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Cyanogen Mod 6 and mytouch 3g speed problems solved

July 30th, 2011 aaron Comments off

So I have my old mytouch 3g with cyanogenmod 6 as my gsm phone when I’m on vacation. The slowness is unbearable. It turns out the key to getting excellent performance is the following.

  • Under cyanogenmod settings go to performance settings
    • turn on JIT (Just in time compiler for the Dalvik VM)
    • uncheck enable surface dithering
    • Check Lock home in memory
  • Finally replace the default ADW Launcher with LauncherPro

This last step, replacing the home launcher with Launcher Pro is what really did it for me. Hope someone finds this useful.

Categories: Android, Cell Phones, Uncategorized Tags:

NYC Health Ratings for Android

July 13th, 2011 aaron Comments off
NYC Health Ratings for Android

I just released version 1 of nyc health ratings for android. You can search for restaurants by name and location and get detailed inspection results just as you can on nychealthratings.com.  Having this information available to you on a mobile device is so much more useful isn’t it.  One really nice feature is that searches default to your current network location, which works for the majority of searches.  If you are searching for a restaurant that isn’t in the immediate vicinity just input the zip code, address, or neighborhood name.  In addition to the android market it is also available on amazons market.

Now that I’ve finished version 1 for Android, I’m going to start building an iphone version.

Android wish list

September 21st, 2009 aaron Comments off

After one month with the MyTouch and Android there are a few things I see as road blocks to being a real competitor to the iphone.  Some of these things are definitely being addressed in the upcoming 1.6 and 2.0 os updates.

First off is the market store.  It’s strictly bare bones.  The search and category breakdown is not developed enough.  For instance when you search, you can’t search subcategories.  Your search is run across all applications,  leading to many  false positives.  Product pages for apps don’t have screen shots etc.  This will change shortly with the 1.6 donut release.

Next on my list is multi-touch.  It’s scheduled to be part of the 2.0 release which may or may not be here before Christmas.  To really be a worthy competitor to the iphone this is a must have.  It’s overdue.

On to a few not so obvious or talked about gripes.  There’s no desktop equivalent to itunes.  I think an itunes equivalent was a major oversite on behalf of google.  Itunes makes managing your media on your phone and desktop simple.  This would be even more evident if you purchase music on your device through itunes.  After purchasing  music there is no automatic synch up from your amazon purchases to an itunes equivalent, becaue it doesnt exist.  When I used itunes I tended to purchase through itunes on my desktop and synch to my ipod.I think others largely do the same.  Lets say to be fair that 50% of people would be more inclined to purchase through their desktop app.  Google could potentially open up sales of mp3′s and apps by 50 %.  Ok maybe I’m off and its 25%.  Thats still 25% of a growing market.

Ah yes theres more.  The performance is sluggish at times.  This could be related to a host of issues.  Most likely some kernel tuning will be done in future android releases.  How about google set up a paid service where they test and certify applications and mark them as google tested and verified.  It would add a level of quality control  that users would be able to discern.

A real media player.  The media player kind of stinks.  It doesn’t pickup album covers 95% of the time, and there is no way to add them after the fact.  How about a genius playlist feature similar to itunes?  Nada.  Its pretty primitive.

Of the things I listed the following are definitely being addressed, multi touch, the app store and performance .  The media features seem to be a bit of an after thought with android.  By focusing on the app store, media features and performance google and partners stand to pick up business from disgruntled iphone users.

Tmobile Customer Service

September 10th, 2009 aaron 2 comments

As a new T-Mobile customer I was a bit worried bringing my new phone home. I had heard non stop about poor reception. Countless people advised me to stick with Verizon for their service. One person advised to have a friend with each provider come to my apartment and see how the service was. This is a great idea, however I had my mind decided on a particular phone. On to the point of the article.

When I got the phone the service appeared excellent, except … you guessed it, inside my apartment. 0 or 1 bars no 3g let alone edge. It was very bad, I wasn’t able to make a phone call in my apartment unless the blinds were open and I stood by the window. After looking into pricey cell boosters and amplifiers I decided to call T-Mobile. The customer support people were clear (spoke perfect English) and sympathetic. They acknowledged that where I lived (The upper east side of Manhattan) I should be getting much better near perfect reception. The customer support representative scheduled an engineer to come to my building and see what could be done. I assumed it was bs, however 1 week later I’m getting 3 bars in my apartment and 3g and edge network access. Basically I’m able to use my phone! Its not perfect but is a tremendous improvement. I’m posting this so others with similar issues in a covered area know that they too should try calling T-Mobile customer support if they have service issues. Just dial 611 from your phone.