Thats a good point :)
However launching the settings would actually be helpful and exactly what I've 
been meaning to look into. Combine it with adding a convenient text field they 
can long-click in should help.

I do get a lot of people rating-down or complaining because they didn't read 
the warning and think that it's telling them I *am* stealing their credit card 
info!
Usually when people write in asking why I capture their data, i have to go on a 
long explanation which essentially boils down to "It doesn't, but there is 
absolutely no way i can prove it to you". 

As a developer and one who will sell more and more in the Market, I really wish 
there was some sort of "Verified" certificate I could purchase that would 
indicate to the user that a 3rd party has checked the app for nefarious code.
As a user of Android, I'd really feel better with that as well, because some of 
the apps I've downloaded make me wonder sometimes.

In order to put something like that in place, Google would need to support it, 
the likelihood of which most of us would not hold our breath for.
Maybe what would work is some sort of reputation rating for the publisher 
rather than just the app. Or maybe some sort of rating like we used to have to 
use for our mail servers when we were getting a lot of spam from a certain IP 
block.

- Brill Pappin


On 2011-01-17, at 12:40 PM, Dianne Hackborn wrote:

> On Mon, Jan 17, 2011 at 7:44 AM, Brill Pappin <[email protected]> wrote:
> Yah, I've had a tone of trouble with my users not understanding how to enable 
> to my IME's.
> I don't want to do it for them however. What would be good is a way to allow 
> them to click buttons in my app to enable it.
> 
> Um.  Buttons in *your* app is very much doing it for them. :}
> 
> You can use this to launch the settings app where they can enable/disable 
> IMEs: 
> http://developer.android.com/reference/android/provider/Settings.html#ACTION_INPUT_METHOD_SETTINGS
> 
> To be honest, there is good reason to *not* make this super easy, because if 
> a user can't figure out how to select an IME to enable, there is a good 
> chance they also aren't going to get the deep security implications and trust 
> they need to have in whatever IME they are using.
> 
> -- 
> Dianne Hackborn
> Android framework engineer
> [email protected]
> 
> Note: please don't send private questions to me, as I don't have time to 
> provide private support, and so won't reply to such e-mails.  All such 
> questions should be posted on public forums, where I and others can see and 
> answer them.
> 
> 
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