You Want Collapsible Threads With Your Buzz?

Android 1.5 and 1.6 users now have a bonus.

As of the Valentine's Day weekend, they can now access Google Buzz's mobile site.

When Buzz first came out, only iPhone and Android 2.0 users were able to access it via their mobile browsers.  Unfortunately, that shut out over 70% of the Android user base.

Now, the previous two versions can also access the mobile Buzz experience and even those on full-sized computer browsers.  The https://m.google.com/app/buzz site allows unsupported browsers.  However, if you want to cut one part out of the process to make it a tad quicker, there's the force option which goes straight to Buzz without worrying if it's a supported browser or not.

However, I've found Firefox seems to have a small problem with this site, not showing all the interface and sometimes locking to the following/nearby screen.  On Chrome and Safari, the whole interface is running nicely.

There are a couple of other small drawbacks to the mobile Buzz experience.  In Gmail Buzz, you can click on a timestamp in any Buzz and get a permalink URL which can be added to a new Buzz and made part of a ReBuzz.  On the mobile Buzz, you can't do anything with timestamps.

One good thing about using the mobile Buzz site on your normal computer is that you can collapse threads.  Mobile Buzz also seems to be a bit faster than the Gmail version.

Google seems to be responding fairly quickly to the feedback from the early adopters after the first half week, so there's bound to be a few more improvements in coming days.

Anyway, I've made Mobile Buzz my main way of accessing Buzz, only going back to Gmail if I really need one of the features the mobile version doesn't have, like the timestamps URLs.

I'm buzzing along nicely.

Today's Adventures In Android

I received a HTC Magic for my birthday and for a few weeks both my partner and my iPhone were jealous of the time I spent with it.

My missus' response wasn't exactly helped by the term used for 'jailbreaking' an Android-based phone.  In America it's a pretty innocent term, relating to gaining root access to the filesystem on such a phone and getting a bit more functionality out of it..  Here in Australia, the term is a euphemism for horizontal tango.

So telling my partner I was thinking of "rooting the android" got quite a nasty look from her.

I would not be at all surprised if Australian readers all keeled over laughing at the above sentence.  However, our Yankee friends would be asking why we were all laughing.

That said, I'm back to spending more time with both my partner and my  iPhone this week, although I've been keeping up on some developments for the Magic and other Android devices.

The Android OS for mobile phones is a Linux variant, though today's news points out that it is forking just a tad too much from the main Linux development.

At the heart of any Linux distribution is the kernel, which helps the hardware and the software communicate and interact.  You fine-tune any Linux distribution to your specific hardware by re-compiling the kernel and adjusting things more specifically.  The Wikipedia article linked to just above gives a more detailed explanation.

Up to now, Android utilized the 2.6 version of the Linux Kernel and there had been Google code contributed back into the community kernel.  Today that code was removed.

There are some things specific to Android you don't find in other Linuxes.  Android does not use X-Windows as its graphic interface, for example. One viewpoint for that and other difference between Linux and Android is explained here. Then there's the C programming language.  It isn't officially supported on Android, whereas it's key to almost all Linuxes. Instead it uses bionic.  Even the virtual machine differs from standard Java, using the Dalvik Virtual Machine and not supporting implementations of Java even found on Nokia phones.

All that aside, Android driver code is differing so much from the main Linux Kernel tree that there would be incompatibilities if it were a part of the main kernel.  There may or may not be some amount of politics to it, but in the end just the examples above show where you can't call it a mainline Linux.  It'll be up to the Google and Linux people to sort it out from there.

Kind of makes me glad I just utilize an Android phone, not develop for it.

Crunchpads, JooJoos, Slates and Mini-Tablets...and iPads

In the months before the announcement of the Apple iPad, I was reading about Techcrunch prototyping something called the Crunchpad.

Unfortunately, the Crunchpad never made it to market in the end.  The full story on why is told here, while the device under a different name is explained here.

Tablet computers are an intriguing subject, especially now the iPad has been created.  They've been around in some form or another the past decade, though here in Australia you'd be lucky to ever see one.

Apparently they seem to do well in some niche markets like medicine.

I am kind of surprised they haven't been picked up more by the art/graphics community.  Drawing directly on a screen would actually be more preferable to drawing on a digitizing tablet seperate from the screen.  I should know...I've tried various ways to do computer graphics and I'm still partial to a Palm or PocketPC and stylus.  I just hate the SIZE of such screens.

Hmm...just realized I should patent or bag intellectual property on the idea of a tablet screen for drawing...

Jokes aside, up to now the timing hasn't been right for mainstream tablets.

What's different now is the netbook market has opened some ground, so it comes down to making a tablet that does something netbooks can't and which has popular appeal.

Is it the tablet's time at last?  Deloitte Digital seems to think so.

Steve Jobs has aimed the iPad at those people who normally shy away from other computers, but who still want to do email, video watching and music listening.  Oh, and who also like gaming.  Your granny should be able to do all these things on the iPad within the first ten minutes and be enjoying it in fifteen.

Jobs, then, is aiming at the right people, those millions or billions who just want something that works for simple email, video, music, gaming and web-browsing without needing an MSCE qualification.

Others, of course, want a tablet which does the same things as Windows 7 and Mac OS X in a slate form factor.  Except, we've had those on the Windows side of things and they haven't taken off that well outside of niches. Will the HP Slate work with Windows 7 to change that?  We'll know soon enough.

It may still come down more to what's actually on a tablet than the actual hardware.

So what else do we have in tablet options? Do we have a middle ground or third path?

Today the Sydney Morning Herald pointed out Google's Chrome OS as a potential operating system for tablet computers.

Then there's Android, already making waves on mobile phones and some netbooks.

Combined with NVidia's Tegra chipset, Android-based tablets could still make a huge impact.

Of course, just reading about a Dell Android mini-tablet makes me cringe a little.  A five-inch screen-size?  Naw, that doesn't float my boat.  Give me seven-to-ten inches of screen and I might consider it.

Here's one prototype shown at CES, great Android OS, great Tegra chip, but let down by some other parts of the hardware.

Engadget has an article about the second generation of the Tegras here.

The ICD Vega demonstrates one of the better Tegra-based Android tablets, avaialbe in both capacitive and resistive touchscreens.

Enough different things are coming together to bring tablet computing out of the niches.

Anyway, I'm looking forward to my first tablet especially if it enables better drawing than the Palm or PocketPC allowed me.

The iPad is already on the shopping list as two other members of my family want it, not just me...you should see my missus and the nine-year-old drooling over that iPad.  It's already a hit with its intended audience and it hasn't even been sold yet.

Related articles:

Sim, Sim, Sim...iPad Sims