shinshoryuken
Member
Cheers, i'm about to install Android Rev HD. I can't flash the new firmware as I guess i'm S-ON still, but it says I shouldn't need to.
So wish me luck!
Good luck!!
You should have done it sooner. Lol
Cheers, i'm about to install Android Rev HD. I can't flash the new firmware as I guess i'm S-ON still, but it says I shouldn't need to.
So wish me luck!
Good luck!!
You should have done it sooner. Lol
haha, nervous as fuck, that's why.
Cheers, i'm about to install Android Rev HD. I can't flash the new firmware as I guess i'm S-ON still, but it says I shouldn't need to.
So wish me luck!
That intimidating array of Android configurations is sometimes referred to as the matrix of pain, a reference to all the aches that must be endured to ensure that code is running as designed.
WIRED: "As Android Rises, App Makers Tumble Into Google’s ‘Matrix of Pain’"
It's crazy how much Android resembles the Windows of old.
Todd McKinnon, CEO and founder of Okta, a company that’s knee deep in the world of Android apps.
https://play.google.com/store/apps/developer?id=Okta Inc.&hl=en
They literally have one app on android.
wat?
Am I missing something?
The differences I'm reading on the battery life are mind boggling.AnandTech's Moto X Review is now up. 11 pages.
Of course, the real question is how the Moto X stacks up to the competition in our objective tests. I have to admit that my initial subjective impressions of the Moto X battery life were not all that great. My first time daily driving the Moto X was after getting it in NYC and flying home I left the hotel with it fully charged, spent 4 hours in a plane with it in airplane mode, and Moto X still died in the baggage claim before I could make it home. The second time I daily drove the Moto X, I also managed to kill it doing nothing out of the ordinary before I got back home. I honestly cant remember the last time I drained a phone completely actually using it. Since those couple of times I havent had problems making it through a full day when Ive daily driven the Moto X, but thats with my usual opportunistic charging from every available wall socket and USB port, and my mixed use definitely isnt 24 hours, rather closer to 8.
As I write this, my Moto X is still carrying a 28 percent charge after one day, two hours, 12 minutes and three seconds. And I'm a heavy user. To give you a better idea of how I arrived at this number, allow me to explain my personal usage habits. Spotify is nearly always running on my phone when I'm in transit, which, here in New York City, means almost any time I'm not sitting. When I'm idling, I usually launch Pocket to catch up on news, voraciously refresh and scan Twitter (set to sync every 15 minutes), have constant emails pouring in and out that I read and respond to, Hangouts that I periodically indulge in, Maps for rushing off to various meetings around town and Chrome for the 20-plus links I have open at any given time.
It's sad, but I am that person at dinner or drinks who's always staring at his phone. And that sort of behavior nets you a 28 percent charge on the Moto X after one day, two hours, 12 minutes and three seconds without battery saver enabled. That result bests even Motorola's own conservative claim of 24-hour battery life. Under the strain of Engadget's formal battery rundown protocol, in which an HD video plays on a loop, the Moto X's 2,200mAh cell lasted 11 hours and 15 minutes. Clap your hands, people. This is the battery life you didn't know you were missing.
Check to see if pri.sm is available, for double hipster cred.Blog name doesn't seem hipster enough
PRISM - an android blog
there, +1 web 2.0 hipster cred
AnandTech's Moto X Review is now up. 11 pages.
"ro.build.version.full=Blur_Version.139.9.51.ghost_att.ATT.en.US"
wtf?The differences I'm reading on the battery life are mind boggling.
We get this from Anandtech:
And this from Engadget:
"When McKinnon wanted to supplement Okta’s longstanding native iOS app with a first-class Android app, he decided to only support the latest versions of the operating system — which means leaving out a majority of Android users"WIRED: "As Android Rises, App Makers Tumble Into Google’s ‘Matrix of Pain’"
It's crazy how much Android resembles the Windows of old.
It took CEO Nirav Tolia’s team less than four months to ship its Android app, which supports operating systems all the way back to version 2.2.3, about 95 percent of the market. But it had to rely on web technologies, rather than native Android code, to drive the somewhat complicated process for signing up new users, a process that is native in the iOS version.
nope, you probably put in more work in your search than they did in their Android efforts.https://play.google.com/store/apps/developer?id=Okta Inc.&hl=en
They literally have one app on android.
wat?
Am I missing something?
I should email Okta and tell them how much they'd pay me to suffer through the matrix of pain and create their shitty one-trick-pony app while adhering to Android guidelines and supporting 2.1+. I guarantee I could do that in less than 24hrs, 22 of which I'd spend laughing maniacally.
LG GPad 8.3
well, in one hand you have AnandTech and in the other hand ... well, don't worry about *what* is in the other hand, just know that you should wash it with soap and water.The differences I'm reading on the battery life are mind boggling.
We get this from Anandtech:
And this from Engadget:
Unless it's deceiving, looks like a good aspect ratio. That's my #1 gripe about Android tablets, and why I still stick with the iPad (mini).
This is amazing.Is this pretentious enough?
(continues)
* Unnervingly, the network status logo and bars are also a different shade of blue than the battery and time icons adjacent to it.
* Theres also AT&T address book preloaded which cannot be removed, which is a huge annoyance.
* Theres also a provisioning check for bluetooth and WiFi tethering, another indication of an operator-touched device.
* The status bar has different spacing for the the cellular and WiFi indicator logos which carries over as a result of Blur (the spacing issue is just the "4G LTE" or similar status logo disappearing when on WiFi).
* Also the on-screen android buttons sometimes appear transparent, showing what's under, which definitely isn't a stock implementation.
[Stock Android]
Is this pretentious enough?
1 billion times more stock than that garbage Shitwiz.![]()
Is this pretentious enough?
Is this pretentious enough?
Looking at it again, I think if you add the holo blue somewhere it'd be ace.
Or maybe this is better?
![]()
more periods means more web-savvy
Is this pretentious enough?
Or maybe this is better?
more periods means more web-savvy
As someone who is well versed in things PC, I find that side of their reviews to be particularly shitty as of late.This is amazing.
Also why do people even listen to reviews other than anandtech really