To deviate a touch, and head a bit back towards a past thread... how many of us
are there left who use their different devices for different purposes?

I like that my computer at work has totally different bookmarks than my laptop,
which has totally different bookmarks than my cell phone... because I use them
for different things. Sometimes I even have my laptop sitting out next to my
desktop at work so that I can do different tasks on a computer that I have set
up to do those tasks. I would think having all my digital devices that much
alike (the same programs, the same features, the same settings, etc., etc.,
etc.) would make you wonder why you have so many devices. 

Any thoughts from the other side of the (digital) ecological divide?

Eric

On Tue, Nov  1, 2011 01:26 PM, Chris Feola <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>
>
>
>>In that case, one more word in praise of the Google ecosystem, which people
don't tend to think of as such. Until iOS 5, iPhones were largely ancillaries
to your desktop -- you
> needed to cable up regularly to synch with iTunes to do stuff. For better or
for worse, Google is pushing deep into the cloud space. Go to the Android
Market; pick an app. The Market knows which of my devices are compatible and
cloud installs; the next time
> I use that device its just there. The phone backup is seamless and wireless;
when I upgrade my games are not only installed, I'm on the same levels! But, as
Apple has proved, its the little things that often count most. If you use
Chrome, you have The. Same.
> Bookmarks. Everywhere. Yes, I realize there are bookmark sync tools/social
tools/etc. This, however, is seamless. If I'm working on something like the
BlackBerry SDK -- don't ask -- and find a good reference, I drag it to my
toolbar, and that's exactly where
> it is every time. On my desktop. On my laptop. On my tablet. (Honeycomb or
better.) On my phone. (Ice Cream Sandwich.) When I'm done with it, delete
it/file it/what ever. Changes how you use things, for sure.
>>
>
>>cjf
>>
>
>>
>From: [email protected] [[email protected]] on behalf of Owen
Densmore [[email protected]]
>Sent: Tuesday, November 01, 2011 11:43 AM
>To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group
>Subject: Re: [FRIAM] [SUSPICIOUS EMAIL] Re: Android Choice
>
>
>
>>
>>
>Brilliant!  Just what I needed, thanks!  If I'm wedded to anything in the
apple world, its unix and programming and command line.  iTunes is just a
fairly reasonable interface to manage
> phone/pad/pod.  I don't need it for music/video/books etc, there are fine
alternatives. Quite willing to give it up and start really using my google
ecology: calendar, mail, contacts etc.
>>
>
>>
>We have Vzn & TMo near to each other so I'm going to eliminate ATT, and focus
my Android attention on TMo as a carrier, and iPhone via Vzn with their
world-phone iPhone.  I'd like to
> wait for a larger screen iPhone but as for my 2G, Its Dead Jim!  No worries. 
Glad to see we agree on TMo.  Damn I wish they had not gone the AWS route.
>>
>
>>
>        -- Owen
>
>>On Tue, Nov 1, 2011 at 10:27 AM, Chris Feola 
><<#>> wrote:
>
>>
>>Hi Owen,
>>
>
>>Glad to help. Short answer: Buy an iPhone.
>>
>
>>Longer answer: When people ask me what phone to buy, I ask one simple
question: Are you married to iTunes? Do you have a playlist for every mood?
Have you spent years getting it to work just right?
>>
>
>>If so, buy an iPhone. You will be massively unhappy otherwise. To a lesser
extent, if you are married to the Apple ecosystem -- iCal and such -- this also
applies. Modern smartphones are becoming the sharp point of your digital life;
one that doesn't fit
> will drive you mad.
>>
>
>>If you are not married to the Apple ecosystem, then try out a few phones side
by side and see what you like. Frankly, they are all "good enough." I find the
current real differentiator to be the screens.  Here, Android has the lead, and
it is widening.
> (Sorry for the pun!) State of the art here is the new -- and for the moment,
insane appearing -- Galaxy Nexus Prime, with a full HD 720 screen -- !! --
that's just over 4.6 inches. What appears to be happening here, btb, is that
Apple is betting heavily on
> larger tablets, and Google is trying to find out if a phone can have a screen
big enough -- while the device remains small enough -- that you don't want a
tablet.
>>
>
>>So, specific advice. It sounds like you are in the Apple eco-system. If so,
buy an iPhone. If your 2 is dead dead, buy a 4s; its a very nice device.  If
your 2 can be coaxed through another year, wait for the iPhone 5. Rumor has it
that this will be the
> last Jobs designed phone, and that it will finally have a bigger screen.
>>
>
>>If you are not married into the Apple eco-system, I would definitely give the
dual core Android phones a look. My advice is to focus on either the HTC
phones, or the Google Nexus line. The Nexus line are "Google Experience"
phones; they get every Android
> release first. HTC is also good about this, and makes solid equipment. Take a
look at the Sensation if for nothing else than the manufacturing: instead of a
battery cover, the entire back is a single milled piece -- aluminum, IIRC --
that pops off the screen.
> You could drive nails with the thing, and its beautiful. (To be clear, Do Not
Drive Nails With Your Phone.)
>>
>
>>Carriers: 
>>Verizon-Stupid expensive. Good service and coverage.
>>ATT-Stupid expensive. Bad service and coverage
>>Sprint-They suck so bad we won't use them
>>T-Mobile-Great plans! We have multi-line T-Mobile plans that cost less than
single lines on ATT and Verizon. Good data tiers. Great Android phone
selection. Pretty easy to get the phones unlocked to swap out SIMs for
international roaming. Alas, no iPhone.
>>
>
>>Hope I haven't overexplained as usual...
>>
>
>>cjf
>>
>
>>
>
>>
>From: <#> [<#>] on behalf of Owen Densmore [<#>]
>
>
>Sent: Monday, October 31, 2011 7:18 PM
>>
>
>To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group
>Subject: Re: [FRIAM] [SUSPICIOUS EMAIL] Re: Android Choice
>
>
>
>
>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>
>>Please keep firing questions as you think of them!
>
>
>>
>
>God, what an offer!  Thanks!
>>
>
>>History: I bought the initial iPhone 2G, first by trying ATT, which failed
due to lack of coverage (and poor service reports) so I bought one on-line and
use pwnage tool to jailbreak/unlock for TMo and european
> travel.  It just died (after 4 years!).  I rather like the iDevice ecology,
having macbooks, macmini, ipad, ipod etc, and have an app that is not yet on
android but has a poor replacement on android.  I like that the apps span
ipad/pod/phone too.  I'm not
> a power user, but use phone, web, mail, music, apps, maps, angry birds, ...
at least once a day, no more than an hour, I'd say.
>>
>
>>I like TMo quite a bit, but am willing to try Vzn, less so ATT .. they still
have poor coverage where I live (Santa Fe).  I find that the plans my friends
have are impossibly expensive, > $90/mo, .. while
> I pay $58/mo.  There are some interesting alternatives such as buy unlocked
and use prepaid plans, but this mainly makes sense on GSM, which here means
TMo.  Even with Vzn, I would prefer a "world phone", thus GSM (Italy 1-2
months/yr).  Main negative for
> TMo is AWS rather than the more standard 3G etc, and would eliminate iPhone
unless Edge was good enough, which I haven't found to be the case.  I've looked
at a lot of alternatives: MVNOs, WiFi "carriers", prepaid, Senior plans (I'm
69) and even cheaper phones
> + iPod.
>>
>
>>If I had my choice, I'd buy an unlocked iPhone, 4 or 4s, and use it on ...
hmm, ATT, no, lousy coverage, TMo, no, uses non-compatible broadband.  Well
what's left?
>>
>
>>1 - See if the Vzn iPhone 4s is OK, get the european SIM unlock, and see if I
can avoid $90/mo bills.
>>
>
>>2 - Suck it up, embrace android, and go with TMo.  They seem to have OK
phones.  They have brilliant plans, both contract and pre-payed.  And are way
less than $90/mo.  They've saved my skin more than once
> with problems traveling.
>>
>
>>3 - Buy a prepaid GoPhone ATT SIM and try it on unlocked phone to see if
coverage has improved.  Then try ATT + iPhone and see if I can avoid $90/mo
bills.  I also prefer their more standard broadband, but
> not a big deal.
>>
>
>>That sounds like Pogue's great "I Want An IPhone" video, but I really am open
to change.  The difficulty is the "gotchas": plans that are really expensive,
having duplicate apps for android and iOS (pad/pod/phone),
> phones that I don't trust (yet), mobility (I really find it hard to
understand folks leaving europe out of their plans, but then...), batteries
that die if I forget to turn off x,y,z and kill app a,b,c ... and billions of
cellular issues that I don't really
> understand as well as I'd like (TMo about to die? Why do plans cost so much?,
WTF w/ AWS?)
>>
>
>>So that's it!  And I really thank you for your clear explanation of some of
the android world that I didn't "get".
>>
>
>>
>   -- Owen
>
>>
>
>>On Mon, Oct 31, 2011 at 4:12 PM, Chris Feola 
><<#>> wrote:
>
>>
>>Hi Owen,
>>
>
>>Yes, Android phones are open. There are two paths for this:
>>
>
>>1. Download updates yourself. Lots of places to do this, the best of which is
generally regarded to be CyanogenMod <http://www.cyanogenmod.com/>
>
>>2. Wait for your manufacturer to stream you updates.
>>Plenty of good reasons to do both.  The best manufacturers -- I like HTC --
are consistently tweaking and adding features. CyanogenMod tends to be faster
to the big updates. Use what you like.
>>There has been some controversy about locked bootloaders, but everyone has
pretty much backed off of that now.
>>
>
>>As to battery life, I'm sorry if I was unclear. The Sensation is as good or
better for battery life when you use it the same way. But you won't.  If you
keep that quarterHD screen lit for four hours non-stop reading Heinlein on your
Kindle app while streaming
> Pandora...yeah, you're going to need to recharge. If you only flick the
screen on when you hear a text come in, not so much.
>>
>
>>Please keep firing questions as you think of them!
>>
>
>>cjf
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>============================================================
>
>FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
>
>Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
>
>lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at <http://www.friam.org>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
============================================================
>FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
>Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
>lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at http://www.friam.org
>

Eric Charles

Professional Student and
Assistant Professor of Psychology
Penn State University
Altoona, PA 16601


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