randromeda

joined 1 year ago
MODERATOR OF
[–] randromeda@lemmy.ml 1 points 1 year ago

I'm Indian. What you said makes no sense. Just install a different launcher or something?

 

Wishlist for Android 15, or future versions like Android 20.

 

I've tried dozens of wallpapers and I've tried the repainter app, but no matter what wallpaper I use and no matter what color I put in as the theme color, the colors that the system picks are always blue and are really ugly shade of pink.

Is there any way to change this without rooting your phone? I'm running a Pixel 7 for reference.

[–] randromeda@lemmy.ml 4 points 1 year ago

The e in eSIM standa for embedded, not electronic. You need to embed the SIM onto the SoC.

[–] randromeda@lemmy.ml 9 points 1 year ago (1 children)

That's not the use case for those features. Syncthing synchronizes files between devices. If I want to send a photo or file to my friend, do I have them log into the same account and then synchronize all my files? Obviously not.

[–] randromeda@lemmy.ml 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Mostly FOSS enthusiasts who see any move by Google that makes Android more "closed source" as negative.

 

First off, I don't think every single one of Google's decisions regarding Android is good. Hell I actually think they've blundered too many times to count when it comes to bringing new features to Android. That said, for Android to mature further, it really needs to go the "it just works" route that Apple's been nailing.

Things like how you're required to have a Google account to really use an Android phone at this point, and how features like Nearby Share rely on Google accounts garners a lot of hate from the FOSS/enthusiast crowd. And I get it. I really do. That said, I've worked in IT long enough to know that the enthusiasts will find ways around restrictions like this, or they'll simply find another open source app that does the same thing. The average user on the other hand, almost certainly has a Google account, and for that person, this implementation makes sense. You log into one account and can see all your devices? That's about as good as it gets.

Notice how it's gotten progressively harder to install apps from external sources over each iteration of Android? Yeah that sucks, but for the average person, that's stopping them from installing malware disguised as an app. They don't care that there were obvious signs that the source can't be trusted, the fact remains that they found a way to brick their Android phone, while that wouldn't have happened on iOS.

Ever notice how people say Android's just "too confusing"? That's the crowd that Google is trying to win over. We already use Android, and probably will continue to because what other option is there? But emulating what iOS does well and bringing that to Android is going to bring in more people to the OS, and ultimately that's not a bad thing.

[–] randromeda@lemmy.ml 3 points 1 year ago (1 children)

You can have multiple users on the Pixel Tablet. Google made a whole new UI for user profiles specifically for the tablet. Each user gets their own customization and apps. Sure it's not a nest hub, but it's not meant to be?

[–] randromeda@lemmy.ml 2 points 1 year ago

The Waveform podcast is pretty decent. It's MKBHD's podcast.

[–] randromeda@lemmy.ml 1 points 1 year ago

In India those prices are still "expensive" for the average person. India and SE Asia are a huge cash cow so I doubt they'll increase prices right away since they're still trying to bring more users in, but eventually I'm sure prices go up there too.

[–] randromeda@lemmy.ml 3 points 1 year ago

Was he using another debrid service? Because from what I understand you can only stream if the file is cached by the service, otherwise torrentio just gives you the torrent. Without a VPN it makes sense why he got DMCA'd

 

After my last post on here asking about convenient streaming options at higher resolutions, I got a few comments recommending Stremio with Torrentio and Real Debrid.

I ended up going through with that and streamed a 4k movie. That said, what's the catch? I'm a little paranoid because I'm not sure if this still counts as torrenting, and if I should be using a VPN while watching something from RD.

No such thing as free lunch, so I'm assuming there's other downsides to this solution, could someone let me know what they are?

 

I've finally invested in a high resolution monitor, which means 1080p content looks pretty bad, especially on a 32 inch display.

I've been using FMovies so far for streaming, but now that 1080 looks like shit on my display, it's sort of lost it's appeal. Are there any ways to have a convenient streaming setup (that doesn't require too much effort for every new movie/show I want to watch) that also supports 1440p or 4k?

 

I've got a Pixel 7 on Android 13. Once in a while I read about how it's usually good to factory reset your phone after a software update, so I thought I might when I update to Android 14. That said, I refuse to go through the process of setting up my phone like new again, especially with things like fingerprints and tasker profiles being a pain to setup again.

The Google Backup seems purely cosmetic. I can't think of a single thing it restores every single time I use it. Are there any options to actually back my phone up before an update that don't involve root?

[–] randromeda@lemmy.ml 6 points 1 year ago

There's really no real reason to stay loyal to a brand when you're using Android. If you like a particular OEM's UI or a feature they provide, good for you! If not, then there's literally no reason not to switch brands. It's not like your apps won't work or your contacts won't move over.

[–] randromeda@lemmy.ml 1 points 1 year ago

I have commitment issues and git doesn't let me push without commits. Am I not cut out to be a developer? /s

[–] randromeda@lemmy.ml 2 points 1 year ago

I've heard this a lot too. A few friends who work at Google always say the way to go from Mid Level to Senior, or from Senior to Team Lead is to create new functionality, despite the fact that it sacrifices old apps and feautres

 

I'm well aware this post has been asked to death on Reddit, but I couldn't find anything relevant on Lemmy so I thought I'd give it a shot.

I'm starting my first SDE job next week, and to be honest I've never really been a dev in a professional environment before. I've had an internship where the bar was very low so I did decently, and a part-time gig where I just assigned myself tickets. Either way I've never worked on a larger team or in a specific org before.

Apart from the usual like "ask questions when you're stuck", "write proper documentation", "be proactive", and "communicate well", what are some technical things I should be familiar with to make sure I'm not bogging anyone down?

More specifically, are there concepts I should know/I am expected to know of that I might not have learned in university?

 

This isn't an iOS vs. Android thread, although I'm aware this might come off that way to some. I've been using Android phones since the Galaxy S4 and at the time it felt like Android was far and ahead the best smartphone OS at the time. It was objectively better than iOS in 2010 in just about every metric apart from UI fluidity.

I'm not so sure about that any more. I still do prefer Android - the UI, the customizability, the ability to sideload apps, etc. That said, why is it that every single time Android gets a feature that truly makes the phone more usable, Google goes ahead and guts that functionality, only for Apple to actually give a shit about that feature a few years later and do it way better.

Just off the top of my head, I can't believe Google screwed up:

  • Android Beam
  • Google Now on Tap (not to mention all the things it did that Google Assistant can't)
  • Hangouts (not necessarily Android but it could have easily been better than iMessage)
  • Nearby Notifications
  • Android @ Home
  • Bump!

I get that Google as a company is out to make money, but do they really have to shut down any functionality that isn't directly generating revenue?

[–] randromeda@lemmy.ml 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

For a legitimate question you sure do keep countering answers with "I don't do it so why do you?"

As for why people use a dedicated app? Convenience. All my podcast are in one place, they get updated automatically, and if I want it they get downloaded to storage automatically too so I can listen to them offline.

If someone tells me about a new podcast I might like, I can search for it and be listening to it within seconds, rather than having to download it from a website. Plus if I'm using Google Podcasts, playback is synced across devices so I can pick up on my phone where I left off on my computer.

Besides there's a ton of open source podcast apps and most don't have ads or tracking.

 

It might be placebo but after the June update my battery life has been struggling. I'm pretty sure I'm not doing anything different but I'm open for suggestions.

I did get a battery replacement because the entire back panel on my phone was replaced but I doubt that could be the issue since my battery health is literally at 100%.

What's the average SOT P7 users are getting these days? I can't imagine even 5 hours of SOT can count as "all-day battery". For reference I'm using LTE with my brightness around 50% most of the time.

 

I came over from Boost for Reddit so the UI on Jerboa is relatively familiar. That said, as it stands a tap collapses a comment while long pressing a comment opens the action bar.

I was wondering if we could get an option to customize tap and long press behavior?

Obviously this is a very nitpicky behavior so I understand if dev resources are better spent elsewhere.

 

I assume this is to be expected as we get closer to the reddit blackout date but I'm just wondering if lemmy.ml is running slower for anyone than usual?

 

That's pretty much it. I think it'll look cleaner and fit in better with other communities.

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