These are my shared links for 2011-12-2
- How To Check If You Have Carrier IQ, Without Rooting Your Handset [Lifehacker]
Apparently I'm clean, check your Android device.
shared with delicious
These are my shared links for 2011-12-2
shared with delicious
These are my shared links for 2011-12-1
shared with delicious
The latest version of my Article Of The Day Android app is available on the Market, and now has the options to browse older articles, besides having a shiny new icon!
I don’t really get those who treat brands like sports teams, offering blind allegiance over self-interest. That’s just zealotry. God bless that file system; my platform, right or wrong.
via If You Already Hate Windows 8 Then You Hate Technology [Gizmodo] .
Neither do I.
Throughout the years, I’ve been faced with flame wars in the various aspects of my life: programming language or platform of choice, operating system, camera gear brand, etc. . Fan boys that defend the lighter, faster, more stable or simply the best thing they’ve found as a crusade, feeding long hours and lengthy pages of discussions with empty arguments like someone keeps pouring gasoline to a bonfire.
I’ve seen too many Java programmers bashing vigorously .Net, programmers who don’t really grasp the main concepts of Object Oriented Programming. Console gamers that play the same game but keep repeating when it’s played in their . The endless Nikon vs. Canon feud, which is worth a post of it’s own, where in every meeting or photowalk people inevitably start counting how many Nikonians and Canonians are present, like choosing sides on a war. Some Apple fanboys, probably my favorite, that some time ago criticized Windows and praised openness of Linux and now seem to switched sides by defending a system that’s actually more closed than Windows.
I’ve chosen may brands but I never offered allegiance to any, some I’ve used for many years while I dropped others. I’ve always used Nikon gear, I’ve bought a grand total of four Nikon reflex cameras and a handful of Nikkor lenses, I was always pleased and never considered switching brands, despite finding features elsewhere that I love. On the other hand I used Windows for many years but got very tired of it, which pushed to try the several flavors of Linux, I ended up sticking with Ubuntu for it’s active community and the uncluttered, straightforward interface of Gnome, and the truth is feels more natural and fits me much better than Windows.
Regarding the post linked above, which caused me to write this rant, although my platforms of choice nowadays are Linux and Android I was really pleased with Windows Phone 7 (although I still believe it arrived too late and fail eventually) and I’m very curious to see how the Metro interface will evolve in Windows 8.
I guess that’s human nature that people like to choose sides.
Technology is just a tool, something to make your life easier and more comfortable. It isn’t a sports team or a religion to follow blindly, and since I’m openly “religionless” I’ll reserve my biased thoughts only to subjects related to my sports team.
My rants and praises regarding Google’s new adventure through the social networking world, updated on the go.
People are disliking the “Sent from my iPhone/Droid/BlackBerry/put-mobile-device-here”, myself included, because they’re obnoxious and have no real use. And the truth is when you read it the real meaning to what the sender is saying is either:
So what’s yours?
These are my shared links for 2010-07-19 through 2010-08-2:
These are my shared links for 2010-06-28
(Texto publicado originalmente no Diário2)
O iPhone tem uma grande vantagem em relação ao Android: um sistema operativo que corre apenas numa plataforma. Este tem sido, aliás, o caminho da Apple nos computadores e em tudo o resto, preferindo um sistema operativo orientado a uma arquitectura conhecida.
A Google, por seu lado, seguiu um caminho diferente para os dispositivos móveis: lançou um sistema livre e aberto a todos, em especial aos potenciais fabricantes que o poderiam adaptar às suas necessidades e assim conquistar uma maior fatia de mercado.
Uma das vantagens de se optar por um sistema exclusivo para uma arquitectura conhecida e para um único fabricante é que é fácil conciliar o os desenvolvimentos de ambos, permitindo ter um calendário de lançamentos único. O problema com o sistema Android é que cresceu imenso no último ano, cresceu exponencialmente em vendas, cresceu no número de fabricantes que o adoptaram e, mais importante, cresceu em funcionalidades e versões lançadas, e coordenar estes lançamentos com os prazos de cada um dos fabricantes não é fácil.
O exemplo disto é que nos próximos dias deverá ser lançada na Google I/O 2010 a mais recente versão do sistema, a 2.2, mas ainda são comercializados modelos com as três versões anteriores: 1.5 (que equipa os HTC Hero e Magic), 1.6 (presente no HTC Tattoo) e 2.1 (versão disponível nos dispositivos mais recentes).
Há uma cada vez maior fragmentação no universo Android, com todas as diferentes versões a coexistirem no mercado, a que se soma as diferentes variações de cada fabricante vai criando. Isto torna a vida complicada não só aos fabricantes como também a quem mantém os milhares de aplicações, ao ter de suportar todas estas variações (que contrasta com a tarefa mais simples de quem desenvolve aplicações para iPhone) ou optar por suportar apenas um subconjunto dos dispositivos existentes.
O Android está a crescer rápido, e com isso poderá no futuro tornar-se demasiado complexo e ramificado.
These are my shared links for 2010-02-3 through 2010-02-4:
Report Details Hacks Targeting Google, Others [Wired]
shared in delicious, tags:hacking cyberwar internet security technology google china shared
How to Use Google Maps for Trip Planning [Matador Trips]
shared in delicious, tags:travel web2.0 shared
Firefox fires up on Android [Make:]Mozilla is testing Firefox full interface in Android. It may seem silly, but considering Android may power tablets and netbooks could be a clever move.
shared in delicious, tags:mobile android internet shared