Tag: nexus

The Surface

The Surface

(Almost) two years ago I’ve spent quite significant US$900 for an Android tablet. The first 7″ ‘real’ Android tablet on the market, which I was sure will worth every buck. That was my 7″ Galaxy Tab device, which I still love and use.

At that time I was still at Microsoft, although I knew the end of these Microsoft days was close. Some of my colleagues disapproved the tablet. However, I had my solid reasons why I cannot wait anymore and I need to get a tablet. I loved the Windows Phone 7 phone, it was great piece of hardware, but I highly disapproved the lockdown, which Microsoft copied directly from Apple and put at his users. That’s why I was sure that my next business phone would be an Android phone.

I was using Android-based devices since then. I’ve had my hands on different phones, starting with Google Nexus S, Samsung Galaxy II, Google Galaxy Nexus, HTC One X and right now Samsung Galaxy III. All those had their flaws and benefits, but the most important experience for me was the fact that I vividly saw the Android OS growing from 2.2 until 4.0.4. I also had some experience with Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1″ (which is with 3.x.x).

Until today I was wondering what would be my next tablet. I was thinking about Asus Transformer series, they’re great, nifty devices with a lot of features. Actually, I almost bought one few months ago, if it was not the Asus support, who ensured me there’s no way Bulgarian language would work with their hardware keyboard. And then I backed off.

…and I’m happy that I waited…

Microsoft SurfaceSo far I did not believe that Microsoft would give something, which would amaze and astonish me that high. Too many disappointments for the past (well…) few years! But fortunately that seems over now.

I just saw the full recordings from the Microsoft Surface announcement, which happened yesterday. I really enjoyed these 47 minutes full of perfection. I can clearly say that the Surface is the device (no, it’s not a tablet, it’s much, much more!), which is worth waiting. Not only because it’s Windows. Because it’s an actual business device, which can be fun as well. Because it will finally close the gap between the Tablet PCs and the real tablets, which you can use in an Enterprise.

I will have to wait for the Pro version. Which means I will wait at least another 9-12 months. But seeing that’re the plans, Windows RT resembles too much the Apple model, which I hate a lot! But Windows 8, on an Intel Surface device, is something which will worth spending $1600 (I think that’ll be the starting price of these things in my geography).

I am very happy with what I’ve saw tonight. Microsoft has finally come with a real product, which will (once again) change the world. I’m sure that Microsoft Surface will give back the speed and the innovation for the consumer computing market, which this company was lacking in the past years.

Microsoft initially won the browser war with Internet Explorer 4. Then Microsoft slowed down and now I can’t see how Internet Explorer will make it back. Especially with the fact that Windows RT will come with IE10 “eunuch edition”, which will not allow plugins at all (Flash does not count, and it’s shitty anyway). I hope Microsoft allows better browsers in its Windows RT market, because otherwise I doubt I’d ever like and own Windows RT tablet at all.

It is, however, quite different story with Windows 8 Pro. It will host full-blown IE10, with all plugin goodness, and it will allow installation of any other software just like any other PC: from any source. This will make possible installing and using Chrome (Firefox, you will rest in peace soon… too bad, because you were the changing factor of the browser market…). Of course, Google has to “surface” the Chrome, but I’m sure that’ll happen too. This combined with all the rest will make the Windows 8 Pro tablet the best future device for me and my needs. And probably for the other 500 million users.

I think that at the end, this will rejuvenate the desktop PCs. Especially for people, who need high processor power at their fingertips. Gamers will have hard time putting their favorite MMORPG on a tablet. Plus, the big screen there is a must. Also, although the Pro tablets are promised to be fast devices, I doubt they’ll match the power of a desktop PC, which can be properly fit and cooled.

But still, the surfaces will prevail. Because iPad might be great consumer device, but it’s total crap in the Enterprise. Plus, until you root it, you’re stuck inside the Fruit Farm of Apple. And when you root it, you lose your warranty. Windows 8 (Pro) won’t have that limitation, and will win (for good). I actually think that naming the device “surface” and not a “tablet” will be one of the key factors, which will help people distinguish, know and look for this particular device, and not “tablet” anymore. The fact that the Android devices are called “tablets” (just like the iPad) is one of the reasons, in my opinion, why they never succeeded (and there’re also about 100 other reasons, which won’t fit in this post). But with the Surface and Tablet now, we clearly know what’s the future, and what’s the past (well, and present).

So, unless Microsoft screws it up big time (for example, exclude my country from the “supported” list, or release a device without full pack Bulgarian keyboards), this future looks much clearer to me 🙂

Samsung Galaxy Nexus: the radio crash bug resolution

Samsung Galaxy Nexus: the radio crash bug resolution

Android Open Kang Project
Android Open Kang Project

Two days ago I wrote about my struggle with the first, very serious and very annoying Android Ice Cream Sandwich bug, which causes the phone radio to crash, resulting into behavior like the phone is in Airplane mode and fixable only by phone reboot.

Today I’ve some developments to report:

Switching off 3G mode

When I switched off the 3G, the ill behavior changed dramatically! The phone radio never hung, causing Airplane Mode-like behavior. Instead, the phone started rebooting! With approximately the same frequency, the phone was crashing and causing sudden reboots. I can’t really weight which behavior is “better” in this case: to have the phone rebooting itself, or to have crashing radio. I left it in “crashing” mode, because after I removed the SIM card PIN, at least I was always reachable (when it reboots, usually it restarts OK).

Update to 4.0.3!

In the Google thread about issue 22503, today I found extremely useful comment! The comment suggests that the issue is not seen on 4.0.2! So far I was forgetting to check if there are any updates to the OS. My crashing phone was with Android 4.0.1, i.e. vulnerable to the problem. The commenter stated that after 4.0.2, the issue did not show anymore.

I immediately asked for help how to locate the official update, but alas… it seems my phone is not in the phones, which is being updated by Google (or at the moment). I’ve no idea how this happen, but I was on my own for this one.

That’s when I decided to turn to the good, old xda-developers.com forum!

After some reading there, I’ve got to the conclusion that the only chance to try resolving the issue is to install custom ROM, which is based on 4.0.2 or 4.0.3. After some more reading, I decided to put Android Open Kang Project, a ROM, which has excellent feedback so far and looks like it’s “alive and developing”.

Once the decision was made, I had to get the tools for updating. In the forum, there’s already plenty of useful Google Galaxy Nexus information about rooting the phone. I had to use the following resources in order to do the job:

It took me about hour, hour and a half from start to end. The whole thing was 5-6 hours ago, no sudden restart of cell hang so far. The phone is cold, no battery overheat and the battery discharge rate looks times better than before.

I hope this is the end of the saga, but if there’s more on this topic, you’ll most probably read about it here.

The first quite serious Galaxy Nexus bug

The first quite serious Galaxy Nexus bug

Samsung Galaxy Nexus (cc-by-sa) Sham HardyIt’s my 3rd week (or 4th? It doesn’t matter!) with the Samsung Galaxy Nexus phone.

Since few days it started to show pretty weird problem: suddenly it starts reporting that Airplane mode is on and I can’t make any call. If I press and hold power, the menu there says the airplane mode is on. If I click to switch it off, it grays out and nothing happens. At the same time, in Settings the Airplane checkbox is not checked. Pretty weird and very annoying problem, solvable only with reboot of the phone. The worst thing is that you can’t know when the problem will popup, so you may end up without coverage for hours, until you see that your phone is off again (already happened to me!). The issue is also discussed in Radio randomly goes off and [Q]Airplane mode keeps turning itself on and won’t turn off threads at XDA Developers forum.

Today I got sick and stopped uninstalling applications, but started the research. Pretty quick I came to the fact that the issue is also discussed in Radio randomly goes off and [Q]Airplane mode keeps turning itself on and won’t turn off threads at XDA Developers forum. Which led me to the thread at Google, which looks like acceptance of this as an official bug. The priority of the bug is “Medium”, which simply means that… well it means that it won’t be fixed anytime soon. I doubt Google guys are out of bug with high and critical severity, so they can fix that Medium one 🙁 .

I’m pissed :(! Let’s see what will happen, but I’m not very optimistic!

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