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Something I really like about Android

My wife and I both finally got new Android phones in the past few weeks. We're entirely new to fancy touchscreen smartphones, though I've been following Android's development since Google bought the company. I just wanted to publicly declare my love for what is, in my opinion, the best thing about Android.

After a few days of playing with her phone, my wife said, "I don't like how I have to tap the phone button before I can dial." She wanted to be able to pick up the phone and start dialing, just like her old $6 phone with a physical keypad. "It's not really a big deal," I told her. "It's just one tap." But she's entitled to her opinion -- she didn't like it. So I did a little research. Fifteen minutes later, she had a keypad on her home screen, ready to use right after picking up the phone.

Last night, she tells me: "I hate this slide-to-answer thing. I need two hands to do that. I'm taking care of a small child all day. Sometimes I don't have two hands available when someone calls." So I asked to see her phone. Within five minutes, I'd replaced the sliders that appear when a locked phone receives a call with big, easy-to-use buttons.

I could be wrong, but I don't believe you can do this kind of thing with other smartphone operating systems -- at least not so easily and without hacking them a bit. What I find really interesting about this is that you sometimes hear people say the openness and customizability of Android is just a benefit for power users; most users just want what's given them. But my wife is very much a typical user, and she was dissatisfied with certain off-the-shelf features. Only Android gives us the ability to change them. I love that.
 
All smartphones have apps to do just about anything you want.

If she doesn't like the lock screen and if she doesn't actually lock the screen, you can install no lock, it will completely disable the lock screen.
 
All smartphones have apps to do just about anything you want.

If she doesn't like the lock screen and if she doesn't actually lock the screen, you can install no lock, it will completely disable the lock screen.


Actually, looking at the OP's examples, I can tell you right now that iOS has no capability to do either of these requests without jailbreaking the phone, which I assume was out of the question due to what the OP said of his wife.

First of all, iOS doesn't have the capability for widgets, and there are no apps that I know of that can mimic a touchpad on the homescreens, because stock the homescreens can not do anything but house icons and folders.

Second, I don't think the issue in the OP was having a lockscreen or not. It's my understanding that even with the lockscreen turned off, you still must use the slider to answer the phone when it's been asleep with the screen off.


Note, I am not saying anything about Blackberry, WebOS, WP7, or any smartphone OS other than Android and iOS, because I've never used them enough to know about these.

But, between Android and iOS, only Android gives the options to accomplish these tasks without rooting/jailbreaking/hacking your phone, which should reside in the realms of the power users.
 
Exactly why Android is the best! There is so much to customize/make things easier/faster. Altough there are a lot other things why i love Android.
 
Yes...the customization of Android out the box is its biggest strength. Out the box...

Dont know much about WebOS. I handled a Blackberry for a few days. I didnt even bother testing out apps. The browsing sucked so bad I just grew uninterested with it.

The old Win Mo..there werent many free or low cost apps I could mess around with, or any worth messing around with that I can remember. The old Win Mo was cool for out the box customization too tho.

When I say out the box I mean no need to root, jailbreak.
 
Actually, looking at the OP's examples, I can tell you right now that iOS has no capability to do either of these requests without jailbreaking the phone, which I assume was out of the question due to what the OP said of his wife.

First of all, iOS doesn't have the capability for widgets, and there are no apps that I know of that can mimic a touchpad on the homescreens, because stock the homescreens can not do anything but house icons and folders.

Second, I don't think the issue in the OP was having a lockscreen or not. It's my understanding that even with the lockscreen turned off, you still must use the slider to answer the phone when it's been asleep with the screen off.


Note, I am not saying anything about Blackberry, WebOS, WP7, or any smartphone OS other than Android and iOS, because I've never used them enough to know about these.

But, between Android and iOS, only Android gives the options to accomplish these tasks without rooting/jailbreaking/hacking your phone, which should reside in the realms of the power users.


Um, thanks for the dissertation.
My point was simply that every smartphone has apps that can accomplish almost anything, so to state what the iPhone can or cannot do had absolutely zero to do with my statement, especially if you were going to blatantly disregard the limitations of Android as well.

Using no lock there is no slide to unlock, there is no lock period. So my suggestion was that if his wife didn't actually use security for locking her phone, no lock would remove the slide.
 
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