Author: Aaron Nelsen

  • Froyo OTA Update for Droid X Brick Your Phone? Try this.

    Froyo OTA Update for Droid X Brick Your Phone? Try this.

    Don’t worry, it probably didn’t actually brick it.

    The very first day I had my Droid X I decide to download the OTA update to Android 2.2, the download was quick and painless, install seemed to go fine, at least until my Droid X restarted and seemingly got stuck on the Motorola logo screen.

    Interestingly enough, if I moved my finger across the screen where the unlock button should be, the phone would vibrate. It would even ring if you called it, but it still only displayed the giant Motorola M.

    Two things you can try to fix this. First:

    • Take off the back cover
    • Remove the battery
    • Also remove the SD card
    • Put the battery back in and restart the phone, leaving the SD card out

    For me at least it booted fine, then I shut down, reinstalled the SD card and restarted again. All was back to normal.

    If that fails and the unit still won’t boot past the M, remove and promptly reinstall the battery.

    • Hold both the Home and Power button until you see the little Android / warning triangle.
    • Press the Search key
    • Using the Volume keys (up/down) highlight Factory Data Reset. Press the Camera button to select it.
    • Tap Yes – delete all user data; then OK.
    • After 1-2 minutes the process should finish. Double check that “reboot system now” is highlighted, then tap OK.

  • Week In Review: Sept. 26th – Oct. 2nd

    Top 5 posts for the week:

    Peak number of RSS feed subscribers: 107

    Number of Facebook Fans: 62

    Busiest day: September 29th, with 979 unique visitors.

    Top browser: Firefox with 31.45% market share.

    Top operating system: Windows with 64.54% market share.

  • iPhone vs. Android – Part 1: Acquisition

    iPhone vs. Android – Part 1: Acquisition

    This series offers a comparison of the iPhone vs. Android experience.

    First, a little back story. I’ve owned several iPhones over the years, but all the while have kept a cheapo Alltel/Verizon phone with which to make actual phone calls. And while AT&T has improved the data network quite a bit over the years, I’m ready to move onto something more reliable. That and consolidate to just one phone.

    Naturally, since Palm/HP and its webOS has handsets made for midgets and Blackberry’s are about as user-friendly as a porcupine, I decided to go with Android, specifically the Droid X. Over the next few weeks I plan on chronicling the process of switching from iOS to Android.

    iPhone
    This part of my experience might be rather skewed, as I never bought an iPhone anywhere near launch. Never waited in line, even for an hour or two, in fact my first iPhone was mailed to be almost 6 months after they were originally released.

    That said, the one time I did acquire an iPhone in a retail environment, it was actually rather pleasant. Three months after the iPhone 3G was released I decided on a whim, to go pick one up for work, I pulled into the local mall, walked into the AT&T store and then approached one of the six employees aimlessly wandering around the store and asked for an iPhone. Moments later one was brought from the back, and I walked to the counter to active it. A few simple questions, and I was all ready to go, and out the door. Total time spent: 15 minutes.

    Droid X
    Admittedly the odds were not in Verizon’s favor when I walked into the store to purchase my Droid X. Even though I fully expected to have them mail the actual handset to me, I was making the trip anyway because I needed to move my current phone from Alltel to Verizon, as well as add my phone to my wife’s Verizon account since she gets a lovely discount for being an employee of the local hospital.

    I cleverly planned my appointment to coincide with the commencement of tailgating for the football game that afternoon, in hopes that there would be fewer people on the store. It kind of worked, I only had to sit around for 20 minutes.

    After my “short” wait, I got my new phone ordered in about five minutes. One guy told me it’d take seven days to get the phone, another staff member said just two days. I wasn’t able to move my account over until the new phone arrived however, since my old phone was an Alltel handset.

    In the mean time I was left dreaming of my new toy, suddenly my iPhone seemed sluggish and bulky, even though the Droid X dwarfs the iPhone.

    Actual time for the phone to arrive? Four days.

    Thankfully it arrived earlier enough in the day for me to head back to the Verizon store. After a  two minute wait, they moved my account and activated my phone in about ten minutes. Much faster.

    The victor?
    I’m going to call this one a tie, since if I’d ever bought an iPhone this close to launch there would’ve been some extra waiting involved.

  • BlackBerry PlayBook Announced

    Good news, RIM was just kidding about calling their tablet the BlackPad! Instead, today they announced the BlackBerry PlayBook.

    The PlayBook will run on the brand new BlackBerry Tablet OS which is based on a previous platform designed by QNX named Neutrino. Honestly, the Tablet OS looks way nicer than BlackBerry’s current OS for their smartphones, so hopefully that means a major overhaul is in the works for their handsets as well.

    RIM is quick to point out that the PlayBook is a “Flash-loving” device, the real question is how will Flash usage affect the battery life? Speaking of which, did I miss the estimated battery life for this device or was it not announced.

    Expected availability in the US is early 2011.

    Technical specs:

    • 7-inch LCD, 1024 x 600, WSVGA, capacitive touch screen with full multi-touch and gesture support
    • BlackBerry Tablet OS with support for symmetric multiprocessing
    • 1 GHz dual-core processor
    • 1 GB RAM
    • Dual HD cameras (3 MP front facing, 5 MP rear facing), supports 1080p HD video recording
    • Video playback: 1080p HD Video, H.264, MPEG, DivX, WMV
    • Audio playback: MP3, AAC, WMA
    • HDMI video output
    • Wi-Fi – 802.11 a/b/g/n
    • Bluetooth 2.1 + EDR
    • Connectors: microHDMI, microUSB, charging contacts
    • Open, flexible application platform with support for WebKit/HTML-5, Adobe Flash Player 10.1, Adobe Mobile AIR, Adobe Reader, POSIX, OpenGL, Java
    • Ultra thin and portable:
    • Measures 5.1″x7.6″x0.4″ (130mm x 193mm x 10mm)
    • Weighs less than a pound (approximately 0.9 lb or 400g)
    • RIM intends to also offer 3G and 4G models in the future.
  • Disable the Ping Sidebar in iTunes 10.0.1

    iTunes 10.0.1 replaced the Genius sidebar with a Ping sidebar, and while you can’t currently restore the Genius sidebar you can disable the Ping sidebar.

    Simply fire up Terminal.app and enter the following:

    defaults write com.apple.iTunes disablePingSidebar 1

    Want to take it a step further? Enter this two commands in Terminal to disable even more of Ping…

    This disables the Ping buttons:

    defaults write com.apple.iTunes hide-ping-dropdown 1

    This restores the previous old-style arrow buttons:

    defaults write com.apple.iTunes show-store-link-arrows 1

    If you change your mind, just change the 1 to a 0 (again, all entered in Terminal).

    defaults write com.apple.iTunes disablePingSidebar 0
    defaults write com.apple.iTunes hide-ping-dropdown 0
    defaults write com.apple.iTunes show-store-link-arrows 0

    If the thought of using Terminal scares you, just download this AppleScript from Doug Adams.