It's 2014, which means it's time for a new Android thread. Looking back at the
2013 thread is fun because of just how much has changed.
Let's avoid iPhone/Android bashing and excessive fanboyism in this thread. Both platforms are basically at feature parity for 95% of users and neither sucks, so let's keep it civil in here.
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FAQ:
Q: What phone should I buy?
A: Android certainly doesn't lack for options, with different phones focusing on different markets and use cases. If you care about having a great camera or a large screen or lower price, there's a phone for you. If you're going to ask the thread, let us know your carrier (or country, if not in the US) and what you want to do with your phone.
This list will be quickly outdated, but as of 1/1/2014, the best overall Android phones are (in no particular order): Nexus 5, Moto X, Samsung Galaxy S4, Samsung Galaxy Note III. The LG G2, Moto G, HTC One, Sony Xperia Z1, and the Motorola Droid Maxx are also all good phones that may hit a specific need you have.
Q: Help! I dropped my phone in water! What should I do?
A: Immediately remove the battery (if you can't, then turn off the phone if it isn't already) and other items like the Sim and memory cards. Dry the phone off as best you can and leave the whole thing submerged in a bowl of a dry rice for at least two days. DO NOT BE TEMPTED TO TEST IT OUT PRIOR TO DRYING. After two days, reassemble the phone and pray.
Q: What apps should I get?
A: There are too many to list. You can browse apps on the
Google Play website and install them right from the browser, without needing to touch your phone. Most big ones (aside from some games) available for iPhone will also be available on Android.
Some popular apps: Netflix, Hulu Plus, 2p2 (yes there's an app), Pandora/Slacker/Spotify/etc, Soundhound or Shazam (identify which song is playing), Dropbox, Amazon Store/MP3/Kindle/Appstore, FoxFi (tethering), MX player (video player), Google Voice, TeslaLED (light).
Popular launcher replacements: Nova, Apex. Themer is a new one that makes it very easy to theme everything with one touch (see below for more detail)
Popular keyboard replacements: SwiftKey, Swype
Popular texting app replacements: Textra, Sliding Messenger, Handcent, Chomp
Popular dialer replacements: ExDialer, Dialer One
Popular internet browsers: Chrome, Dolphin, Firefox, Opera
Popular password/security apps: Google Authenticator (use to enable 2-Factor authentication with sites that support it), KeePassDroid and Lastpass (all-in-one password managers).
Popular note/task apps: Keep, Evernote, OneNote, Remember The Milk
Q: How do I root?
A: While usually fairly straightforward, the rooting process is different for every device. The best resource for all things related to rooting and custom ROMs is
XDA Developers. Find your phone's forum and there will usually be some stickied threads that address rooting your phone.
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Styling Android by [Phill]:
Android lets you do a huge amount of customisation and one of the most popular demonstrations of this is styling your homescreen. The practice is so popular there is the community website mycolorscreen.com dedicated just to users taking screenshots of their phone and uploading them. You can make small tweaks such as putting a different app in your dock bar at the bottom of the homescreen or putting a specific looking clock and weather widget on your screen but if you are artistic you can make some huge sweeping changes to the phone all of it possible without needing to root or ROM the phone in any way.
Most of this is trial and error but the payoff is you will have a phone that is truly yours and unlike anything anyone else has. Here are some tips on the apps I use and what they can let you do in order to either make minor tweaks or sweeping changes if you are artistically inclined.
1, Launchers
A third party launcher will let you change how many icons you have on your dock, how many docks you can scroll through just like your homescreen, even if you want a dock, it will let you change the animations of scrolling, it can turn your app drawer from a horizontal multi-page affair into a vertical scrolling grid of apps.
From a search of the Play Store you will find a lot of options but the one I personally recommend is Nova Launcher.
2, Lockscreens
You may like the lockscreen that your manufacturer put on your phone. I keep buying Samsung phones so I never do. Just like with launchers there are options out there to completely change the look and feel of your lockscreen, you can include any widget you want and you can use different styles of lock from the basic slider to a modern 4 way slider or any combo of them. The big point is you can do all this with the aim of making your phone
your phone. For example I like to be able to glance at my phone and know the upcoming calendar appointments so I include the widget Smooth Calendar on there. I like knowing the weather so I have a weather widget on there from 1Weather. I also listen to a lot of music on my phone so having a widget to control my music player MortPlayer is easily included and thanks to the features on that it becomes invisible when the player is off so I never have to worry about it.
There are a few options, though less than with launchers, but the app I recommend is Widgetlocker. It does cost money and has no free to try option and it also has one big flaw in that if you want any lock such as a pattern lock you cant include that on the page so it will unlock with the slider first on Widgetlocker and then ask you to input the pattern after to fully unlock the phone, but it is the best option available until something new comes along, probably made by the same developers.
3, Dialer and Messenger apps
If you cant use the dialer in the Nexus 5, the search function of which is great, I recommend exDialer. This is a combined contacts and dialer app that is extremely fast and smooth to use and supports the functions you would expect including fast dialing where you can spell your contact name using the pad and it will work out who you are trying to call and you can swipe left or right to quickly call or text anyone who is on your call list - swipe down on the key pad to minimise it and click the bottom left to access your contacts list.
For SMS I use Sliding Messenger which is designed around the holo design guidelines with card style and lots of sliding/swiping. It looks a lot like the GMail and the new Nexus 5 dialer.
4, Misc apps worth noting
MultiPicture Live Wallpaper - this is used by a lot of themers on mycolorscreen to get the effect that every screen uses a different background so you can either have images carrying on from one side to another in a specific design pattern or perhaps you just want to have a big picture of pacman on the background of a homescreen packed with games.
HD Widgets or Beautiful Widgets - both charge money IIRC and do the same thing while both being extremely popular. Its very subjective which is better but right now I prefer HD over BW (I own both). Basically they let you create a clock and/or weather widget with a lot of options over how it looks.
1Weather - mentioned already, the app is free to use supported with adverts in the popup when you click it, this is a really great weather widget and app with three very different but equally useful widget sizes and styles and the popup is really awesome with arguably too much weather data including hourly breakdowns, percent chances of rain, any weather warnings in your area, lunar phase and even most shockingly the current temperate and weather where you are. BW and HDW have weather included but I use a separate app because 1W is so well made (and I am not even a big weather junkie).
Widgetsoid - lets you add apps, shortcuts and toggles to the notification shade
like this. Some manufacturers such as Samsung put toggles in the shade but others running stock or near-stock Android dont so Widgetsoid lets you configure your favourite apps and most used toggles in a very easy to access place.
Unified Remote and Remote Control Collection - to use your phone as a remote. Requires an IR emitter in your phone.
5, Automation
Arguably the biggest party trick Android has and the hardest to show off to people is automation. The undisputed king of this field right now is
Tasker. The options are near endless and this truly makes your smartphone smarter, it will turn on your wifi if you are in phone network cells (in other words at home), it will let you automatically reply to messages if your phone is silent, it will turn on your gps when you load up maps turning it off when you close it. it will turn off wifi when you lose the signal for a set amount of time and one I made a couple hours ago is turning on auto rotate on my phone when I load up my browser Chrome then turning it off when I exit.
Tasker is really intimidating when you first load it, really really intimidating. Sooner or later someone will write a book on Tasker and if they dont do it soon I will because this app is genuinely amazing and shows just what sets Android apart from its competition. iOS wont even let apps control things like turning on bluetooth or your internet and Android lets apps do so intelligently taking many inputs such as NFC, time of day, day of the week or phone cell data (which requires no more battery use unlike GPS data) to streamline the amount of things you need to do on the phone so if the phone can do it for you, you can teach it how and when.