Thursday, December 30, 2010

Jerky Talks #1: Let's Never Talk About 2010 Again

I first joined fun runs last February 2010. When I do join these marathons, I habitually run a mental sermon to myself when I am midway and tired: "Why do you have to do this? Why do you need to run? What were you thinking? Are you planning to kill yourself?" And each step I take closer to the finish line, the sermoning voice dies down a little. The challenge becomes fun and each step is one act closer to a personal victory.

2010 was like a fun run for me. It was fun. And challenging: I had heartbreaks. I needed to sever ties several times. Close doors, open windows with a lock pick. There were challenges and I think for most, I did well.

Friendships: A tie severed, opens up to new friends
I was disappointed with 2009. I made a resolution to open up myself to others and tear down walls and just be friendlier. I didn't do that last 2009 and it carried over to my 2010.

Sadly, I needed to sever ties with a very special person and no matter how I try to patch things up with us, it just doesn't seem to work. I figured I lost my chance, but maybe I'll try again next year. Keep it a habit. Maybe we'll be cool again. But I'm glad we had that fight. Made me rethink about my expectations from people and how I react to them not meeting promises. Made me realize how I limit myself to a select few.

After that falling apart, I just thought that maybe it wouldn't hurt to have more friends and let other people in. I was naturally afraid of rejection or being disliked. So I befriended people anyway. I threw all care in the air and just found these amazing people who can tolerate my demeanor. Thank you guys. I don't wanna mention who you are, but if you're a friend--new or old--know that I have just thanked you.

That overused four-letter word: how elusive
I came to a point where I have stopped believing anyone who says I am a catch (or anything to that effect), most of them are my friends anyways. It's now low self-esteem talking. But more like me not really giving a care about how I appear to others. Yeah, I guess that's low self-esteem. Or just not giving a care and being comfortable with what you are. I find my attitude towards love nonchalant. If I have it, great. If I don't, I couldn't care for it. I guess I was so satisfied with being single that dating seemed like an idea I'd reply something like "seriously?" I guess I was satisfied already with more convenient stuff, so to say. You know, the cow and milk metaphor. I don't want to clarify for the kids.

I mean, friends are good, but an emotional baggage like a relationship, maybe I wasn't prepared for it.

In short, I only dated a few times in 2010. But I think it's a bit more than I did last 2009, where I did some serious stuffs in this department, though--to a fail. This time, the dates were friendlier and I just went with the flow and not all psycho like delivering a no commitment guarantee speech on the first date. LOL. That was a total fail before.

I kind of gotten my heartbroken during 2010. As usual, it's during September. I wouldn't blame the heartbreak on anyone else but me, but that was something that taught me a lot of stuffs and made me rethink the way I go on about relationships, dating. It's also a reality check for me that maybe I am not one to play the bad guy role. Idk, that was just one messed up part of 2010 that I really hate revisiting.

Personal Goals
I didn't have abs, but I got closer. Lol. I almost quit on growing myself a six pack, but people telling me and encouraging me got me to give it another try anyway. I have two right now. LOL.

Liabilities, well I apparently didn't meet the clearing up my credit card bills on time, but I guess next year this can be possible as I hate the cards now to the point that I have "jailed" them some place so I won't use them.

I got a new phone this year. In fact I had three. I only planned one. Then it got stolen so the crazy Jerky acted and bought two new. And the crazy jerky is quite happy. The financially challenged Jerky is not so.

Didn't get a promotion, not that I want to, but it is something I have been thinking of. How do I get promoted in this very flat org. Maybe better luck this year.

I got so many new friends, I guess I have check that off.

Man, were my goals shallow and limited. LOL. Don't worry, I don't write everything down, dear reader. Some things are still meant to be personal.

So I approach the end of 2010. And how does it feel, the way you finish a run. You feel so excited, yet kind of sad that it's actually gonna finish because it was fun. I'm seeing the end of this year and I feel like I should celebrate it. I feel like the most growth in my person I have had happened this year. And for that 2010, for the exhausting but happy run you have been for me, I kiss you goodbye sweetly. You will always be remembered. 2011, I can't wait. Please be kind!

Wednesday, December 29, 2010

Pick of the Week #6


Decidedly obscene and LSS-inducing, Cee-Lo Green's F*ck You gives soul a modern and vindictive twist. It's full of bitterness in a very fun way. Enjoy.

Tuesday, December 28, 2010

From a Bro #1: The Swan Tribe Effect

I had this idea before of running a blog that kind of apes Barney Stinson's way of explaining social structure and concepts. Given my schedule back then and the 379 things I wanted to do, I lost time for it. Given my renewed interest to blog, I thought of incorporating the concept to this blog. And I'd like to start with the first social structure concept I've observed: THE SWAN TRIBE.

Let's begin.


Definition
A group of swans is called a tribe. Swans are elegant-looking water fowls that people usually associate with beauty. Similarly, a group of men or women comprised of beautiful looking members may be referred to as a Swan Tribe. When a not so good looking individual inserts himself/herself to such group, The Swan Tribe effect is triggered by the individual and that individual is commonly referred to a Duckling.

A duckling may consciously or unconsciously insert himself/herself to a swan tribe because, naturally, on their own, ducklings don't seem much. With a tribe, they feel more or less physically more pleasant (discuss CHEERLEADER effect) than they usually are and project this belief to other people as well. With their natural charm and seemingly harmless nature, ducklings can court their way in to a tribe and reap the benefits.

Benefits
The swan tribe effect benefits the duckling in the following ways:

1. The duckling will more or less look like a swan (more appealing/prettier than normal) since he/she is surrounded by swans.

2. The duckling can take the swans's leftovers (individuals the swans don't like can always be taken by the duckling as most usually individuals rejected by swans are suffering blows to their egos and ducklings seem easier prey). This means the duckling basically just need to hang out with the swans and wait for them to attract attention and get the ones the swans don't pick up. Pretty nifty.

3. Ducklings are well connected, this is due to the swans's connections who in turn become their acquaintance, thanks to their friendship with the swans. Confident ducklings are usually part of more than one swan tribe, which results to more connections.

Harms
Like with most social concepts, the swan tribe has its cons:

1. The Swan tribe effect does not work on ducklings with low self-esteem. Ducklings who find themselves in a swan tribe must have their self-esteem beefed up to maximize the swan tribe's effect on them.

2. The Swan tribe may suffer a social scratch due to accepting a duckling into their midst, but this is only true for highschool girl groups or ultimately vain men.

3. Better knowing individuals can easily identify a duckling in a group and not fall in their lure.

Stay tuned as we discuss other social concepts soon.

Monday, December 27, 2010

Top 7 (+ 3) # 3: My Favorite Movies For 2010

Like 2009 with Avatar, 500 Days of Summer, Julie & Julia, Kimmy Dora, Up, Up In the Air and a host of other good films, 2010 was blessed to have similarly good flicks. Below is my top ten favorite movies from the concluding year. Note that this list collects film screened in the Philippines starting December 1, 2009 to November 30, 2010.

10. My Amnesia Girl
Probably the best Filipino film released this year much because of its wit and charm and good directing that's why it got to my list. It beats out another Star Cinema comedy "Here Comes the Bride" by providing a more realistic plot and choosing wit and character development over typically comic characters. I'd also give props to Toni and John Lloyd for their good acting although the chemistry is a bit shaky. Cathy Garcia-Molina sure is shaping up as one of the best commercial director in the country.

9. The Social Network
Practically known as the Facebook movie, The Social Network scores good on my list for its wit and charm, though, I wasn't as engaged in this movie as with the others on this list--I'm not sure why it couldn't have gone any higher on my list. Jesse Eisenberg plays Mark Zuckerberg, creator of Facebook and details his treacherous ways to social network supremacy. Clever screenplay makes this movie shine beyond the limited action in this film.

8. The Blind Side
After the Oscar nods, The Blind Side finally premiered last January 27, 2010 here in the Philippines. Sandra Bullock's performance as a devout Christian living in the more conservative side of America won her awards, including an Oscar. The movie's theme of trust and showing kindness stroke well with me.

7. Buried
What can one actor and a director do, well, "a lot" says this film. Buried features a psychologically tortured Ryan Reynolds as he fights for his way out of being Buried underground in the middle of nowhere. The film may be too psychologically draining for some, but is nonetheless effective in execution.

6. Easy A
From afar, Easy A seems like a typical teenage movie--a girl pretends to sleep with guys when she doesn't--but upon closer inspection, you would realize that it is far better than you could allow it to. It's unpretentious, funny, engaging, witty, and charming. I was pretty surprised by the casting, too: Stanley Tucci, Lisa Kudrow, Amanda Bynes, Thomas Haden Church, Penn Badgley, Cam Gigandet. Emma Stone, who I believe needs more love, shows her charm and wit in this movie and gets the love she deserves. A.

5. Inglourious Basterds
Premiered in the Philippines weeks before the 2009 Metro Manila Film Fest, this film was subsequently re-released near the Holy week times in 2010. Probably now one of my most favorite Tarantino films (Eh, I love all his films, Grindhouse included). Brad Pitt stars as a World War Two American soldier stationed in Germany whose band notoriously scalps German soldiers. Tarantino's penchant for making tasty violent and gritty films remain in tact and lovely, and his storytelling / screenplay always works wonders for his films.

4. Toy Story 3
A franchise finally ends. And unlike Shrek which just got worse over time, Toy Story remains charming and nostalgic to the very end. Pixar has taken care that this last installment won't be disappointing and I think they have done their job, bringing a sad yet hopeful ending to a beloved franchise.

3. Kick-Ass
Don't be dissuaded by this movie just because Nicolas Cage is in it, Kick-Ass is one of 2010's finest. Casted with a bunch of unknowns and awkward heroes, this movie was controversial for one line delivered by a minor (the character Hit Girl who is a 12-year old vigilante), "Ok, cunts, let's see what you can do." The movie is one of the best comic book adaptations I have ever seen and probably one of the most entertaining in its genre.

2. How To Train Your Dragon
A children's fiction book goes to the big screen with a bang--and even adults were drawn in. This movie about a weak lad in a village of muscular Viking men where brawns always win over brains pokes your heart the way most Pixar movie does. In a way, this was last year's "Up." The way the story develops, how the characters are fleshed out and the especially teary ending will make you think this is Pixar material, but no folks, it's all Dream Works giving them a run for their money. Universally praised, How To Train Your Dragon is no simple animated film and it will probably one of the most memorable animated films Dream Works has produced.

1. Inception
Yep, this is probably the most awesome movie 2010 has come up with. Inception stars Di Caprio and a bunch of other cool stars portraying dream thieves who entered Cillian Murphy's character's dream to implant an idea of dissolving his family's business empire. This film was so awesome that it had rivaled Avatar with its fan discussions. Discussions about whether Di Caprio's character is still dreaming or has awaken at the closing scene still rings on for months after the movie has ended its run to the point that Michael Caine needed to step up and say that Di Caprio has actually woken up.

How about you? What's your favorite movie of 2010?

Technological Buzz for 2010

While 2009 was so-so in terms of technological revolution in the mobile segment, 2010 is a good year for technology. The technological war in 2010 shifted heavily to mobile computing and smartphones thanks to the continuous proliferation of wifi and affordable data plans.

Q1
1. XPERIA X10 - Everything about this device leaked during the late 2009. It was such a crazy ride with various sites overbumping the specs to include HD video recording and in-board storage of 32GB. The UI also made it to youtube and made people all the more excited. It was announced during the MWC and made available near Q2.

2. HTC Desire - one of the first devices that came out-of-the-box with Eclair and the twin of Nexus One. Techradar quotes this device as the best phone of 2010, beating the iPhone 4, Galaxy S, Desire HD, the Nokia N8, and a host of others.

3. Samsung Wave / Bada OS - Announced at the MWC, what really drew attention to this device was its Super AMOLED display capable of displaying perfect blacks and very good contrast. Samsung's decision to make a new OS, however, was not so lauded and people were skeptical at first.

Q2
1. iPhone 4 - leaked by Gizmodo (remember when they picked one at a local pub, lol, and the staff's place was all policed up) and released late June 2010 in the US

2. iOS 4 - Folders, multitasking, and a host of other features made it to the iOS 4 and the Apple fanboys rejoiced

3. Android 2.2 (Froyo) - Dubbed as the leapfrog in Android OS evolution, Froyo was made available last May 2010. It includes faster operation via JIT compiler, web Flash Lite support, and Chrome's V8 JS engine to name a few.

Q3
1. Samsung Galaxy S - announced last March and released July in various spots all over the world, the Samsung Galaxy S family has sold 9.3 million units across the globe.

2. Blackberry Torch - Storm marries Bold and the nuptial was made public last August. Comparisons to iOS and Android made it shine less, though, while it maintains grace for its keyboard and improved usability--compared to its sisters.

Q4
1. Nokia N8/Symbian ^3 - Nokia was mum for much of 2010, releasing phones that made little impact. They announced the Nokia N8 and the Symbian ^3 which was supposed to pick things up for them, but critics were not very generous with Symbian ^3. The camera module on the N8 was lauded, though.

2. HP Palm Pre 2 - The update to WebOS, Palm's OS, saw shiny eye candies and attracted new interest. The Palm Pre 2 was a beefed up Palm Pre. Like the N8, critics weren't very friendly to this little device--again comparing it to iOS and Android phones.

3. Gingerbread - Android's latest iteration excited tech sites and Android fans. Along with the announcement of the Samsung Google Nexus S. It saw minor improvements over Froyo, with speed and battery use improvements as the only major differentiators from the previous Android flavor.

4. Play Station Phone - Engadget leaked the device and everyone at twitter started talking. I am seeing the same series of events that would lead to this phone's release--dozens of leaks even before it is announced and a pretty spoiled announcement. Rumors now say that it will sell under the name Xperia Play.

Wednesday, December 22, 2010

Things to Remember Before Getting a Galaxy S

The Samsung Galaxy S

In true jerkysans fashion, I got the Galaxy S without batting an eyelash. Not! I have had some serious issues with my first Samsung smartphone (i900 Omnia--buggy wifi, software, irresponsive screen, stupid updating procedures). While my experience with Samsung's very own bada OS-totting Samsung Wave improved the way I look at Samsung, something tells me that non-native OS is not their thing. Given those, I did some reading about it on the online forums and review sites. I mean, 27K is not a small amount and I will be stuck for two years with this device. I hounded down the usual suspects: GSM Arena praised it, for instance, for being a technological monster with great audio reproduction and amazing video capabilities. Engadget praised it for being thin and sexy while criticizing the lack of polishing in the UI. Techradar praised the processor, audio and video while commenting the slight freezing at times.

I have friends who have lined up for the Galaxy S from Globe, and I can understand why. The Galaxy S measures up to iPhone's popularity, perhaps due to its superb S-AMOLED screen. But that's all skin deep. The Galaxy is more than it's fast processor, Android OS, and S-AMOLED screen. You would need to live with it for a month before you can really say and mean it, "I want this phone."

Having the SGS for a month, I have compiled a list of things to expect and remember before getting your SGS.

1. It lags like hell, especially after Froyo 2.2 update
On Eclair, the SGS is pretty capable. Out of the box, you will encounter Techradar's "slight freezing at times" comment. But don't say, I can live with that just yet. Wait till you update it to 2.2. Froyo is supposed to make things go faster. But with SGS, this is the contrary. After updating my SGS to Froyo, I encountered inordinate amounts of lags that is not slight at all. The internet is filled with buzz about these lags and freezes and they were serious usability issues that I cannot live with and makes me want to flush the phone down the toilet. I've read up and this is caused by Samsung's building in an SD card into the device and using the wrong filesystem format. Or something like that. Luckily, there is a fix for this, in fact, more than one fix option. This requires some knowhow but if you have a friend who knows, you can get away with a blazing fast SGS. Else, you're stuck with a freezing device. So in case, read up. Just look up One Click lag fix or z4mod. This requires you voiding your warranty, on the other hand.

2. It comes in two variants 8GB and 16GB, should I get the 16GB?
What should you get? I suggest you get the 8GB. It is cheaper by as much as 4K. Save the 4K and get 16GB SD card, which gets you a 22GB total (I can count, but there will be some storage space your device cannot use). A reliable 16GB card is worth 1.2K. This gives you more storage and more savings. If you are getting one from a Globe plan, then 16GB is your only option.

3. Samsung has unwittingly built in some quirks to SGS
Like any other phone in the market, but these quirks will surprise and annoy you. For instance, the notification bar may not at times be pulled down. Sometimes it will get stuck midway, sometimes it will just be stubborn and not be pull-able. And this is the only Android device I know that does this. The resolution is to restart your phone. Another noted and popular bug is that the wifi may not always connect to your Home network. A number of users have complained about this and while there is a workaround--which is to launch the AllShare app with your wifi off--it is annoying to know that the wifi has issues. I read that this is due to the SGS's wifi logic being fussier and won't connect on a busy wifi channel despite your iDevices, laptops, and other devices being able to. The obvious resolution is to move your router's channel to a less busy one. This is apparent when the wifi channel you have chosen is crowded. Another issue is that the GPS sucks big time. Reports suggest that the GPS won't lock your position accurately or may take froever to do so. At release 2.2, the GPS has been improved, though still not that accurate. Then again, you'll bump into Froyo freeze trouble. Some users also report typos and grammatical boo-boos. Indeed such exists on the Samsung-made apps.

4. It is not an iPhone
Samsung designed the SGS to feel like the iPhone. This is apparent just by looking at the design for the SGS--it looks like one of those Chinese knock-offs. The form-factor which is very iPhone-ish, is a turn off. I mean why must they copy even the form-factor? Going deeper, the software suggests the same thing. Among the Android phones out there, SGS is the only to use a horizontal app paging system a la iPhone. Their music player also apes the iPhone's. So as the video player's feel. But really, much as they want it to be, it is not. I swear, the audio in my Galaxy S is kind of scattered. The trebles are broken and may hurt your ears at loud volumes. At low volumes the bass is just off and barely audible. The video on SGS however outdoes the iPhone's thanks to its bazillion codec support and brilliant 4" S-AMOLED display. However, I noted on my SGS that both the music and video player occasionally hiccups. Additionally, it does not have iTunes, so you will need to get your audio and video content ported to it manually.

5. It will fail you
So as other phones. But it's best that you don't experience this. After two weeks of ownership, I needed to do a factory reset on my SGS. The facebook app just won't open for no reason. And I've tried every workaround and solution available. To no avail. I also encountered audio and video hiccups too often. I did a factory reset and things went back fine. But I feel bad it failed me. Something the humble X10 has not experienced in my two months' of ownership. Moral lesson is always backup.

6. TouchWiz UI is nothing to write home about
Review sites are unanimous in thinking that TouchWiz UI is not value-adding. I also feel that the size of font they chose makes the phone feel low-res amidst it's WVGA resolution. On my X10, the messaging app can display 9 conversations at a time. Galaxy S can only manage 7. The conversation itself can only show 3 bubbles, while the x10 manages more than 5 at a given time. Same is true with the default phonebook.

7. Samsung Galaxy S's display is protected by Gorilla Glass
Gorilla Glass is a shatter-proof and scratch-resistant material. I have not touched much if the S-AMOLED screen is directly stuck with the Gorilla Glass, but I have a feeling it is. And in case, this will be a bad thing since if you need to replace your S-AMOLED screen in the future, you will also need to replace the Gorilla Glass, which is more expensive than normal glass. But then again, you have added protection. And most likely S-AMOLED will start to fail two years after purchase, by which time you have a new phone.

8. The Swype that comes with the SGS cannot be updated on its own, it updates with your firmware updates
That's right, you cannot update it. It does not have a Market or an OTA update from Swype. Registering as a beta Swype user won't help as you will still need to delete the Swype files manually and this requires voiding your warranty. Again. What's more painful is that the Swype that is pre-installed is, I think, one of the earliest releases. Swype is supposed to be eerily accurate, but this one is just a mess--prioritizing the names in your phonebook over the proper words in the dictionary. Of course, there is a resolution to this, but again, wouldn't it have been nice if they at least update it separate from the whole firmware.

9. S-AMOLED is nice, but the green tint is icky.
The Desire has a slight rosy tint. I can live with that, but greenish tint is a different story. I'm not sure why, but it does have and at first it is not noticeable especially if you use a prominently black background, but don one with a white, and it gets all too obvious--and all the more when the brightness is a bit low. This is not much a usability issue, but it's kind of iffy for me--movie viewing is still surprisingly pleasant and immersive and if this is your only device, you won't notice it until you compare it with another device.

10. Should I get one from a Globe contract?
If you ask me, hell no. Here are the cons: 1.) The lock in period is 3 years as of this writing. 2.) For plan 999, it is yours for 15K, sounds like a bargain, right? Then again, the lock in period is 3 years not 2 and Super Plan sucks because unlimited services will go on top of your "consumable" bill. 3.) There is, apparently, a waiting list--a long one. 4.) Since it is locked to Globe, firmware updates will take longer for your phone. 5.) It is locked to Globe and resale value is slightly less. If you were to get one, get the most expensive free phone from your chosen contract price, sell that phone, and add the money to get an unlocked Galaxy S. But if you plan to stay with Globe for a long time, say 3 years, then you might as well get for a cheaper amount.

I know I seem to have written more cons than pros, but those are warnings on what you might experience when you get one--not discouragement. The device itself is capable and most of the weaknesses are just things I find worth fussing about.

Most of the times, the Galaxy feels like an expensive device with a snappy response that it is. On some occasions (lagfix installed), it will feel like a kid throwing a tantrum. A large number of bugs have been written on forums about the SGS and chances are majority of this model has those bugs. Samsung's tagline for the SGS is "Expect the best," which I suggest you to "expect the buggy" instead--like I did since it's Samsung. Lower your expectations, read up more before getting this phone and see if you can live with the its weaknesses because the strengths are very apparent and are worth enough to get this device. If you can live with occasional lag (most androids have that) and the icky green tint on the display. Also note that I've said voiding your warranty often. Granted you can boot your phone, you can always revert to the "un-voided" warranty firmware version which should help you save on charges.

Monday, December 20, 2010

Body Combat Release 46 Track List

While surfing the net last week looking for Release 45's track list, I stumbled upon Body Combat's Release 46 track list. If you know me from the gym, you would know that I have developed an addiction to Body Combat. So, if you're like me and wondering what's in store for January, read on:

1a: Teenage Dirthouse (Topmodelz Radio Edit) – Patrick McFly
1b: Black Betty – Masia
2: Shut Up & Kiss Me – Spacegliderz
3: Truly, Madly, Deeply (S&B Remix) – Cascada
4: Kalinka (Russian Hit Mix) – Captain Jack / Kalinka – Za No Za
5: Contagious – Boys Like Girls
6: Spitfire – GhostHunter
7: Braveheart 2006 – Frantic & Gammer
8: I Surrender (Hixxy Hardcore Remix) – Cadence
9: Take It Off – Ke$ha
10: Wait Till You See My Smile – Alicia Keys

Sunday, December 19, 2010

In Review: Swype


If there is anything that made me feel more comfortable about using touchscreen phones other than capacitive screen technology, it is this piece of software called Swype. Introduced in 2008 back when resistive touchscreen is still pretty popular, Swype has not received greater acceptance until 2010 when they have released more beta samples to more users and after making Swype usable by Android and lately Symbian users.

The concept of Swype is pretty simple, instead of tYPE-ing, you SWipe across the keyboard (ergo SWYPE). Like in the screenshot above, I spelled the word "money." I start on the letter m, then slide to o, then n, e, then y.

Advantages:
* Very comfortable to use with one hand on portrait mode
* Eerily accurate
* Can remember words outside of the user dictionary

Disadvantages:
* May prioritize non-dictionary words over dictionary words
* Gets confused with short words (confuses is and us, live and love, our and or, etc) which you may find annoying in the long run
* On higher versions, imports phonebook names as dictionary words and prioritizes them (there's no response from the Swype team yet)
* Still on beta mode, higher versions does not install on unsigned devices and not available for free or paid--user has to be beta-listed by the Swype team
* May feel uncomfortable on larger screens due to wider spacing when on Landscape mode
* Typing words for the first time so Swype can remember them can be a pain.

Personal Opinion:
In my two months' use of Swype, I can say that switching back to normal keyboard + auto correct has been uncomfortable. I have been dependent on Swype for most of my handheld typing. In fact, after a week's use, I scrapped any plan of getting an iPhone 4 because Swype is not yet available for it. Even on my laptop, I sometimes wish there's a technology similar for it.

Drivers will love Swype as they can type with one hand while driving with very little effort. It can be eerily accurate to the point that you won't need to check whether you are swyping the right words or not.

Now for the downsides, I have mentioned how annoying it is that Swype remembers and prioritizes the names on your phonebook. For instance, I have a contact with a surname of ONG, when I swype "OMG" the choice window pops out and gives me the choices with Ong over Omg. Sometimes it goes straight to thinking I meant Ong. And I find this terribly annoying. I have looked up on the Internet and apparently, there is no solution for it yet only workarounds.

Also, since you will be Swyping with your thumb, you will most likely end up with a sore thumb if you do this often.

Overall, I still feel that Swype does more good than harm and is game-changing.

Score: 4/5

Thursday, December 16, 2010

Switching from iOS to Android: What You May Not Know

Update Jul 2011: Read the followup article Why Switch to Android to get more insights on Android.

I have a friend who recently switched to Android coming from iOS. Like most of my friends who did the leap of faith, he came to me asking, "how come it doesn't work like this, how come it doesn't do that, iPhone does that!" His questions are coming from the common stigma of iPhone users that Android is merely a copy of the iOS which has been played by the media. If you think this way, you couldn't be more wrong.

At first, before I tried Android, I had the same idea: it should work like the iPhone, only a bit less restrictive. But to my surprise, it didn't. Sure, it was a lot less restrictive, but it's not as iPhone as I think. If you haven't tried Android and have been planning the leap of faith, feel free to read the rest of the article. Below is a quick summary of the similarities / differences:

iOSAndroid
Popular DevicesiPhone 4, iPhone 3GS, iPhone 3G, iPod Touch, iPadHTC Desire, Samsung Galaxy S, Sony Ericsson XPERIA X10, HTC Legend, HTC Hero, X10 mini/pro, LG Optimus One, Samsung Galaxy 5, Motorola Droid, Nexus One, Nexus S
Sync SoftwareiTunesManufacturer-provided PC Sync Software
TetheringYesYes, 2.2+ (or workaround app for lower versions)
Flash SupportNoYes, 2.2 +
MultitaskingYes, by pausing apps in the backgroundYes, true multitasking
Hot-Spot CapabilityNoYes, 2.2+ (or workaround for lower versions)
FoldersYes (for apps only)Yes (filesystem-wide)
Copy and PasteYesYes
Video ChatNative support (only on iPhone 4 hardware or tweaks on 3GSYes (manufacturer-provided)
BooksSupport for iBooks to download and read digital books.Available only through add-on apps.
MusicAvailable through iTunes; automatic syncing with desktop iTunes. Streaming music only supported through apps.Built-in ability to play MP3 files, but no syncing with your desktop music. Streaming music available via add-on apps.
Apps300,000 iPhone apps100,000 Android apps
EmailUnified inbox (one inbox for all accounts), threaded messagingNo unified inbox, threaded messaging via Gmail
Claim to FameSilky smooth operation, there's an app for anything, casual gaming platform, iTunes integrationOS is updated every 6 months, Very flexible and customizable user experience, support from dozens of mobile phone manufacturers and thus more choices of models

FAQ

How come my Android's interface is not as silky smooth as the iPhone's
Well, this might sound like making excuses but there are several factors: 1.) Android has true multitasking unlike the iOS which pauses or kills applications when not needed. Android multitasks and keeps each app alive unless you signal your device to terminate it. 2.) iOS is designed specifically for Apple's hardware, each procedure and call matches and is optimized to work with the hardware inside your iPhone, whereas Android is very generalized to work with different hardwares--which gives you choices and thus we have cheaper to ridiculously expensive Android phones.

How do I install apps from my PC to my Android Phone
To answer that question: you can't. Android does not have a syncing software to sync your stuff from pc to phone. Everything is done via the Android Market on your device. The stuff you download or buy is remembered by your Google account in case your phone gets lost or the SD card gets broken. But the data is forever gone unless you have backed it up via your preferred Android phone backup app.

Update: You now can do this by visiting market.android.com. Just choose the app, click install, and lo and behold, as soon as your phone connects, the app downloads the app.

What is this fragmentation I hear about?
It is the way the Android Market is broken because of the inordinate number of available combinations of device hardware, screen resolution, and OS version. That is to say that not all apps will work with your Android phone and this is a big pain for the developers (imagine having to write your app so that it works for versions 1.6, 2.1, 2.2, 2.3, 3.0, and then you have to make it fit the HVGA, HWVGA, WVGA, VGA, FWVGA screens, and then you need to make sure it will run amidst the device not having a GPU or having 600MHz CPU only, you get the point). This is somewhat the reason why developers are hesitant to port their stuff to Android: the tedious testing and making sure it works not only with popular devices kind of leaves them rethinking.

How come my friend's phone is on Froyo and I'm stuck on Donut?
Well, you are using a Sony Ericsson device. LOL. That or you don't know how to update. Because Android has been designed to work with any hardware, we have lots of manufacturers in the scene and each manufacturer makes their own tweaks and choices of hardware and drivers which needs to be modified for each OS version to work properly with their choices of hardware and software tweaks. And that update takes time and money. That's why Motorola's devices are stuck on 2.1 and Sony Ericsson had a hard time moving from 1.6 to 2.1.

Update: Sony Ericsson has now moved to 2.1 and is expecting to release 2.3.3 for their X10 users come August 2011. Motorola is the one who's behind the times now, Hello, XT720.

What is the iTunes equivalent on Android?
There is none. But here is where the manufacturers do their jobs. As far as I know, it is only Sony Ericsson that has a paid music service that allows you to download music and pay for them a la iTunes. This service is called PlayNow. Samsung, HTC, and Motorola, as far as I know, does not have any. Apps are downloadable via the Android market.

Why doesn't my FB notify me when I have a notification in my Android, it does in iPhone?
For one, the FB app on Android is different from the one in iPhone. I haven't read up on iPhone but I guess The iPhone FB has push notifications via listeners--small codes that retrieve data from their servers. On Android, the whole app needs to run to get you the notifications. Or at least that's what experience tells me. I haven't read up on this.

Update: Android users with Froyo (2.2) and above are now treated to push notifications from the facebook app.

So who's winning, Apple or Google?
Apple has more iOS devices if you count the iPod Touch and the iPad. Strictly speaking these are not phones. Android sales only count devices approved by Google and the Galaxy Tab. Strictly speaking that does not count the OEM devices and the oPhones produced in China and other Android devices not licensed by Google. Apple slightly wins over Google, if you add iPod Touch and iPad to the count, but Google wins by a wide if you take them out (blame it on the iPhone's price).

Samsung Kies sucks.
I know, right?!

Update (Jul 2011): It still sucks.

Update (Jul 2011): Apparently, people have been reading this post quite often so I am working on a thorough update for this and a follow-up post on "Why should I move to Android?" that should highlight reasons to switch to Android from iOS or Symbian or RIM. Click here to read reasons Why you should switch to Android.

If you have any more questions, feel free to post them on the comments section. :D

Tuesday, December 14, 2010

Samsung Galaxy S General Impressions



After two weeks of heavy use and scrutiny on the Galaxy S (a week on 2.1 and another on 2.2), I have collected my likes and dislikes for this phone. On paper, this phone beats my X10 almost spec-per-spec (multitouch, 16M colors, S-AMOLED screen, 512MB RAM), but on practice, there’s a different story going on. Read on for the preview of the clash of the beauties.

Likes

  • Best in class 4” S-AMOLED screen
  • Useful pre-loaded apps: Task Manager, Office Editor, Swype, Aldiko eBook, File Manager, Asphalt 5, Mini Diary, etc.
  • Special mention to the capable de facto Video Player and Music Player
  • Access to updateable Swype text input
  • Access to Android Market Apps and Samsung Apps (which includes Dictionary, Vlingo, etc)
  • Fast loading 5 MP camera
  • Front-facing VGA camera for video calls on Swype and YM
  • Access to Froyo (2.2) and Gingerbread in the future
  • Nice integration of phonebook and social network accounts
  • Access to beautiful live wallpapers—some Samsung made
  • Workarounds if you don't like the stock solutions
  • FM radio
  • Feels good in hand
  • Sliding door USB hatch
  • Loudspeaker really loud
  • Fast operation after lagfix

Dislikes

  • 16M color screen still dithers
  • Greenish tint on the S-AMOLED display
  • Laggy performance before lag fix, occasional hiccups occur
  • Video player skips, same with music player
  • TouchWiz UI does not really add value
  • Samsung widgets can’t be used on custom homescreens (LauncherPro, etc)
  • UI uses too many big fonts which results in less info being displayed at a time and a low-res looking device
  • Very generic body design, no premium look at all, makes the phone feel cheap
  • Plastic is a fingerprint magnet
  • 5MP camera is not very good, especially at low-lit environment since it does not have a flash
  • Back and menu soft key may hamper an otherwise good user experience
  • Freezes and hangs occasionally
  • Audio reproduction feels too clunky
  • Suspect buggy software

Galaxy S over X10

  • Android 2.2 and possible access to 2.3
  • S-AMOLED display
  • FM radio
  • Faster operation after lagfix, though suffers occasional hiccups
  • Dozens of supported video and audio codecs makes it the perfect pocket theatre
  • Updateable official Swype
  • Better out-of-the-box apps & content (notification tones)
  • Multitouch support
  • Better voice calls without headset
  • Overall better internet experience because of Flash lite and multitouch support
  • 512 MB RAM is more than X10’s 384MB

X10 over Galaxy S

  • Less dithering amidst 65K color limit
  • Little to no ergonomics issue because of the hardware buttons used
  • Classier looking
  • More stable, rarely freezes, hangs and restarts on its own
  • Better out of the box experience (little to no modification required)
  • More usable and classy UI
  • Better audio reproduction
  • Better camera and video
So it’s blazing speed versus stability here, with Galaxy S and X10 picking one trait over the other. I can’t help but fall in love with S-AMOLED and some more fluidity offered by SGS on Froyo. Then again, the going gets rough when the pretty thing hiccups, and that destroys the fun. I can’t also help but be enchanted with X10’s good looks and fluid UI overlay, which in turn does not perform well on videos and still serves a soon-to-be-moldy Éclair which does not do justice for the intensive apps (cough Timescape cough) it runs.

Sunday, December 12, 2010

Pick of the Week #5

This week's pick of the week comes from Indie artist Feist. The video for My Moon, My Man is taken in one continuous shot. Amusing, right?

Wednesday, December 8, 2010

Food Review: Happy Lemon




I haven't done this in a long while, so let's get to the specifics.

Location: Greenhills Promenade Mall (Mallfront) besides Starbucks and Coffee Bean
Concoctions: Tea, Coffee
Type of Service: Pay and Wait
Target Market: Yuppies, Tea and Coffee Drinkers, Chinese
Price Range: 75 pesos to 150 pesos~

This place is very curious. It is situated in between Starbucks and Coffee Bean and Tea Leaf, seemingly unafraid of competition. What does it have to offer, a lot you haven't tasted anywhere yet. Not to mention the smiling insignia of the Lemon Boy. In a sense, the place does not look serious at all, as if all is fun and happy. Thus, Happy Lemon.

What they offer in Happy Lemon is nothing but beverage, however. No pastries and stuff. Service is currently running under a DRY RUN warning when I got here. But given the competition, they offer a unique menu: some of the most peculiar drinks I've noticed have Rock Salt and Cheese, or Seaweed Jelly in them. This really calls for a try out.

Offerings
On my first visit, I played it safe and had the Choco Cream Puff Milk tea priced at 85 pesos. This is a reasonable price and comparable to Bubble Tea's prices before they decided to commit suicide by shooting their prices up to as much as 125. How was it? Really good. It is milk tea with distinction.

The second one I had was the Blood Orange Iced Tea with Seaweed Jelly. Sounds peculiar and tastes pretty odd, too. It is a bit on the sour side and not one for my liking.

On my third visit, I had me a Rock Salt and Cheese concoction. The waitress was instructive enough to tell me not to use a straw and I didn't. This, my friends, is heaven priced at 90 bucks. Seriously, if you want to know what heaven is like, this is the cheapest you can get. My appreciation was too much that after finishing my first cup, I bought another one.



Service
As I mentioned, service is on a dry run but was nonetheless fine. Use of credit card was not possible yet, but I didn't mind as I don't swipe anything less than a hundred bucks, really. The service crews are pleasant and knowledgeable of what they sell and are even to a point instructive and too happy.

Over-all rating
Bubble Tea was my once most favorite Tea stop. Then it had to die by shooting its prices high above into Starbucks territory. They're still up and running, but wouldn't wonder if they die in two years. Happy Lemon seems a viable and fun alternative. Everything here seems Happy. Their claim to having the world's yummiest drinks is no joke and I give them that.

4 out of 5.


Samsung Wave Review Part 2: Internet, email, apps and multimedia, special features, conclusion

Here it is, guys: Part two of the much delayed Samsung Wave review. This covers Internet, email, apps, special features, and conclusion. I'm so sorry I've been so busy with work and at the same time down with the bug, it's only now I found the time to actually finish this. Hope this review would still help. Holidays are here!

Internet
This is where bada falls completely short. While the internet browser does support flash seamlessly, it has a lot of shortcomings. First up, you might not be able to forgive it if it can only open one tab at a time. Shall you brave to open another, you risk running out of memory and bada will close your widgets on your homescreen. When that happens, you might end up having an empty homescreen and needing to reset again. I particularly dislike this behavior so I often just end up with one tab opened at a time.

You might also find another troubling behavior when your transfer speeds slow down. While loading the page, you might end up getting a message that the page you are trying to download is too large and that you have ran out of memory instead of just stopping page render like most browsers.

Pinch zooming is supported though. You will find this feature very useful as you will only need to pinch the page. Text reflow however is poorly implemented and may cause you some minor inconvenience.

The web browser for bada is called Dolfin. This is very different from the android brewed Dolphin browser.

Overall, I call the internet experience in bada / wave lightweight. If you have tried iOS internet or high-end android internet, you will be scratching your head with the the wave's execution.

Email
You can have as many email accounts as you like although I'm not sure if it's me or the browser, but I can't seem to have more than one gmail account registered as I have a gmail account logged in there.

Upon registering an account, wave will download your 50 most recent emails. Every time you ask the email client to download emails, it will download exactly 50 emails, regardless of their age.

That would have been just fine if you can tick "set all emails as read" but as it stands, you cannot. You will have to open each email to have them marked as read. This is something I find pretty annoying. There isn't even a link or button to mark the email as read without opening them.

Also, since you have new unread messages, there will always be a new email icon on the notification bar, which basically just stays there unless you've cleared your inbox. Luckily, when a new message arrives this gets hidden in favor of the new message notification.

There is also no unified inbox experience, which is an opportunity missed. UNIFIED INBOX means all your email accounts messages is collected in one inbox. Not sure if you will find this good or bad: Bad because you would need to switch accounts to check mails. Good since you won't have your stuff mixed up. But for me, I'm all for unified inbox.

Over-all likes: Pinch to zoom is very useful, browser supports flash
Over-all dislikes: No unified inbox, you would need to switch email accounts. Text reflow is not very well done, laggy internet experience, need to open each email to be marked as read

Apps & Multimedia
From what I see before I left bada, its apps have a plausible future. Right now, there are a handful of games that feature 3d graphics and promising game play. There aren't that many games yet, but the ones available are bound to keep you busy while waiting for new ones.

Apps
As much as I have loved some games in bada, I was also pretty disappointed with some. For starters, the apps for twitter and fb are severely underpowered. In the facebook app, you can't chat with your facebook friends, like in ios. Managing your inbox is also such a chore, and you don't get notifications. I was told that the notifications for facebook should appear on my phone's notification panel, but I've never experienced that. The twitter client in the other hand does not allow you to reply on your mentions. Their lack of functionality always sees me switching to mobile web versions. I believe both the twitter and fb clients are made by samsung themselves and only sanctioned by fb and twitter.

I also downloaded a "stress-relieving game" that takes a picture from your library and places it on a caricature body that you can poke and bully. Once the app starts searching your sd card, your phone either loses all of its ram, which closes all the widgets in your homescreen, or the app just closes. You can't choose phone memory pictures only, the app can't be configured. Not exactly stress relieving.

Multimedia
This is where The Wave recovers grace and makes itself such a worthy purchase. For 19K and going lower, you get a 3.3" S-AMOLED screen with a WVGA screen resolution (800 by 480). Videos and movies will love this phone. S-AMOLED offers the best sunlight legibility and color vibrance / contrast.



Camera
Let's take the camera first. Typical Samsung smartphone 5MP camera is installed on this phone, as such, it misses out a few pixels--compared to the industry standard present in the iPhone 4. This simplye boggles me as this is the same camera sample size they've used since the OMNIA i900. This is also the module installed on the Galaxy S, I presume, though the one on the Wave will inevitably perform better due to a LED flash affixed on the unit.

Pictures taken by the Wave looks nice especially when viewed on the phone, but transferring them to the PC will make them lose contrast and color, this is because the PC I am and most people are using is equipped with an LCD and not an LED screen. On print, the pictures are estimated to take more contrast. This makes the Wave a good testing tool for photographers. Instead of rushing to print the picture you've post-produced, it is a good idea to send them first to your Wave or any S-AMOLED device to test how you've done with your photos' contrasts--as this is most likely how the contrast would appear on print. Unfortunately, color reproduction on the Wave is a bit too exaggerated, so practice caution if you are to use to check for color.

The user interface is very friendly and familiarly Samsung. The one feature I like most is the tap to focus. Just tap anywhere to focus and press the hardware shutter key to take the picture. Taking pictures is also fast, the camera starts up fast and breaks in-between shots are also short.

If I have any complains on the Wave's camera, it is the loss of detail when you take pictures on dimly lit occasions. Turning on the flash does not help either as it drowns your targets with too much LED flash. Otherwise, it is a top-notch 5 MP camera with a fast start-up and focusing time.

Video
The video recorder can take a 720p video, which is the most high-res you can get these days. This is a unique feature for the price range the Wave is at. Normally at this price rate, video recording can only go as high as VGA at 30 fps. You may however want to note that the video is, be it 720p does not go higher than 24 fps. This is acceptable, though marketed wrongly. Continuous auto focus like on the Vivaz and the X10 is not here though, just the normal focus.





Multimedia: Music Player
As per a test conducted by Mobile Review, audio playback on the wave is not top-notch, though by my judging, it is pretty average--not the best solution but decent enough and introspecting, there are some sounds I can hear on the X10 that was not audible on the Wave. Sure that might seem like a cause for alert, but nothing really serious or deal-breaking in magnitude.

The Music Player UI is very intuitive and mimics much of what has been done on iDevices, at portrait it is your standard music player, stuffed with the usual next, previous, play/pause, loop and shuffle controls. It has, interesting enough, a toggle for 5.1 ch, which makes for something good on video playback but not much on music playback. Flipping it to landscape will give you a similar coverflow interface, only instead of cover flow, it will give you a disc flow. Yep, disc flow: discs that feature the cover art on your stuff. It looks fun, especially how smooth it all runs, but just like Apple's cover flow, I don't find it very useful unless I want to play a whole album. I must commend the music player interface as it does the mimicry so well that the intreface won't alienate.

Time for some bad news, I've tested it time and again even after I updated my software, the music shuffle is very much like Sony Ericsson's. This means that certain tracks are repeated and some are omitted in favor of the repeated tracks. This kind of poor shuffle algorithm really puzzles me.

As I also mentioned earlier, the music player can also be toggled to play, stop, or skip the track by pulling down the notification bar. Same thing works for the FM radio--which is basically just an FM radio so I won't delve into it anymore.

Video Player
If anything, the extensive video playback capability built into the Wave really makes it feel such and expensive device, aside from the already mentioned brushed steel body. This thing supports almost all known codec to man, including Matroska (.mkv), albeit still needs some polishing. The only thing it doesn't play are Apple codecs, which we can assume is because to Apple's policies on its codecs.

The overall experience here quite differs from the iPhone/iPod Touch in a sense that the video player can only remember a bookmark for one video unless you create a bookmark for it, which is available under options. Another useful functionality is the Mosaic Search which is unique to the Wave (not even Samsung's Galaxy S has this)--this nifty feature scans the whole movie / video you are playing and gives you scenes taken from the scan--kind of like chapters on a DVD film. Thing is, the Mosaic rendering takes more than ten seconds and once you click on the mosaic and realized that is not the one scene you want to see and you go on to do the mosaic search again, your Wave will need to re-render the mosaics, which is quite a waste and, for me, defeats the thought of making it easier for you to search.

The video player also offers on-board changing of brightness and color temperature (warm will give it a reddish tint, neutral, and cool will give it a bluish tint). The video player, unlike the one in Galaxy S, does play at portrait mode, which is kind of pointless.

Another nifty feature of the video player is how you can "lock" the keys of your phone, meaning, video playback will ensue, but the keys are locked so you can't accidentally exit the film in case you press a key by accident.

Over-all likes: Lovable video playing capabilities that supports dozens of popular codecs, key-lock mode, familiar iPod like interface, nifty music dropdown on the notification bar
Over-all dislikes: Mosaic search could have been better, treble-y music playback needs a rework

Other features
Before we wrap up this review, let me mention some special features that make the Wave a standout among the smartphone crowd or totally screws it up:

1. Etiquette pause - This is much like HTC's face down to mute function, though I've seen this first on Samsung back in the Omnia days. This is very nifty during meetings and times you don't want to be disturbed much.

2. Bluetooth 3.0 and Wifi b/g/n - This is worth noting down as these are the latest connectivity modules available on the market and Wave has them. Bluetooth 3.0 ensures better bluetooth device connectivity and wifi n gives you faster data transfer across a wifi network.

3. Samsung Kies - is a mixed bag. For one, it is quite slow and buggy--the forgivable kind, and can be totally bypassed unless you are installing apps. For another, it is very helpful when transferring media. Upon sensing that you are transferring stuff that your phone can't play, it will offer to convert it, and this saves much time.

4. A detailed manual - Samsung spent time on their manual to make it easy for you to familiarize with bada, though I skipped reading this since I have learned much about the interface by reading the reviews anyways, I find their manual very nice, organized, and informative.

5. Mobile AP - Here you can turn your phone into a mobile router and share your 3G internet connection to 3 other devices. Nifty, right? And is also a complete rip-off of a Froyo functionality, but is a very welcome addition.

Conclusion
Samsung built a baby Galaxy S under the guise of the Samsung Wave. As this is their initial offering for their homegrown smartphone OS effort, they gave it the best care and hardware they could. Come on, 1 GHz Hummngbird CPU, A GPU that produces 90 Million triangles a minute, the best screen technology available, and that sleek metal body--sounds like a cheap deal for PHP19K.

On the software side of things, they incorporated good bits from Android, iOS, and even Symbian to create a smartphone for the masses. bada's goal is to be the smartphone OS for everybody. It does not aim to please the techies; in idea, it competes with the iPhone which is basically--as it is now--the smartphone for everyone with money but what about those who don't? Here is where the Wave beams to everyone, wooing customers by offering the best bang for the buck. Samsung did this by offering a familiar experience and giving it some dash of conveniences not found on the iPhone. And I think at some points they did well, though fail at some points, too.

I would have to criticize the choice of UI fonts and interface color. I think this was mainly done to showcase how S-AMOLED can display real blacks which is really just showing off already. The 1000 messages cap doesn't seem like a dealbreaker in paper, but does well to surprise you how much crippling it is.

On the hardware side of things, the button layout and body design kind of makes me question Samsung's taste. To me, it is still Sony Ericsson who does the best body design by sticking to minimalism--which is were most manufacturers are going these days, the less buttons, the better, and the Wave here looks like it's stuck in mid-2000s with all those buttons and tacky design.

Would I recommend the Wave? Hell yeah, but only if you have not used Android. iPhone users are welcome to try it and they will feel as if they've never left home, although the missing apps would suck, they would have to wait for the app store to grow, unfortunately. People leaving the feature phone arena will feel empowered by the Wave, but don't get carried away, it is still the least flexible among the smartphone OS's around. But with Samsung's continuous success and domination, the future seems bright for bada. And keeping your Wave for two years does not seem like such a bad thing in the end, you would get everything you need from it with software updates coming in a stream that helps keep your phone feeling brand new.