Re: Samsung Galaxy S, Big Brother, and an unsolicited review [Was: Advice Needed - Bye Bye Nokia!]
On 27/02/2011 06:23, sammy ominsky wrote: On 26/02/2011, at 03:24, Shachar Shemesh wrote: The contacts situation is a little more complicated on stock Android. The contacts application is useable even before logging in to Google, but it uses a temporary local provider that is no longer available once the Google provider is present. On my (U.S.) Galaxy S, when I create a new contact, the phone asks me where I want to create it, 1) on the phone, 2) on the SIM, or 3) in Google. --sambo In the next month or so, there will be the Galaxy S2. The more, the merrier :) -- Moish ___ Linux-il mailing list Linux-il@cs.huji.ac.il http://mailman.cs.huji.ac.il/mailman/listinfo/linux-il
Re: Samsung Galaxy S, Big Brother, and an unsolicited review [Was: Advice Needed - Bye Bye Nokia!]
On 25/02/11 23:28, Oleg Goldshmidt wrote: I hope synchronization can be disabled on all Android phones, but I don't know that and I could not find out. My Calendar was a major reason for choosing Galaxy S. Calendar and contacts use a provider (technical term) in order to perform the synchronization. Calendar cannot be used without at least one such provider. Samsung must have created a local only provider to make calendar usable without connecting your phone to Google. This is not Android's default. Standard Android does support, at least for the Google provider, to tell it what to sync and what not. I routinely (because my phones get reinstalled a lot due to work) tell it to not sync the contacts, but you are right that this is not the default. The contacts situation is a little more complicated on stock Android. The contacts application is useable even before logging in to Google, but it uses a temporary local provider that is no longer available once the Google provider is present. This means that any contact you create after logging in to google will automatically be synced unless you told the provider not to sync the contacts. This includes contacts imported from vcard or the sim card. Shachar -- Shachar Shemesh Lingnu Open Source Consulting Ltd. http://www.lingnu.com ___ Linux-il mailing list Linux-il@cs.huji.ac.il http://mailman.cs.huji.ac.il/mailman/listinfo/linux-il
Re: Samsung Galaxy S, Big Brother, and an unsolicited review [Was: Advice Needed - Bye Bye Nokia!]
On 2/25/11, Oleg Goldshmidt p...@goldshmidt.org wrote: Configuring email accounts with incoming (POP) and outgoing (SMTP) gmail.com servers This is a bit of a goof: Gmail only supports IMAP with Android clients, but not POP. I usually use POP but I had to configure IMAP for the phone, and it didn't register... -- Oleg Goldshmidt | o...@goldshmidt.org ___ Linux-il mailing list Linux-il@cs.huji.ac.il http://mailman.cs.huji.ac.il/mailman/listinfo/linux-il
Re: Samsung Galaxy S, Big Brother, and an unsolicited review [Was: Advice Needed - Bye Bye Nokia!]
On 26/02/2011, at 03:24, Shachar Shemesh wrote: The contacts situation is a little more complicated on stock Android. The contacts application is useable even before logging in to Google, but it uses a temporary local provider that is no longer available once the Google provider is present. On my (U.S.) Galaxy S, when I create a new contact, the phone asks me where I want to create it, 1) on the phone, 2) on the SIM, or 3) in Google. --sambo ___ Linux-il mailing list Linux-il@cs.huji.ac.il http://mailman.cs.huji.ac.il/mailman/listinfo/linux-il