chhotii: (apple)
chhotii ([personal profile] chhotii) wrote2011-09-02 10:10 pm

smartphones: the good and bad

Just the other day a friend was asking me about the Android phone, asking, for example, "what apps can you just not live without"? And I'm like, seriously? I could chuck the whole thing when my contract is up. I carry my MacBook Air just about everywhere, and mooch whatever WiFi I can find, rather than peer at the tiny little screen on the smart phone.

Well, within the week, I now have 2 apps I might not be able to live without.

1) EEBA: virtual cash envelopes for personal budgeting. The envelope system is a brilliantly simple concept in personal budgeting. But, how do you manage when you don't carry around tons of cash, and do everything with the debit card? EEBA implements virtual envelopes. You label your envelopes, you put virtual cash into them, and then you record transactions, which remove virtual cash. The little smiley envelopes (so cuuuute!) even tells you how on-track you are with spending in each category, and how long to stop spending to get back onto track. This should be just the thing to impose some discipline on my casual impulse purchases of fast food and magazines as I commute to and from work. As I understand it, if there is money at the end of the month in an envelope, you can choose to transfer it to another envelope. This is a big incentive-- I plan to try to save on lunch bought at work by brown-bagging it more, and reward myself for under-spending in that category by then going somewhere nice to eat with the savings. This app should make it super-easy to track that and thus stay motivated.

2) The Droid version of Anki. istemi enthusiastically recommended Anki on the iPhone, so I'm trying it out on the Droid. Seems a lot better than StudyDroid. I love how it adaptively plans out your lessons. There are lots of great decks out there to download. I downloaded "German for Reading Knowledge", and I think I might have finally found a way to make progress on language learning in a fragmented way. The only quibble is that initially it was adding cards to my study set in alphabetical order, so I had a huge string of "ab" verbs all lumped together; but I seem to have fixed that by poking at something in the settings. (Oh, and that "German for Reading Knowledge", which has over 2,200 cards, initially took an age to load... probably at nearly 2 years of age, my phone is way behind in memory and power. :P )

Not that I wanted to develop a smartphone addiction. Just the other day, I tried to make a phone call, and the touch screen was spazzing out, making it difficult. Remember when phones were just phones, and it was not difficult to make a phone call? This might be related to the fact that the moisture sensor has tripped. I have no idea why: I have never dropped it into water, let it get rained on, or even sweated on the phone. I have merely been living in an area with the normal range of humidity for a hospitable climate. I think they design these to always trip so that nobody ever gets warranty service.

Furthermore... This is horribly heretical. I can't believe I'm saying this. But. If/when I get another smart phone, I might have to consider getting an iPhone (oh, no!) because the Driod still does not support Indian language fonts.
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[identity profile] perspicuity.livejournal.com 2011-09-03 02:27 am (UTC)(link)
is there not a way to run android in a virtual box and put your app in that?

one might find that quite entertaining...

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[identity profile] whitebird.livejournal.com 2011-09-03 04:30 am (UTC)(link)
You do not, in fact, live in a region which has a normal range of humidity for a hospitable climate. :)

A smartphone is handy for the carryability of it. I can use one (an iPhone, imagine the odds...) and be productive on it, but, even with the very nice screen of the iPhone 4, it's still a bit hard to really be productive.

The iPad suits me much better for that. But so too would a MacBook Air.

Part of my problem may be aging eyes, but that's a bit hard to say.

On the other hand, every android device I've poked at has disappointed me. The HP TouchPad I briefly helped someone with was much nicer than the Android tablet I had to help someone else with. (It was a really cheap one, and the help I ended up giving was telling them that it was an utterly useless piece of junk.)

The trick to all of this, of course, is finding the apps that make the device really useful to you, so I'm glad you've found two programs that make your life better!

[identity profile] deguspice.livejournal.com 2011-09-03 04:49 am (UTC)(link)
"I have always wished for my computer to be as easy to use as my telephone; my wish has come true because I can no longer figure out how to use my telephone."

- Bjarne Stroustrup (the father of C++)

[identity profile] chhotii.livejournal.com 2011-09-03 11:16 am (UTC)(link)
LOL!!!

[identity profile] istemi.livejournal.com 2011-09-04 02:35 am (UTC)(link)
I really like my Collins French dictionary. For all the verbs, you can click to see all conjugations in all tenses.
It transcends the paper version when you search on a conjugated verb and it brings you to the definition under the infinitive. I would never guess the infinitive of the irregulars.

Glad you like Anki. I'm learning how to add media for sound flashcards.