review of Android phone operating system

Playing with Android

Saw recently that Google’s software developers have released a Beta of the up and coming Android operating system for phones. A small number of devices are already on the market with this new platform. This might seem a difficult market to get into with a plethora of handsets already available such as the supremely hip and clever iPhone and the more business preferred Blackberry and of course Microsoft’s Windows Mobile which has been around for many years now.

I decided to play with it. The download is in the form of an ISO image which can be burnt to CD (or there is a USB stick version too.) You have to join the two pieces of the file together first using a free app or with a DOS command.

I used my favourite virtualisation application Virtualbox which I already running Windows 7 and Linux quite happily. So I made a new virtual machine with 256Mb of memory and set the default options, I had to create a hard disk image even though the current beta only runs from CD and doesn’t have a hard disk install option. I then mounted the ISO file and booted it up. The Android logo came up, being a little slow to get going, then I had the desktop with a few icons and signal bar and clock. I couldn’t see the mouse pointer, as it took a few seconds for it to be visible and it moved a little erratic at first, I could then click on the sliding bar to bring up the menu. There’s a fair few bugs, there is no sound, I get an error about 15% of power left (I am on a laptop on mains) and some menus are greyed out. Google are going the laptop development version of this OS on the ever popular Asus EEE mini laptop, as its ideal for small laptops with 7-10 inch screens.

The browser is simple but very nice. I didn’t need to play with any settings, it all worked first time. I could log into my Gmail account and look at Facebook, both obviously different screen formatting, however the screen size seems big and not cramped.

I am big fan of most things Google does, and as they are the biggest commercial backers of free software I think its quite certain this new OS will be a success, not just for phones but for other devices as well, there’s at least 10 different hardware makers committed to developing devices based on it including Samsung, Motorola, LG, HTC and Garmin. Non-subsidised handsets with full email and browser capabilities are also expected to be around costing less than US$100 by 2010. This is great as the iPhone is still hugely expensive or require 2 year contract on a hefty monthly tariff.

iPhones are not officially available where I live in Israel, but some people have managed to get them anyhow.

Microsoft made a memo to their employees a little while back that people were not allow to be seen using iPods at their work place (because of their own developed rival Zune player, as yet not seen in Europe) I am sure they wont be happy as Android is expected to take a huge chunk out of the smartphone market that MS have had for years. HTC, one of the biggest backers of Windows mobile are rumoured to be abandoning it altogether for Android.

Too be honest I don’t really get excited about phones, but as of yesterday playing with the newer (0.3) build just released with quite a bit of improvement, and seeing some of my favourite free software such as VLC player, VNC and MAME is available, I am very tempted. I don’t want 3G data access as I don’t want a confusing and possibly hugely expensive 3G contract and would rather just do occasional web browsing or downloads when near a normal wireless point.

I dont get Twitter, I think its boring, but there are numerous free clients to do tweeting for those who like it.

I can just think of this quote from the alien bar from the original Star Wars movie, when thinking about Microsoft’s view of employees other brand items “we dont want your Droids here, they’ll have to stay outside..”

By Jonathan Posted in it

great vs hard things in Israel

Great things in Israel

Biblical places & seeing scriptures in action

Its easy to see places here in the bible like Mount of Olives, the walls of the old city, the way the Jewish people have come back from the four corners of the earth in accordance with scriptures, you only have to look at olive trees in city streets, and iconic sand stone buildings to know this is a special place.

Food

Food is good here, really like Falafels or Shwarama sandwiches.  Don’t think I can go back to normal sandwiches at home now.   I do like getting fresh stuff, fruit, vegetables, meat, bread, cake, etc from the Shuk (open air market)   I also really like meeting up with friends for Shabbat (Friday night to Saturday afternoon) for dinner as everything in the city stops then.

Family life

One of things I like most about Jewish people is they love their families.   Seeing kids with their dads out shopping and out in the park here is something that should be more common place in the UK, instead at home people look at relationships as throw away things that get replaced by something new when they hit a problem.   Here it seems marriage and family life are taken seriously, and there is a strong amount of respect here.  Even yesterday on a Monday evening in the park near my house, I see hundreds of people, families having barbeques and picnics out in the grass.

Low crime

There are house and car break ins sometimes, but assaults or robberies are pretty rare here, except for the occasional pick pockets.  This is a much safer place to live than most cities in the world.  Plus the fact there are soldiers and police, on and off duty making you feel safer.

City life

I like the fact there seems to be lots of live music, comedy clubs, entertainers in the street, also ice cream bars (why don’t we have these in the UK?)   as well as bars and coffee shops, theres always fun places to visit friends.   This is even more so in the more secular city of Tel Aviv.

Scenery

I like the views from the city as Jerusalem in mountainous and you can see from a long way across Mount of Olives or Mount Scopus.

Shopping

Taking a wander round the markets is fun, if you feel brave, you can always barter with the very pushy Arab traders who are hawking T shirts, biblical souvenirs, jewellery and middle east related gifts.

Diversity

Contrary to what you see on the news, (‘apartheid’ and other nonsense attempts to discredit this nation) there is a mutual respect for different ethnic backgrounds and beliefs.  Jewish people comprise of all shades of the skin spectrum, as people have come back from the US, the ex-Soviet states, France, Morocco, Iran, Argentina and many more places, you also have different approaches to Judaism from secular to ultra Orthodox.   Moslem people are treated well as many work for Jewish employers and receive better pay and working conditions than if they work for Palestinian owners.  All road signs, public information, government web sites, etc all have Arabic translations and Russian as well.    I haven’t been to East Jerusalem or any of the Palestinian territories as these are not safe for visitors.

Hard things in Israel

Things are expensive.

Mainly costly probably like the capital of any other country, but food (in normal supermarket) is expensive here.   Bread is normally around 12/13 shekels (#2) here.  Fruit and vegatables are cheap in the market, more so if you get them when they are nearly at the end of the shelf life.

Hebrew language

Its really difficult, I need to investigate some means of getting to grips with learning this.   In a lot of cases people do speak English to some degree.

Political instability

Theres always the worry and threat of terrorism and war, at the same time, protests are quite common with religious groups against homosexual pride events, a recent riot that the police where picking on a woman from the Orthodox community who was accused of child neglect, as well as the frequent heated discussion on land for peace deals and pressure from the EU, UN and the US over land.  Generally you don’t easily wander into things like this they seem to be on the outskirts of town and you are advised to stay away from disturbances.

Smell

This is probably more to do with the extreme heat and scarcity of water, the drains often smell bad, as do rubbish bins out in the streets stink as well as the dozens of stray cats I see in my street.

Traffic

Driving is quite bad here, the fatality rate is about twice what it is in the UK and US.   A lot of cars look heavily dented and scruffy looking.  People often don’t wear seat belt and speak on the phone whilst driving.  If you see someone parking, they nearly always kerb their wheels or mount the pavement.  This seems a thing consistent with all of southern Europe and Mediterranean countries.

cats in the holyland

Cats in the holyland

For some reason, there seems to be lots of stray cats here, saw plenty of them on previous trips here, in the city walls of old Jerusalem, around one of the Roman amphitheatres on the Mediterranean and in a museum near Masada.

Stray cats can serve purposes, to get rid of rats and mice, but often they don’t bother as there are ready stocked dustbins or generous human neighbours around, There’s at least 15 cats in a hundred metre radius of my house, most of them sit in a garden two houses away which seems to have loads of rubbish (and really stinks, as do our drains and rubbish bins with the heat we have) and appears empty. Some of the kittens appear ridiculously cute, the little tiny black one that’s often asleep by my front door appears to have a nasty eye infection. Most of them look a mixture of ginger, tiger stripes and black. I don’t think anyone bothers to get their animals neutered or spayed.

Try and pet one of the adult moggies and you will get a nasty scowl and a paw swiped at you. I dont know if this country has a rabies or other nasty diseases but I think large numbers of feral animals can be a problem and really numbers probably need to controlled a bit, just as national parks in the UK, have to cull excess numbers of horses and deer.

Now, as domestic cats are widely thought to originate from Egypt, I wonder if Moses brought some over to here at some point….

will get back to some more articles soon….

prayer walking places

Before I left, I used to go walking along the seafront in Southsea, head out of my house and turn left and go as far as the rock gardens on South Parade Pier, or turn right and head around Old Portsmouth and Gunwharf. At the moment Rehavia Park is my blank canvas for speaking to the Lord on thanking him, giving him praise or asking for help at the moment. Walking in the park is nice as its usually full of families often having barbeques or people out with their dogs or jogging.

Shabbat on a balcony overlooking the city

Had Shabbat dinner (from friday) at a friends house on the other side of town, well a longish walk across the park along side the the Knesset (government building) Had some really good food, got to sit on a balcony across the city, the view was amazing. Whats more that balcony had a wooden frame built around it, so it could be used as a Succot tent, just throw a big tarpaulin over it.

Our team consists of people from US, Canada, Germany, South Africa, Australia and Japan, until now actually I was the only Brit but there another person joined this week.

Browser wars and customer’s data

Blogging some regular geek stuff today.

http://www.theregister.co.uk/2009/07/08/orange_and_ie6/

Just read this article on the register on IT techs working for Orange are getting into trouble for using Firefox at work.   Now I understand that you should follow company’s procedures for using software that’s approved, but for a lot of big companies still sticking with using Microsoft’s Internet Explorer 6 (the browser that comes with Windows XP)  really need to start getting upto speed with their security.

Its well known the IE6 is incredibly insecure even with all latest updates and patches on, businesses must start moving on from using dangerously flawed legacy applications.

I went into my bank (Lloyds TSB) before I went away, and my records are being stored on a PC with IE6 with some kind of web based customer relations software.

Word up to Orange and Lloyds TSB and any other business using IE6 to keep my data, start looking at your security procedures.  I am not happy you could be putting me, the customer’s data at risk on such an obsolete poor excuse for a web browser.  If you are not interested, I don’t want to be a customer of you any more.

Firefox really actually should be an easy app to support and use in the work place.  True, some finicky apps will insist on ActiveX plug ins and wont work on anything but IE6, but this can easily be solved with a Firefox extension called IETab which can automatically render certain sites with URL filtering.

The ActiveX system in IE 6 (and 7&8) can let all kinds of uninvited nasties in your machine.  Firefox’s main security advantage is it doesn’t support ActiveX, but is easily scalable and can be customised by add on extensions, these can be locked out by making sure the user doesn’t have Admin rights of course.  Of course, no browser is completely secure but from supporting people in business and at home using Firefox, users generally take to it without much training and generally don’t tend to break their computer’s set up or get security problems really at all, plus you can use it under Mac and Linux as well.

By Jonathan Posted in it, work

The Shuk

Now, somehow I thought I visited this market before on my previous two trips to Israel, but I was mistaken as was confusing this with the more general sort of market held in the old city. This was different as this market is just food.

It was sunday midday and I was going to head to church about 5pm, the market is hugely hectic and full of shoppers looking for bargains, and young men pushing around trolleys of fruit and vegetables on to the shelves. To me this is the most fun part of weekly shopping.

Things here are just not what you expect. One man had what appeared to have large hand operated meat mincers, I am not sure if this was for mashing up baby food or for butchers for producing meat products. Behind him were various odd looking mostly rusty metal parts, maybe he was repairing and recondition these contraptions. Another sight was some workmen using an angle grinder to cut through some kind of redundant plumbing fitting on the wall, but without much regard for the safety of nearby shoppers the sparks off the tools where flying all over path and all over some meat put out in the stand close by. Some cheeky pigeons swoop down and start scoffing some of the tubs of corn, nuts, cereal and dried fruit sold for people to buy and and weigh themselves before the owner of the shop looks up from his newspaper and they are suddenly gone.

I want to get myself a falafel, but this particular counter doesn’t have them, instead I got some kind of shwarma a sandwich with omelette, fish and some kind of spicey sauce, and a malt drink, the 50 something man tells me to sit down on a small round table as he will bring it over, as he turns around his cigarette ash blows into my face, yuk. The food is really good though. He then flings the cigarette but carelessly into the middle of the market road where it just misses a box full of mostly paper rubbish.

I got a kilo of plums, some pita breads, and best bargain of all a large half of a water melon, this item was just one Shekel (16 pence) Its funny in this country its generally cheaper to buy fruit and vegetables than to get a microwave meal. I really like the fact that prepackaged food is not really that easy to get hold of so everyone is encouraged to eat decent stuff here.

second day here in Jerusalem

Plane journey was not to bad, left on time, although my screen on the seat in front of me stopped working, pressing any of the buttons would not respond, the screen was just black, after a couple of presses of the alert steward button, someone came after a few minutes, he then pressed some of the buttons making me feel somewhat stupid. Got chatting to the guy next to me who was returning back to his home in Haifa as he had been on the way back from Los Angeles which required 3 different plane changes, so he was obviously very tired. Also spoke to a British girl who was only 18 but was bravely coming on her own to see some family here, so we chatted whilst waiting to go through security and waited as she went to buy a new mobile phone from kiosk in the airport, then we got a Sherut (taxi van) which gets you from TLV airport to anywhere in Jerusalem for NIS50 (£10ish) this is great as you can get to the door of where you want to go, but the taxi only leaves when it has enough people, and it took a few hours going all around different bits of Jerusalem dropping other people off.

My phone has decide to not work doing roaming here which is odd as its worked before. In my flat I share with an American called Josh, and once I arrived I had a Cellcom SIM card, some food, and few books and literature about the charity waiting for me.

Today I got up about 9.30, and don’t have to work till next week, so got a free day to take a wander and look around town. There was a demonstration on a road nearby for the release of the young 18 year old soldier who was captured by Hamas a few years ago, he is meant to be still alive somewhere in Gaza, so continued to pray for him that he will be released soon. Jerusalem has changed a bit since my last visit here in 2006, there’s a huge bridge held together by some steel wires, looks like a big expensive and ambitious design, its not finished as there were workman there as there is no actual road surface on it. In the middle of town there is a lot of work going on as well and its obvious a new light railway that is going to through the city is underway.

Its not easy negotiating round the city as the street signs are small and directional signs are a bit vague. As I was hoping to get to the Shuk (main market in the middle of Jerusalem) it became apparent as it was 1pm the chances are it will be shut already or soon because everything closes for Shabbat. I got a few items in this medium sized supermarket, but things like falafel or bagels were not to be found, and this shop like a few others for some strange reason do not sell drinks in bottles smaller than 1 litre. It was slightly worrying my carrier bag I had these items nearly broke half way walking through the park, think I must of walked a good six miles today in exploring the city, but not got see the juicy bits like the old city, the Shuk and the tomb of Jesus.

My room has wireless and Cellcom sim seems to work all ok, I also have a land phone as the international rates we have seems extremely cheap too. My housemate is making me dinner so will call this journal a night I think.

Flying London Heathrow to Tel Aviv Ben Gurion

Woohoo! Time for some airport lounge style blogging, even though all the wireless networks here are subscription only, I am just typing this into Open Office and uploading later.

My flight is going at 11.15 to Tel Aviv, getting up at 5 wasn’t so bad as for some reason I keep getting up early anyhow, but some how feeling hugely dehydrated and some tea and orange juice didn’t really help things, it go worse on the coach up here, but found praying and getting a bit more sleep seem to help things hugely.

packing for trip, seafront walking, other preparation

Went for a walk this evening, on the east side of Portsmouth, from Moorings Way, over to the seafront around Eastney Marina around to Eastney then to Locksway Road, St James Hospital and back to Moorings Way, must have been a good nearly 4 miles.

Only have a week till my flight, so probably going to miss the sea around Portsmouth. Got somewhere to put car for 6 months, so now need to fill in a load of forms to get the tax disc I bought a week and a half ago refunded, as well as insurance.

Now got to work out how to condense things I need for 6 months into a 20 kilos, or more accurate a 5 kilo bag with 15 kilos of airlines quota…