Have you ever had that moment, where, in researching for something for your work, whatever field you are in, you come across an article so interesting but you really have to file it for later? Because reading it will consume precious time that you could use to just finish your job so you can go home and read all you like?
This is how I frequently feel. Oftentimes, in doing my work research, I come across juicy blog or website articles that would have been helpful to me: for my work or for my personal development. But the catch is that I may have time to read those ONLY during weekends, or for those long bus rides with nothing else to do but wait till your bus gets to wherever you need to go.
So, the solution is to be able to "pack" juicy links and save them for later.
For those who are working in companies with firewalls, or with security protocols like a "zero flash drive policy," I'm sure you could relate. For those who won't be able to save links on the work computer, it may be best if you can find a way to read your bookmarks and links from your Android or e-Reader when you've gotten off work.
Here are some solutions on how you can sync your article finds with your Android/e-Reader:
Use Opera And Opera Link: If you are browser-agnostic, meaning you don't really care which browser you use, then use Opera and use Opera Mini on your Android. Then, activate your Opera Link account, from the Android Opera Mini browser by going to: Opera Button > Settings Button > Opera Link > then proceed to create a new account.
This is better illustrated in this slideshow:
Then, after you configure your Android, this is what you do with your Opera desktop browser:
Click the Cloud icon to enable Opera Synchronization.
Alternatively, you may enable Opera Link through the Menu:
Go through the process, either create a new account or sign into an existing one:
When Opera registers that account with the desktop browser, voila! Your browser accounts are now synchronized.
You may do this either either way: set up your Android first, or your desktop browser first.
Then, when you find something interesting, just add it to your Opera Mini Bookmarks folder, as shown below:
And when you're on your Android, just logoff then login to sync your data right that moment. Opera regularly syncs its data, but if you want to refresh the synchronization, the best way to do it would be to turn it on and off.
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Use GMail To Send Links To And From Yourself: I find this a little clunky, something über un-techie, but this is faster to do, especially if your company allows you to use GMail. Less awkward if your company will only allow you to use MS Outlook.
Whenever you find a good link to read later, paste in the body of the email, send to yourself, or if from MS Outlook, your work email to your GMail, then later, refresh your Android, find that email you sent to yourself and read in your browser of choice. That simple.
Still, if you want a visual representation of what I talked about, here it is:
Note: If you have inadvertently set defaults for your browser, you may clear it by going to Settings > Manage Applications > Browser/Opera/Dolphin/Whatever has the default > Scroll down to Launch by default > Clear Defaults:
Google Chrome To Phone:
Just when I thought we'd have to live with kludges for integrating the links we find to read on our Androids, Google actually came up with THE solution to the problem: a whole app dedicated to integrating content from desktop browser to Android Phone.
However, there's a catch: this app is not available in the Philippines yet! So if you're looking for this in Google Play via your Android, good luck to you; you won't find it. You will only be able to see it on the desktop/web version of Google Play.
So meanwhile, our other suggestions may suffice.
Enjoy reading!
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Yesterday, I posted the process of rooting and
modding that I went through with my Cherry Mobile Nova Android. Now this
is my review of the Firetrap Lollipop, a modification of the Android 2.2 Froyo.
The Android, just as a backtrack, is a custom OS built for mobile devices, but based on the Open Source code of Linux. Linux, on the other hand, is another OS from the Unix
family of Operating Systems. The advantage of Linux over proprietary
OS’ is the fact that it’s offered free and it’s perfectly legal to copy
it, modify it to the developer’s purposes, and distribute it, whether
for free or for a fee, after the customizations, of course. A whole
industry has been built around creating a unique Linux distribution or
“distro” and it’s been awesome to see how companies have innovated upon the original source code.
Andy Rubin,
the developer/founder of the Android, took the Linux Source Code,
modified it to suit mobile devices, pitched to then got absorbed by
Google, and they offered up the Android, completely free and perfectly
fine for phone OEMs to customize and use as their phones’ OS.
And that, Android Alliance Ph friends,
is the reason why a Samsung Android will look slightly different from a
Cherry Mobile, HTC, or Motorola Android. And that is also the reason
why we have a whole slew of custom Android ROMs, customized for Android
users, by other, geekier Android users.
Now, for my thoughts on Firetrap Lollipop, the distro I used for rooting and modding my Cherry Mobile Nova Android phone:
I thought it was a Gingerbread distro, so I was wondering why the Settings menu text were still on a monochromatic color scheme. The Samsung Galaxy Y’s
rendition of Gingerbread had its menus on a more colorful theme and I
didn’t like it. I was happy to see a Gingerbread that was monochromatic.
But it’s a Froyo distro, so, bummer. And that explains why it’s
monochromatic. When I finally change the OS again and this time to
Gingerbread, I will let you know if the distro I used will be colorful.
In the meantime, as far as I can tell from the official Gingerbread release page,
the menus look like they’re supposed to be monochromatic. Therefore,
Samsung has an awful sense of style for its Samsung Galaxy Y. Just
sayin’.
The Firetrap Lollipop has one major difference from the Cherry Mobile Nova official release
that bothers me: the App Gallery and how the user can navigate through
it. In the original Cherry Mobile Nova interfaces I used, both on Éclair
and then on Froyo, the navigation is vertical, much like the navigation
on an iPod Touch or an iPhone. On the Firetrap Lollipop, the navigation
is horizontal.
I hate the act of horizontal scrolling
through the apps. I really prefer the iOS style, thank you. But the
Android is working towards hedging Apple’s lawsuits, so
I can’t blame the move to horizontal scrolling. It’s just very
inconvenient. And Apple should stop suing people; they copied their OS
from Xerox too, if you heard of it. When “karma” or divine retribution
bites you on the butt, should you complain?
But I digress.
I missed the last wallpaper I used
on my Cherry Mobile Nova on its official Froyo release. So I had to
find a similar one. I still miss the old one I had. The Firetrap
Lollipop came with ONLY ONE static wallpaper option, and it’s annoyingly
boring and ugly. The original wallpaper is this gray wood-like
background that’s a little too boring and drab for my taste:
It comes
with the standard Android Live Wallpapers, however, but since I don’t
use those to save my battery, that doesn’t make much of a difference to
me.
Some of its functions work like Gingerbread,
though. Back on Nova’s official Froyo, I wasn’t able to change the
icons on the dock. Whatever it came with, stayed there. It was very
annoying because I hate the stock browser, and I never really use it,
but whenever I bumped onto the dock with my thumb, the stock browser
always opened. It was annoying to keep killing or even force-killing the
app. On the Firetrap Lollipop, you can customize the dock! So now I
have Opera on the left side, the App Gallery launcher in the middle and
the Android Assistant on the right. Completely convenient now.
The
only complaint I have with the dock is that while I was customizing the
dashboards, I kept managing to delete it so I had to keep adding a
launcher action app from the long-press menu (it’s native, so I didn’t
have to install it from the Android Market), in order to restore the
Dock. A clunky kludge, but it worked. It was the disappearing act that
annoyed me. When I got everything in place, the disappearing act
stopped. Maybe it was all the long-pressing and bumping around that I
was doing that kept making it disappear.
The icons are different.
The dialer, for example, is in green. On the Cherry Mobile Froyo, it
was in blue. The stock browser is also colored green, and again, on the
official Cherry Mobile Froyo, the browser is blue. It came with
QuickOffice instead of Docs to Go on the Cherry Mobile Nova’s Éclair
version (there was no Docs app on the official Froyo update, or maybe I
deleted it as soon as I fired up the OS that I didn’t notice). And there
are admin apps that advanced users will be able to use: SetCPU,
Terminal Emulator, and as a requisite for rooted phones, the Superuser
app. There is also a Root Explorer, LinktoSD and RoadSync. I wish I took
a detailed note of what apps came with the OS, but I was so excited to
tweak it, I forgot to do so.
It came with the standard Google suite:
Google Search, Gmail, GTalk, Youtube, Maps and Latitude. Someday, I
will figure out how to get rid of GTalk, Google Search, and Latitude,
unless I need it for Maps. For now, I’m still fine that they’re there,
because I have around 46MB of space still left, even with all the new
apps I’ve added.
One thing I noticed as I went through restoring
and adding more apps to my suite was that the phone got really hot. But
I guess that’s because I installed Advanced Task Manager alongside
Android Assistant because its task killer is just more efficient. I had
to uninstall it because my Android had considerably slowed down thanks
to its presence. When I got rid of it, the Android got cooler and was
faster.
It had the same 5 dashboards as I had on my Nova,
unlike Samsung Galaxy Y’s 7 dashboards. I noticed some innovations,
like a Reboot app, which I found convenient when the Power button
wouldn’t call up the Shutdown dialogue. I use it more often now, and I
find that it also helps keep the Power button from the usual wear and
tear.
Lastly, I noticed some Camera customizations
that I didn’t notice on the official Cherry Mobile Nova Froyo update.
Maybe I just didn’t explore enough, but I recall trying to look for
saturation settings and I didn’t find them there. On the Firetrap
Lollipop, there are settings for Contrast, Brightness, Sharpness,
Saturation, Anti Banding, Metering Mode, and even for having a grid or
not. For those who know how to use these settings, I’m sure these will
come in handy.
On the whole, I am satisfied with having
been able to modify my Cherry Mobile Nova with the help of Geekier Chick
and the guys who made these custom ROMs. More space has been opened up
to me, and more functionality as well. I’m happy I made the plunge.
HOWEVER, as we keep saying, MOD AT YOUR OWN RISK. When you brick it, make sure you can fix it.
TIP:
For those who love changing phones often, don’t sell your old Androids.
Always keep a spare one with you, for modding, rooting and playing
with. If you’re always asking but never taking the plunge (like I used
to, until Christmas weekend), but you’re really, seriously itching to do
so, maybe managing your risk by an iota more through using an “old”
Android will help. In particular, choose an out-of-warranty unit, so
that all you’ll need to do would be to take the phone to the
knowledgeable cellphone technicians in your area, should you manage to
brick the thing. That way, a CSR from a mobile phone manufacturer’s
service center somewhere will have one less irate customer for the day.
Again, manage your risks, think about what you’re about to do, and when you do take the plunge and end up happy for it, congratulations!
Happy modding (or NOT modding)!
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