UPDATE: If you have Android 2.2, check out our 20 handy Android 2.2 tips and tricks.
Android
is a great little mobile operating system for the modern smartphone,
but it can feel a little bewildering and complex to the newcomer.
Google's
quest to make everyone feel at home by providing layer upon layer of
option screens and hundreds of tweakable settings can leave people a
little lost, plus there's your widgets to worry about, the Home screen
layout and much more hidden beneath Google's green bonnet.
So
here, to make things a little easier for Android newcomers and those
seeking a few more power tips, we present 50 essential Android facts and
techniques.
These tips are mostly for the 2.1 version of
Android, which is by far the most common form of the OS out there today -
but much of the advice will also work on older and newer versions and
those boutique varieties skinned by some hardware makers.
1. Activate the Android Power Strip
The
single most important feature in Android 2.1 is its built-in power
strip widget. Here, you're able to quickly disconnect all the phone's
battery-destroying features, like Wi-Fi, Bluetooth and the Great Batter
Killer that is GPS. Long-press on the screen and install it via the
widgets category. 2. Android call screening
If
you're a paranoid call-screener, Android is there for you. Open up the
Contacts listing of the person you're currently avoiding, then select
Menu > Options. From here you're able to ping all incoming calls from
this person directly to voicemail. Give people the brush off with
Android.
3. Set up custom caller ringtones
Alternatively,
if you like talking to people, the same screen lets you allocate a
specific custom ringtone to each caller stored in your Contacts
directory.
4. Add your alarm clock to your task killer
A
classic mistake, this. We're constantly being told of the (debatable)
importance of using a task manager to maximise Android battery life, and
if you want to go down that route you're welcome. However, when killing
all your tasks to save battery life, remember that your alarm clock is a
task in itself - kill that and you'll wake up in a panic at 10.15am
tomorrow morning.
5. Organise things into folders
While
Steve Jobs may have recently made quite a big deal about letting iOS
users organise things into folders, Android's been doing that for ages.
Fancy a quick Home screen shortcut to your starred favourite contacts?
Long-press the Home screen and make it so.
6. Rename Android folders And,
once you've done that, to customise things to perfection it's possible
to rename folders. Simply open the folder, then long-press on its name
in the top bar to bring up the Top Secret renaming field.
7. Check the date
Possibly
one of the tiniest undocumented features is the date-checking facility.
Press the Notification bar at the top left of the screen. It tells you
what the date is. Go on, try it. It will.
8. Mount your SD card
Also
accessed via the Notifications field is the "Mount" option. Many an
Android newcomer has failed at this hurdle, as mounting your phone's SD
card is an awkward step that needs to be taken before it'll appear as an
external drive for data copying. Plug it in, mount it, then copy.
9. Set up your keyboard launch shortcuts
One
of the reasons many people still love their QWERTY keyboards is
Google's inclusion of the reliable old keyboard shortcut system in
Android. The phone has a completely customisable collection of app
launcher shortcuts, which are found under Settings > Applications
> Quick Launch.
10. Download more Android live wallpapers
One
thing that makes Android 2.1 a little more swish and exciting than the
rather dull earlier versions is its support for Live Wallpapers - the
animating image format that brings your Home screen to life. There's a
negligible battery life hit for doing so, but in return you get a phone
that looks cool. Which is what life's all about, right? Search the
Android Market for Live Wallpaper - there are loads.
11. Easy zoom
A
teeny little feature, this, but one that's super-useful if you're using
all five of your Home screens - or a custom user interface that offers
even more. Tapping the dots beside the dock at the bottom of the screen
brings up a mini thumbnail list of all Home screens, allowing you to get
from Screen 1 to Screen 5 without wearing a groove into your screen
surface.
12. Add a Navigation shortcut to Android
Android
2.1 lets users set up local short-cuts to the Maps Navigation satnav
app. As long as you have one of the latest Google Maps updates, you're
able to select one of your Navigation routes and attach it directly to a
shortcut on the Home screen - creating a one-press launcher for your
favourite trips.
13. Set your double-tap zoom level
On
phones that don't support multi-touch zooming, you can take more
control of your web browsing zoom via the browser's setting page. Change
your view to "Close" if you want the page to fly right into extreme
close up when you double-tap the screen, or leave it to "Far" if you're
happy to have text only cropping in a little closer when you double-tap.
14. Change Android browser font size
From
the same menu you're also able to select your browser font size. Your
personal ideal settings will vary depending on your screen size,
resolution and eye sight, but a few minutes getting it set up so pages
are instantly readable will save many cumulative hours of resizing over
the coming years.
15. Search web pages
Menu
> More > Find on Page lets you search for specific text terms on
web pages, if you can't be bothered reading the thing properly as the
author intended.
16. Practise your robot voice
Android
2.1 features voice-input for every text field. Which is nice, although
the delay for "processing" - and often rather left field results - mean
it's usually quicker to just bite the bullet and type things. Remember
to say "comma" to tell it to insert a comma. Full stop.
17. Add words to the Android dictionary
This
is such a useful feature it ought to be screamed about via a sticker on
the phone when you take it out of the box. If you've been labouring
through life with a difficult-to-spell surname, type it once into your
Android phone's text field - then long-press on it in the suggested word
field. This adds it to the dictionary, so you'll never have to type
more than the first couple of characters of your stupid
name again.
18. Sign up for a Picasa account
Google's
online image-sharing tool may have failed to capture the public's
imagination in the same way as Flickr, but there's one good reason to
register yourself one - Android 2.1's 3D gallery can auto-sync your
photos with your Picasa account. Photo sharing works both ways, so
you'll have to deactivate sync if you don't want your entire web gallery
popping up on your phone.
19. Download web images
If
you've seen one of those funny photographs on the internet,
long-pressing on it lets you download it to your phone - and it'll pop
up in your Gallery for easy sharing.
20. Manage your Android call log
It's
very easy to delete individual items from Android's log of made and
received calls - simply long-press on an item and delete it. Then sleep
easier.
21. Facebook your Contact photos
If
you combine Android with the official Facebook Android app, it's
possible to automatically pull in photos for your contacts through
Facebook. You're also able to create a specific Facebook Phonebook
folder on the Home page, keeping internet and proper friends separate.
22. Browser combo button
The
Android 2.1 web browser features a clever multi-function button beside
the address bar. While a page is loading it turns into a "X" to cancel
loading, but once a page has finished it transforms itself into a
bookmark adding and history management tool. It's always there for you.
23. Android web history shortcut
Also,
further speed up browsing by holding down the Back key - this is your
shortcut to your internet History. Ideal for navigating those complex
browsing sessions - and also cuts down on unnecessary reloading.
24. Use browser tabs
The
standard Android browser offers tabbed browsing, it just doesn't do a
very good job of advertising it. Long-pressing a URL lets you open web
links in a new tab - you then switch tabs by pressing Menu and selecting
the Windows option. Not that user-friendly a system, but it works. Just
remember that quitting to the desktop may automatically close
everything in the middle of a tab-heavy session.
25. Multiple Gmail accounts in Android
Android
2.1 added support for multiple Gmail accounts. Add a new internet
identity to your phone by opening the Gmail app, then pressing Menu >
Accounts > Add Accounts. Then remember who you're pretending to be.
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