Buffistechnology 3: "Press Some Buttons, See What Happens."
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(shrug) Form, mostly. I like the themes and the general look of its default launcher, though I miss the app drawer (I just file most apps in a folder called Other on my second page, to simulate it). I think I get pretty much the same battery life, etc, I would get with CyanogenMod. If I was used to ADW or LauncherPro and was going to use that on top of the default, I'd probably use CyanogenMod, since it's a little more popular and well-supported in the US.
I do like the way the quick-access settings-toggles work on MIUI. I don't know if those exist on CyanogenMod. I wish that I could dismiss notifications individually on MIUI like you can on Cyanogenmod.
quick-access settings-toggles
Ooh, please do tell...
I don't know what I'd accept in exchange for an app drawer. Can you load another launcher on top of MIUI and get a drawer back, or is that intrinsic?
I wish that I could dismiss notifications individually on MIUI like you can on Cyanogenmod.
Do you mean individual notifications like for one email out of many?
It was really hard to find somewhere to
start
reading about MIUI. It was all so opaque. I get that it's not driven by an English language team, but still. I'm not sure I'd ever start there--was it your first Android root? First Android phone? The Cyanogen page is still a bit confusing, but it's about what I figure you're in for with getting funky with Android, and funky is part of the reason a lot of geeks go with Android anyway. And the opacity is part of the reason a lot of borderline people go with iOS. I mean, why not just use something where there's one clear primary source of information?
I have seen some people say they go MIUI because it looks like iOS but has Android customisability. Was that part of it for you, or other things about the look? I have also seen customised MIUI screens that...man, they barely even look like a phone, they're so out of the world.
The miui.us page isn't bad.
You can see a screenshot of the MIUI quick-settings toggles if you google image search "MIUI toggles", or just click this: [link] It's essentially a tab on your notifications page that lets you easily change up to 12 settings. The colors are not set in stone (I hate the orange, and finding a theme to let me escape it was one of my first MIUI tasks).
You absolutely can run another launcher on top of MIUI that will have an app drawer. ADW.Launcher and LauncherPro both work great and will give you your app drawers back. But you lose some of the pretty of MIUI - one of the coolest things about MIUI is how many icon themes there are, with custom icons for hundreds of popular apps. I'm pretty sure those icons won't show up except in the default launcher.
Actually, I just checked, and the custom icons appear in ADW.Launcher too! I may go back to ADW now! Neat.
The MIUI lockscreens are pretty amazing and beautiful as well, though I'm a fan of WidgetLocker's functionality and went back to it pretty quickly after installing MIUI.
My first root was essentially the stock rom for my phone, only rooted. I only decided to play with other roms when HTC Sense started to grate on me. You're right that there really isn't a single place to find information on MIUI, etc, but I think that's just because they have no real need to market, per se. They're not selling anything, so they don't hire anybody to sell it.
Oh, by single notifications, I meant that if you've got notifications from several applications, Cyanogenmod lets you swipe just one of them to make it disappear without clearing all of them. Like if I have a "new email" notification, I might want to actually check the e-mail right now, but I might want the notification to go away without clearing my "It's your turn in Scrabble" notification. In Cyanogenmod, swipe the e-mail, it disappears, the scrabble stays. MIUI is like stock android - clear all, launch the app, or leave it are your only choices.
MIUI is like stock android - clear all, launch the app, or leave it are your only choices.
Huh. On both my devices (ADW Launcher and Launcher Pro, but I just checked and the default Galaxy launcher does it too) I have an X next to each application's notification, and can clear it without losing everything else. Is that what you mean? I thought I was dealing with stock there too.
a screenshot of the MIUI quick-settings toggles
Oh, that is sweet. I was ashamed when Colin showed me the five quick setting toggles that shipped with my phone and tablet, because I really should be ahead of him on those things. That's way better, even if you are giving up about an entire home screen. It looks worth it.
They're not selling anything, so they don't hire anybody to sell it.
But isn't that the same about CyanogenMod? It just seemed easier to research. I figured that's because primary dev is happening in English.
I've realised I have a Motorola Cliq lying about here. If I can find the power cable (please let it be the standard USB mini), I might root that for general rooting practice.
The notifications screen is not controlled by the launcher, it's controlled by the underlying ROM/OS. If you have the ability to dismiss single notifications, you are not looking at stock Android - that capability is coming in on Ice Cream Sandwich. It may be in Android 3.0, actually, but if you have it on your phone it's custom. Must be provided by T-Mobile.
The quick-settings toggles is not a home screen. You pull down your notifications screen, the click the tab at the bottom to access the toggles.
You're right about Cyanogenmod being easier to research, but it's also much bigger. There is more passion about it. And the primary dev is indeed in English, which helps.
if you have it on your phone it's custom. Must be provided by T-Mobile.
It must be a Honeycomb thing, then. Because that's where I have it. I can't keep track. Fragmentation ahoy.
I've been reading developer.android.com. It's a surprisingly initially accessible read for someone who has no intention of developing and just learnt they'd need to download the SDK. The deltas between the major releases are fascination.
The quick-settings toggles is not a home screen. You pull down your notifications screen
Nifty.
Ok folks, sell me on GroceryIQ - I downloaded it but I don't think I'm using it right because it doesn't seem very useful. What am I missing?
I didn't like it - it wasn't useful to me to make lists based on particular brands, which seems to be where it shines. I just want to get "pretzels" not "Rold Gold Twists." I'm using OurGroceries now, which is shared with my wife. Much simpler.
I just want to get "pretzels" not "Rold Gold Twists."
Then add pretzels. There's nothing stopping you doing that. You can add either brands or generics. I've gone through and done both--there's informative brand information in there about what's available, but sometimes just bacon is enough.
I don't see anything *not* simple about Grocery IQ. I can just type "Bacon" into the line at the bottom of the screen, or I can go a level deeper and say "Bacon" or go a level deeper than that and scan the barcode of the particular brand of bacon that's in my fridge. There's no requirement to commit to any level. And the lists are shareable too.