Saturday, February 11, 2012

Hey Browser! Don’t Assume One Day Is Typical

The Samsung Galaxy Tab’s browser app presents you with a graphical grid of your “most visited” pages when it launches. But this grid is useless, because it’s your most-visited pages for the past 24 hours. How exactly is this a time-saver, considering how rarely anyone ever visits single pages more than once in a given day? The grid usually winds up just being the last eight pages you happened to visit, even if they’re all from the same site.

Sunday, January 1, 2012

Facebook App Notifications out of Sync

Okay, so if you, like, tap on a Facebook notification in Android, it takes you to the Facebook App in like the News Feed. But, like, your notification isn't there! So you totally can't see who just, like, Liked your status. It takes like 15 minutes for the app's News Feed to catch up to the notifications. OMG too bummerrrrrr

Samsung Galaxy Tab Memos App Google Docs Desync

Don’t press us about this app, a more troubled one than most we know. This particular problem is just the most fun to highlight. The Memos app that comes pre-installed on the Samsung Galaxy tablet seems to synchronize up to Google Docs okay. But then when it syncs back down—let’s say you didn’t change any memos, or even touch them—it doesn’t normalize newline character sequences, so it thinks all the memos changed in Google Docs. That causes it to update all the memos (which you didn’t change, as noted) down to the character. This removes all the newlines, no doubt discarded as unallowed, so say good-bye to any paragraphs you created; they’re all run-ons now.

Swype’s Tablet .com Key Not So Much of a Time-Saver

Say you’re logging in somewhere and your user name is an e-mail address that ends with “.com.” If you use the Swype .com key, at least on the Samsung Galaxy tablet, a space is added before the dot.

Last we checked, most domains don't have space characters in them. In fact last we checked, most every dot ever written in English was not preceded by a space. This fault is not exclusive to entering e-mail addresses—that was only an example. It appears to occur everywhere spaces are automatically placed between words.