Tag Archives: android

Google Pixel 第一天實戰測試

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望穿秋水,終於等到Google Pixel寄到。我是Google手機的忠實擁躉,先後擁有平價王Nexus 5,和Mo記大機Nexus 6。三叔,小米那些不是純正統血的Andriod,只有Google原味版才是正宗。開盒報告不用我寫,網上有很多影片可以看。有趣是跟機有兩條USB-C線,一條兩邊都是USB-C頭,用來插叉電器,另一條是舊USB-A大頭,用來插電腦。有一舊細USB-A to USB-C dongle,說明書是用來駁iPhone條lighting線,讓iPhone用家可以一鍵把資料轉到Pixel上。盒內沒有耳機,其實那些跟電話的平價耳機大部份是垃圾,家中堆了不少,Google索性不送,一來可以省成本,二來減少癈物,夠環保。

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開機亳無驚喜,與其他Andriod機一樣,登入Google賬戶,自動把你用開的apps裝過來。我買細芒32GB最平價的型號,夠用就可以了。我喜歡五吋機,大機放入褲袋梗著不舒服。以前用Nexus時,大部份storage都是用來裝相片和影片,Pixel送無限Google Drive相片和影片原size儲存,除非長時間offline才需要128GB。雖說是32GB機,但除去OS後,還有27GB左右。我部Nexus跌爛了後,用了先後用了兩台16GB的平價Andriod機(Moto E2和Samsung某平價型號),完全滿足到日常工作需要,只是沒有空間安裝遊戲,電話不能打機。我不是重度手機遊戲玩家,同一時間只會玩一兩個遊戲,玩完就刪,32GB夠用有餘。

昨晚安裝好apps後,沒有什麼時間測試。今天如常用了一天,早上七點斷電,整天正常用量,開車時聽下Spotify,無聊時上網,正常用量講幾個電話,不過影了好多相測試功能,又成日玩OK Google語音助手,五點回家還有50%電。與我以前的電話比較,部Nexus 6很大食,用一日只剩30-40%,而四吋芒的Moto E2非常省電,用一日還有70%,Pixel中中間間,不算很大食,但亦不是省電。網上廣告主打的Google Assistant,老實說我不覺得有什麼特別,不就是上一代的Google Now換了新衣,以前好用現在一樣好用,新功能不用開機都可以聽指令就真係幾方便。

Pixel的賣點只有一個,就是部相機非常強勁,冠絕所有Andriod機,同iPhone7可以一較高下,所以與iPhone7同價亦非無道理。電腦雜誌甚至給Pixel相機的評分比iPhone7還高幾分,不過我就看不出有什麼分別。天朗氣清影靜態畫面,任何中價手機以上沒有分別。Pixel的相機勁在,低光暗的環壞下,拍出的照片非常清晰。第一張相是昨晚隨手影阿仔的Lego,客廳沒有開大燈,只有一盞LED裝飾燈,暗到看書都看不到,影出來顏色很清楚。第二張相是返工地下停車場影,影出來的效果與其他手機拍戶外差不多。最後一張是放工停紅燈,見到運車車覺得有趣,拿起手機便拍,打開相機app和快門都非常快,用以前的手機架車走了個app都未load完。另外一秒十二張HDR連環快拍超強,按著個相機製便擦擦聲不停拍,張張都拍得非常清楚,不過拍完後感覺到部機有點暖,因為HDR要用很多CPU。

Pixel值不值得買?如你好似我,是Google的死忠,一定要買。如果你用開Android機又有錢,這部是最好沒有第二的Android機,好過用會爆炸的三叔,唔知有冇偷你資料的大陸機。果粉當然一定不會買,Pixel目前還未目超越iPhone的必殺技,不過下個月Daydream出街,有可能靠VR一起蘋果尾注。至於不介意手機OS用什麼的朋友,通街都係iPhone亳無新意,出部Pixal可以扮hi-tech友以示與眾不同,至少別人問你點解買Andriod機,不用答因為買不起iPhone咁失禮。

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Nexus 5

My old first generation Samsung Galaxy S is at the end of its life, it is so slow that it becomes unusable. I have been waiting for the new Nexus 5 since rumors shows up in the summer. The Nexus 5 exactly fit my need. a no-frill unlock phone at a very reasonable price. The hardware specification of Nexus 5 is comparable to flagship phone from Samsung, HTC or Sony, but it’s almost $200 cheaper. The best of all, I know I will always have the latest Android OS update.

When Google announced Nexus 5 on Halloween, I ordered it once it is available on the Play Store. I believe my order is one of the first shipment. I got my Nexus 5 last Friday. Before I had my new phone, I already read tons of review on the web, so nothing comes up as surprise since I know exactly what to expect. The phone has the fastest CPU in the market, it runs very fast compare to my old Captivate, but I couldn’t tell much speed difference from my Nexus 7.

The battery capacity is not as big as Samsung or HTC, but good enough. On the first day after I got the phone, I unplugged it at 7am and it runs out of juice around 6pm after of a full day almost non-stop use. Today is a normal work day, I left the WiFi and LTE enabled, made a few phone calls, go online a little bit during breaks, and I still 70% of battery at the end of the day. No bad.

The major disadvantage of Nexus 5 is the camera. It is good, but not great. Definitely not as good as other flagship photos. The optical image stabilizer works well when you are taking still photos and try to hold your hand steady, but it not so useful if you are taking action shot. The auto-focus is very slow, can’t really capture my son’s movement fast enough. I read on the web it is a software problem, so hopefully it will be fixed in the next update.

I don’t see any special feature of Android 4.4 KitKat. Google changed the home screen again, and make it fully integrated with Google Now. I can say “OK Google” to the phone under home screen and it will start Google Now automatically, no need to press any button. I think it is more like a gimmick and it only works on English(US), not even English(Canada). Does “OK Google” sounds very different in Canada compare to the States? I really miss the customization enhancement of the Cyanogenmod, I am so used to the short cut icons on the lock screen and configurable docks screen in the launcher. The true gem of Android 4.4 is the ART compiler hidden under developer features, which runs much faster than the Dalvik pre-compiler in other Android. Too bad that it crashes WhatsApp, so I can’t turn it on until WhatsApp fix the problem.

The lack of a SD-card slot is always a sore point in Nexus line of devices. But base on my previous experience with my old Captivate, which has support SD-card, I probably won’t miss it that much given that I ordered the 32GB model. The internal memory is more than enough for photos and mp3. After 3 years of use, I didn’t even fill up the internal 16GB of memory of my old phone. The external SD-card ends up being used as a dump for mp3s that I rarely listen and too lazy to delete. The only scenario I would ever need more storage space is storing movies during flight, but I can always solve the problem by using an OTG-USB SD card reader.

Overall, I am very happy with my new Nexus 5, but it is not a phone for everyone. It lacks the bells and whistles of Samsung or HTC, it is not an exciting phone, it is just a plain work horse phone. It totally does not make sense to get a subsidize Nexus 5 from the carrier and lock yourself into a 2 years contract. The last bit of dilemma of owning a Nexus 5 is about to flash or not to flash, that is the question. Since I am always getting the new OS upgrade, I don’t have a need to flash the phone. On the other hand, I do miss the enhancement of other customer ROM. I guess I just need to find a way to install launcher and lock slider from Cyanogenmod without replacing the OS. I tried install the launcher from CM10.2, which is based on Android 4.3, but it does not work well, it crash when I tried to configure the screen size.  I guess I have to wait until CM11 is released and try again.

Nexus 7 (2013)

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Finally the wait is over, I bought my first tablet. I’ve been waiting for the right one for over a year, I want a tablet with powerful specification and yet at a reasonable price. The iPad is way over my budget, and I don’t like the gimmicky line-up from Samsung. The first Nexus 7 almost meet my requirements, but I want a better display and a more powerful CPU.

The new Nexus 7 is just the right answer. It has higher pixel density than Apple’s retina display, the same resolution as my 24″ monitor. The CPU is top of the line quad core Qualcomm processor, on par with the flag ship smartphones like Galaxy s4 or HTC one. I bought the 16G model since the 32G model is not yet available in Canada, and lack of a micro slot is probably the biggest down side of the nexus 7. I intend to use it mostly at home, where I can stream files directly from my computer, so I am not very concern about the storage size. When I am traveling, I am get an USB cable and use external thumb drive, it is not very elegant but it works fine.

I pre-order my Nexus 7 from Bestbuy.ca and I got my tablet delivered right on July 30th, the first day that the Nexus 7 is on sale. (It already sold out, for now) I ready have an Android phone, so setting up the Nexus 7 is pretty straight forward. Log into my Google account and all my existing apps are downloaded and installed automatically. The tablet is up and running within 10 minutes. It feels just like my old phone, except it runs much smoother and has a bigger screen. I can’t tell anything real different in the new Android 4. , in fact I miss those little handy customization of Cyanogenmod 10.1, such as lock screen shortcuts, scrollable dock bar, etc.

The Nexus 7 lacks the wow factor, when I show it off to my colleagues, their comment is yet another Android tablet. My wife is not impressed by its relatively small size, she thinks only a 10″ iPad is a real tablet. It seems the only person fascinated by the Nexus 7 is baby Marcus, he prefer it over my old Android phone and mom’s iPhone 5, probably just because the Nexus 7 is bigger. I am quite happy with my new tablet, I don’t have to sit in front of the computer to surf the web or watch video. I am actually writing this blog using the tablet lying on the sofa. Typing with the on screen keyboard is not as fast as using a real keyboard, but good enough for light usage.

I am looking for a few accessories for my Nexus 7. First I need case and cover if I want to carry it with me outside of the house. Then I need to get a Bluetooth keyboard, so I can replace my laptop for simple note taking or writing tasks. Last I want to get a USB docking station to charge the tablet on my desk.

Tasker for Android

Tasker is the most powerful app in Android. It is a GUI base script engine for Android. User can performs different actions based on different trigger events, pretty much anything that the Android OS supports. With Tasker, you write a small script in 2 minutes which pretty much does the job of a silly app that costs $2.

Here are example some useful scripts idea for example. The phone can read the WiFi status to figure out I am at work and turn down the ringer volume. The phone will turn off 3G data and WiFi when the screen is off to save power, yet still kick off auto-sync every 30 minutes with data connection. Whenever I plug in the headphone, the phone will pop up a menu let me select which music player to launch and auto-play the music.

Here is the best script I have created so far. In case I lost my phone, I can sent an SMS to my phone. It will turn on GPS, get its location, use Google Map to convert GPS data into human readable address and send it back to me via SMS.

With Tasker, I can turn my phone into a fully automated personal assistant. In fact Tasker is the app that set Android apart from iPhone and represent the difference in design philosophy between iPhone and Android. Apple spoon feed iPhone user but never let them step outside of the fence. Google gives average Android users a phone close enough to iPhone, but it allows power users fully customize his phone to make it fun and productive. Once you had experienced the freedom and power of Android, you will never go back to iPhone.

Mountek MK5000 CD Slot Mount

After I bought my Android smart phone, it is naturally that I am going to play mp3 and navigate with the built-in GPS when I am driving. Therefore I need to buy a phone mount to hold the smart phone inside the car. There are only two types of phone mount in the market, suction cup that sticks to the wind shield or flimsy clips that clips on to the air ventilation. I am not happy with both solutions, the former one blocks my view and the later one blocks the wind.

I did some search on eBay and Google and come across this one of its kind phone mount, the Mountek MK5000 that mounts on the CD slot. Since I no longer use the CD player, the space in front of CD player is pretty useless. It is the perfect place to mount my smart phone. It does not block anything other than the useless CD player. The MK5000 phone mount is very sturdy, it has an adjustable blade than I can slide inside the CD slot and lock it tight. The mount support vertical and horizontal rotation for easy screen rotation. It has spring loaded adjustable arms that fits devices of different size.

I have been using the mount for a couple of months and it works very well. Every day when I hop into my car, I place my smart phone onto the mount. The only disadvantage of the mount is its price. A cheap made-in-China phone mount costs less than $10, sometimes you can even get one as low as $5. The Mountek MK5000 is currently selling for $20 at eBay. Although it is more expensive, the design and the quality of the product worth the premiums price.