Daniel J. Lewis

Internet entrepreneur, award-winning podcaster, podcast consultant, keynote speaker

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iOS 8 review from a former Android user

September 26, 2014 by Daniel J. Lewis 1 Comment

iOS 8 review from former Android user

iOS 8 is out and it contains many features quite familiar to Android users. I used to be an Android user, and here's what I think of iOS 8 on my iPhone.

I have cycled through many smartphone platforms. My first smartphone was a Palm Treo, then a Windows Mobile Treo, then a BlackBerry, then Android, and then iOS. I'm most content with the iPhone because the iOS platform gives me the best reliability and integration with the rest of my Apple devices.

Before I share my thoughts, know that my exposure to Android was limited to two and a half years. I primarily use Gingerbread on a rooted HTC ThunderBolt.

Alternative keyboards

The most exciting feature to me on Android was its wide selection of alternative keyboards. I was a proficient T9 “texter” on my old Motorola E815 flip phone. I learned to generally trust the software to choose the right word after I typed all the letters, instead of trying to correct it along the way. (One battle I could never win was between “home” and “good,” since both words are typed with the same T9 sequence. Context wouldn't help, either, because I would say, “I'm home” and “I'm good”—despite its poor grammar—quite often.)

This trust was less necessary when I used Treo and BlackBerry devices with physical keyboards. But the jump to an Android phone made this more difficult. But I was familiar with trusting, so I quickly acclimated to a touchscreen keyboard.

My mobile typing changed when I was introduced to Swype, the keyboard that allowed me to drag a single finger (usually my thumb) across letters to form words. Swype would intelligently understand words based on where I started, “bounced,” crossed over, and stopped with my finger. This drastically sped up my mobile typing and made it easier to write messages with only one hand.

LastPass on Android also provided its own keyboard that could intelligently login to apps with my secure credentials (with randomly generated passwords).

Then I switched to iPhone and I was back to a standard touchscreen keyboard.

I learned to adapt again and trust iOS to understand what words I generally meant, based on possible combinations and the relative locations of each tap. It seemed that the more I trusted iOS, the faster I would type.

Then iOS 8 supported alternative keyboards.

After updating my iPhone 5 to iOS 8, the first app I installed was SwiftKey (I wasn't ready to spend 99¢ on Swype before knowing whether I would like the alternative keyboard experience). I immediately felt at home with SwiftKey's similar swiping method for typing. It was like a long-awaited relief.

I enjoyed the experience so much that I actually wanted to type more on my phone, just to relish each quick moment of swiping instead of tapping. This felt like touchscreen home to me; it brings the thing I loved most about Android onto the mobile platform I love most—iOS.

The downsides

But this new feature isn't without its negative quirks. iOS 8 won't consistently activate an alternative keyboard unless I remove the standard keyboard.

I have also noticed longer delays for the keyboard to show when I'm using SwiftKey instead of the built-in keyboard. I understand that it's essentially a new program to load, but I would like to see these miniature apps treated like startup items that remain in the system's memory.

There is no LastPass keyboard yet, but I am seeing more 1Password integrations in apps.

Custom widgets

The second thing I loved about Android was the world of widgets. I had become quite familiar with widgets on desktop computers by installing third-party, cross-platform tools. This carried naturally onto my Android phone where I could place information or interactive widgets on any of my home screens.

Once I rooted my HTC ThunderBolt and installed an open version of Android (I typically preferred LiquidSmooth, but also liked Gingivitis), I also had limited widgets in my notification area. I could toggle certain features like wi-fi or my flashlight.

iOS 7 introduced the extremely helpful Control Center, which supported some system toggles, a flashlight, and quick access to a calculator, alarm/timer, and camera. This also brought the new Today screen, but no extensibility.

Then iOS 8 offered developers the ability to place information and interactive widgets inside the Today screen. My favorite, so far, is Evernote, with its buttons to quickly create a particular kind of note. I also like using an alternative calendar like Calendars 5 or Sunrise when it supports the Today screen (I still prefer Google Calendar).

The Today screen on iOS 8 is not as versatile for widgets as Android's home screens, but I do believe it saves battery life by not always loading the widgets when I don't need them. (It was common for widgets to cause battery drain on Android.)

Developers are getting creative with their Today-screen integrations. I also find these iOS widgets to be more consistently better designed than Android widgets.

But this also means that my iOS home screen is still not as beautiful as some of the Android home screens. (It's also not as ugly, as a former Tumblr blog used to showcase.)

Sharing integrations

I'm highly active on social networks and one of iOS's biggest annoyances was that I couldn't share from any app to any network I wanted. I prefer Tweetbot over the official Twitter app, I prefer Buffer for sharing lots of messages to multiple accounts over time, and I like Google+. I also use a different email app and productivity apps like Asana and Evernote.

Some iOS newsreader apps, like Mr. Reader or Feedly, would offer some of these integrations. But sometimes I wanted to share from a different app.

This was all easy on Android because every app seemed to put something in the “Share” menu. So I could share almost anything to almost anything.

iOS 8 finally opened up the sharing panel to third-party developers. I eager look forward to app updates to support tweeting through Tweetbot, sharing to Google+, queuing up something through Buffer, and so on.

Browser extensions

Last, but not least, the mobile browser is a high priority since many things go back to the Worldwide Web. Since I use LastPass for secure password management, I was at home with the Dolphin browser on Android. This has a quite seamless integration with LastPass to let me login to sites quite easily.

Until iOS 8, the only way to use LastPass was with annoying and cumbersome-to-create bookmarklets. These Javascript-based bookmarks would perform little actions on web pages, but I would have to add them through my computer and sync back to the mobile device. It seemed that my bookmarklets would be logged out almost every week. I eventually started not using sites in my mobile browser because it was too annoying to login to LastPass again in order to ensure the bookmarklets would log me in—sometimes.

iOS 8 opened up to browser extensions. Now, I can easily login to websites through either Safari or Chrome on my iPhone or iPad. The experience is much smoother, much more mobile friendly (with larger tap areas), and far more reliable.

There are more, helpful browser extensions, such as viewing the HTML source.

iOS 8, the most Android iOS ever

Yes, I realize that many of iOS's features have been inspired by either official or unofficial Android developments. I don't really care, anymore, about who came up with the idea first. I just care about which is the better experience and fits my needs the best.

So if you are or were an Android user, what do you think of iOS 8? Does its approach to some features seem more desirable to Android's approach?

 

Filed Under: Technology Tagged With: Android, iOS, iOS 8, iPhone

5 ways to use Google Voice (and why it’s not going away)

September 12, 2014 by Daniel J. Lewis 24 Comments

Google Voice is a communications web and mobile app that can make and receive phone calls, send and receive SMS, transcribe voicemail, and more. Learn more about its features here or watch the video below.

Here are five creative ways to use Google Voice for business, hobbies, and home.

1. Use Google Voice as a business phone number

Google Voice can forward to any other phone number, and it's easy to make call from a Google Voice number through your computer, mobile device, or any other phone.

I created a Google Voice phone number for my business, and I have the convenience of answering calls either through my personal wireless phone, or my computer through Gmail/Hangouts.

The greatest business feature of Google Voice is the “do not disturb” (DND) feature. This can be enabled on demand, or for any number of minutes, hours, or days. It will not forward Google Voice calls to any of your phones, but send the caller directly to your voicemail inbox. DND is perfect for focus times or preventing business calls in the evenings.

2. Use Google Voice to ring multiple phones

You may be a multiphone person: you have a home phone, wireless phone, and work phone. Your Google Voice number can ring all of these phone simultaneously to ensure you don't miss an important phone call.

But don't just think about your own phones. You could have a single “family” number that rings your phone and your spouse's phone.

If you don't want to continue the conversation from a particular line, press * and you can switch lines.

3. Use Google Voice as a feedback voicemail system

I host several podcasts and love the convenience for my viewers and listeners to send feedback with their own voice. This is especially convenient for celebrities.

Google Voice can be set to never forward to another phone number. This will make it function like a 24-hour voicemail system.

You can have these messages forwarded to any email address (like your podcast feedback address) so you'll have a rough transcript and the audio recording file.

4. Use Google Voice to protect your privacy

Concerned about giving out your home or wireless phone number to businesses? Make a Google Voice number in your local area code and you'll never have to give away personal, direct numbers.

This is also a convenient way of having a local phone number, for the rare case where that actually matters.

My wife and I used a Google Voice number when selling our house. That allowed us to also have a custom voicemail greeting to point callers to our house website for more details when we couldn't answer the phone.

5. Use Google Voice to make and record phone calls with your computer

One of my favorite features of Google Voice is the ability to make a phone call through the Internet. My home office is currently in the lower level of my home, and our home is in a valley. So wireless phone reception isn't always the best.

Google Voice solves this by allowing me to conveniently make and receive phone calls through my computer and not have to worry about wireless signal strength. If I need to leave the computer, I just press * to switch the call to my phone.

Also, by routing a phone call through your computer, you can easily record the call with several apps and devices. This is great for interviews, or conversations you simply need to document.

Why I'm convinced Google Voice isn't going away

I've seen some old fear, uncertainty, and doubt (FUD) about Google Voice's future. But I'm quite convinced that—like Celine Dion, World of Warcraft, and the ending of The Lord of the Rings—Google Voice will go on. Here are several quick reasons.

  • The Google Voice website uses the standard Google account bar, which is on all of Google's most current and updated properties. (Interestingly, this isn't on FeedBurner, which is the more likely candidate to shut down since it has already ceased development.)
  • The Google Voice website also uses the same clean design as other, modern Google properties. (Again, FeedBurner doesn't.)
  • Google Voice calling has been integrated into Hangouts, which enables sending and receiving calls in Gmail, Google+, Google+ Hangouts, and YouTube Live / Google+ Hangouts on Air.
  • The Hangouts app and Google Voice app for iOS have been recently updated to include phone-calling with a Google Voice number from any iOS device. (Yes, you can even call phones for free from your iPod Touch or iPad!)
  • The Google Voice app for iOS has finally been updated to iOS 7 design standards (the week before iOS 8's release).

Considering all of these things, I would not be surprised if the Google Voice service is eventually merged completely into Hangouts, but I'm convinced that the core functionality will remain.

How do you use Google Voice?

Filed Under: Business, Family, Productivity, Technology Tagged With: Android, Google Hangouts, Google Voice, Google+, iOS, VOIP

An Android-user’s first 30 days with the new iPad

April 16, 2012 by Daniel J. Lewis 6 Comments

iPad vs. HTC ThunderBolt

I love my Android-powered HTC ThunderBolt. I even lined up at my local Verizon store before they opened, just to get this first 4G LTE device (Verizon's first).

But when I needed a tablet, I bought an iPad.

Here are some observations after using my new iPad every day for 30 days, alongside my Android smartphone.

The retina display is great, but I have little to compare it to since I haven't regularly used an iPad before. Sure, text looks crisp and smooth, but the only time I can tell when something might be non-retina, it looks really bad with visible pixelation (like Feedly's splash screen).

Sounds are rebellious. No matter where I set my system volume, some apps will still play a notification or action sound. The only solution for notifications seems to be turning off each one through the settings. But even after that, some apps still make action noises when my iPad is muted.

I love the rotation lock. This makes it easy to move my iPad wherever I want to, and the screen remain as I set it.

Sharing anything is a pain. Android has a wonderful “Share to…” menu that apps can hook into. So from almost any app, I can share to SpringPad, TweetDeck, Buffer, Gmail, Facebook, Google Plus, WordPress, or any other app I install. On iOS, most programs offer Twitter, Facebook, and email. That's it.

Gmail is frustrating. I get that Google is now putting their best work into Android. But their Gmail app is terrible on iPad, and it's not all Google's fault. I can't undo actions, receive notifications, send from a different address, or default to priority inbox. And Gmail can't be set as a default email application, so “share to email” is useless to me because my Gmail is too complicated to setup in Apple's email program.

Notification Center is wonderful. Yes, Apple copied Android's notifications, but I like how Apple has improved on it, and made receiving notifications in full-screen apps easy. However, these notifications are oddly CPU or GPU intense, because they'll cause the framerate of a game to stutter.

Apple wants my Apple ID password far too often. Upon setup, I had to enter my Apple ID password a dozen times in different areas of the settings. If the whole iPad is tied to my Apple ID, then why re-enter the same credentials? Even once setup, I have to re-enter my Apple ID password just to update apps or install paid or free apps. Considering that I make secure passwords with LastPass, this is even a further pain.

I hate “slide to unlock.” There's no way to disable it unless the iPad never turns off.

Typing is error-prone. Something about touch-screen keys, or maybe a sensitivity issue, makes it hard to type much on the iPad. But even with successful typing, there is so little screen real estate left to see what I'm doing.

Battery life is great, even outlasting my ThunderBolt. This is understandable because the ThunderBolt does more in the background and has a data connection when it's awake.

The camera is great, but I don't want to look like a dweeb by actually using the camera in public. Instagram works, but it's 2x'd for being an iPhone app (or would that be 8x'd with Retina display?).

Reading is a lot easier. I frequently take my iPad whenever I want to read. The bigger screen and crisper text make reading ebooks or RSS subscriptions (via Feedly) a breeze. The iPad will display twice as many news items as my smartphone.

I have to buy my apps all over again. I have a lot of premium apps on my Android phone. Important things like Angry Birds, Cut the Rope, and Where's My Water?. I would have to repurchase these for the iPad, and I would still lose my progress from the Android smartphone.

No disk access. On my smartphone, I can upload or download a file to it and access that file however I want later. On iPad, I have to sync with a specific app, if that's available. Otherwise, the file is worthless on my iPad (like syncing a file with Dropbox).

Voice dictation is great, but there's no Siri.

Yes, stuff just works. I lose a lot of customization, but it does just work.

That's it for now. I'll probably blog more about my iPad as I feel like it.

Have you mixed an iOS and Android device in your regular day? How did that work for you? What did you like or dislike about the experience?

Filed Under: Technology Tagged With: Android, Apple, Gmail, iPad, notifications, passwords, retina display, sharing, Siri, social media, tablet

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