no degree no less, the "self-appointed sidewalk psychoanalyst of /.", lol), with you constantly calling myself 'crazy' & what-not/etc., here, repeatedly...

    Well, to that, I can only use my "std. reply to trolls that think they're psychiatrists":

    When you:

    ---

    1.) Have a PHD to your name in psychiatry
    2.) Have a license to practice psychiatry
    3.) Have performed a formal analysis of myself in a professional environs

    ---

    THEN, you can talk...

    Otherwise? Well, you know... lol!

    ---

    "I posted a generally polite response as to why so many of us think you're unstable, and how you could address that." - by Red Flayer (890720) on Tuesday January 04, @05:58PM (#34759578)

    You mean 'ALL OF YOU WANNABE PSYCHO-ANALYSTS'? To that, again, I can only refer you to the above... you need it.

    ---

    "It was advice." - by Red Flayer (890720) on Tuesday January 04, @05:58PM (#34759578)

    Ahem: I don't accept advice from non-professional wannabes like yourself... get it (for the 2nd time now already if not more)?

    ---

    "And instead of taking it like a man and considering whether or not there were valid points" - by Red Flayer (890720) on Tuesday January 04, @05:58PM (#34759578)

    That's a laugh & 1/2: "Valid Points", from a screwball wannabe psychiatrist, like YOU? Please - you're making me laugh...

    ---

    "you go off the deep end with another rant written in a style sure to make other continue to consider you, as I do, a complete loon." - by Red Flayer (890720) on Tuesday January 04, @05:58PM (#34759578)

    I don't even consider you @ all... you're nothing/nobody, period. Why? Well, again: Refer to the above... "take it like a man", yourself.

    ---

    "you crazy cunt?" - by Red Flayer (890720) on Tuesday January 04, @05:58PM (#34759578)

    Man - All you ever do, is call others names... so, if ANYONE is "unstable" here, it's you - learn to keep your cool, fool.

    (Of course, in the real world, I am SURE you are "meek as a mouse" because if you were ever in front of me talking the way you are? I'm actually QUITE certain it'd be a different story...)

    APK

    P.S.=> RedFlayer, face it - you're a "non-entity", and your "foaming at the mouth" replies, replete with profanity? Hey - your replies only makes you look even STUPIDER than you do already - & I am laughing, hugely, @ your antics! Grow up... apk

  27. A real hack by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    On a fine summer evening, when I had run out of budget for exotic astro-gear, and blinded by the light pollution in my neighborhood, I made this app / hack to help me guide my telescope with the sensors on the phone alone.

    (for those who are new to telescopes, a separate device using encoders that does the same thing, though with more accuracy, can cost several hundred dollars)

  28. A douchebag says what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    you know there's a key for that. by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday January 04, @06:34PM (#34759996)

    So that's what a douchebag says.