I have been using the HTC One Max for some time now, and it seems that it might be time to provide a review.
I have been using it for about 11 months now and I have learned it's quirks.
First, HTC Sense is worthless. Generic Android is much better and Sense only gets in the way of doing things. So, first I turned it off and later I installed the Google Now Launcher which I actually like, though it is far from perfect.
I have my phone from Verizon, and between HTC and Verizon there is far too much bloatware on this phone for my taste. There are a group of Verizon apps that cannot be uninstalled, which is really annoying, since I use only one Verizon app, the one that lets me check my data usage.
The screen is enormous, which I love and I have never once been sorry that I chose one of the largest phones on the market (5.9"). Unfortunately, HTC made some unfortunate choices which are rather annoying. The HTC One Max has only two buttons, a home button and a back button. They are backlit, but the lighting is so feeble that they can only be seen when the phone is off. So, they can be seen when they cannot be used, and cannot see when they can. Great work, HTC. Couldn't you find anything stupider to do? Oh wait, you did.
Because there are only two buttons, there is no dedicated button to view the list of running programs, so that you can switch between them. No, you have to double tap the Home button to bring up a screen of the running apps, not a list, but a grid. Actually, I suppose that makes two stupid choices. More excellent work HTC. Double tapping is not easy. Single tap, home screen, double tab running apps grid. Only about 40% of the time, my attempts to double tap bring up the Home screen. The grid is not as good as a list, because when you have 4 or more apps open and want to close an app, you have to slide up through the app above the one you want to close. About 5% of the time, that switches to the app on the lower line, or the one above it. It isn't that often, just enough to be annoying.
So, each HTC change makes the phone worse.
Also, the power button is in a perfect place, so that when you pick up your phone, it will either turn on or shut off, depending on what it was before you picked it up. HTC, didn't anyone actually test the phone by picking it up? It seems like a simple and obvious test, but obvious they did not perform that test. Fortunately, a gel case fixed that.
One last thing, and probably the smallest of all. The phone is white. No one in their right mind wants a white phone, and yes, I am looking at all of you white iPhone users...you are NOT in your right mind. Of course, you chose Apple, so you were mostly there already before proving it my buying a white phone.
So, what is my overall opinion of the HTC One Max?
I love it.
My problem is that I have owned three HTC phones, one of the first batch of Windows Phone 7 Phones (yea, that was a brilliant decision Microsoft), an HD7, and then an HTC Trophy 7. I loved both of those phones, much more than the HTC One Max.
Hmmm, I wonder why?
Oh, it might be because Microsoft was smart enough to decide not to let OEMs modify the OS, and the hardware was set in stone, 3 buttons on the front, one camera/shutter button on the side. No alterations. No deciding that you know better and messing around with it.
The HTC One Max is a very good phone, but if they had left Android alone, and stuck with the standard button arrangement it would be a nearly perfect phone.
I wanted a big screen, and I got it, and that is why I love the HTC One Max. If it were smaller, this would be an annoying phone. I look at the HTC One remix on Verizon and notice that the extra hardware buttons are gone and it uses the onscreen buttons and it appears to have all three, so while a 4.5" screen is too small, at least they corrected one problem.
Wednesday, February 11, 2015
Sunday, February 1, 2015
Where to Begin....Again
I have been away from this site for far too long and for the last month or so, I have stayed away because I had been away too long. I simply do not know where to begin in getting back into putting down my thoughts on this blog.
One thing that has changed is my gadget status. When I was last writing regularly, I was a gadget-starved gadget junkie. I am a bit better fed now.
Microsoft Surface
This is the original version and the RT variety, not the Pro. Quick review. I love it, even though I do not use it as much as I thought I would. With the addition of a TypeCover I can do virtually anything on it that I can do on the PC that I am presently typing this on.
Dell Venue 8 Pro
Now, the funny part is that my 8" Tablet runs full Windows 8, while my 10" Tablet runs RT. I love this one as well. I got the smaller tablet because I do not like to read on the larger one. Also, I discovered that my phone, which is one of the biggest on the market isn't big enough for reading on.
On the subject of Windows RT versus Windows 8 is that it really does not make a difference. I have no legacy programs that I use on my tablets, so the smaller tablet could have RT on it and I would not notice.
HTC One Max
This is the big phone, 5.9", which makes it larger than the Galaxy Note. I love the real estate, but it has a few annoying things, like the change in the buttons, which is really annoying because you have to double tap the home button to get the running programs list. It doesn't always work. Overall, I really like it.
I still have my Hisense Sero 7 Pro, but it gives me problems from time to time and I do not use it much.
So, this is my first time back in a while, but I intend to write more often, so watch out.
One thing that has changed is my gadget status. When I was last writing regularly, I was a gadget-starved gadget junkie. I am a bit better fed now.
Microsoft Surface
This is the original version and the RT variety, not the Pro. Quick review. I love it, even though I do not use it as much as I thought I would. With the addition of a TypeCover I can do virtually anything on it that I can do on the PC that I am presently typing this on.
Dell Venue 8 Pro
Now, the funny part is that my 8" Tablet runs full Windows 8, while my 10" Tablet runs RT. I love this one as well. I got the smaller tablet because I do not like to read on the larger one. Also, I discovered that my phone, which is one of the biggest on the market isn't big enough for reading on.
On the subject of Windows RT versus Windows 8 is that it really does not make a difference. I have no legacy programs that I use on my tablets, so the smaller tablet could have RT on it and I would not notice.
HTC One Max
This is the big phone, 5.9", which makes it larger than the Galaxy Note. I love the real estate, but it has a few annoying things, like the change in the buttons, which is really annoying because you have to double tap the home button to get the running programs list. It doesn't always work. Overall, I really like it.
I still have my Hisense Sero 7 Pro, but it gives me problems from time to time and I do not use it much.
So, this is my first time back in a while, but I intend to write more often, so watch out.
Labels:
Dell,
Dell Venue 8 Pro,
gadgets,
HTC,
HTC One Max,
Microsoft,
Microsoft Surface,
starting over,
Surface
Monday, January 27, 2014
Starting the New Year on the Surface
So, I have not been very good about writing here lately. I am not sure that will change, but here I am again.
For my birthday, I bought myself a refurbished Microsoft Surface. Yes, the one that runs Windows RT. No, not the new Surface 2, but the original Surface. I found a very good price on a refurbished Surface and I jumped on it when I had the money.
So, some of you may be wondering why I decided on the Windows tablet that may be doing least well of them all. Well, that is why I am here writing today.
First, I reject completely the argument that Windows RT is bad because it does not run Windows legacy apps. That is completely and utter balderdash. No, I do indeed understand that Windows RT does not run Windows legacy apps. What I reject is the idea that this is a mark against it. Will Android run Windows apps? No. Well, is that a mark against it? Does iOS run Windows apps? No. Does iOS run MacOS apps. No. Why is Windows RT judged differently from iOS and Android? Windows RT is Microsoft's attempt to enter the low end tablet market. Just like the tablets that it competes directly against, it does not run Windows or MacOS apps intended for desktop systems. So, all three are even.
Windows RT only fails when compared to Windows 8 tablets, and that is understandable, except that with an ARM processor, it can have a much longer battery life, and a lighter weight. I would put that as two in the plus column for Windows RT.
I have a new Windows 8 laptop that I am typing this on, so I do not really need a full Windows 8 tablet. Though I must admit to being tempted by the Dell Venue 11 Pro, but at more than twice what I paid for my Surface, I was willing to sacrifice a few things I did not really need.
There are plenty of apps in the Microsoft Store. I have installed Kindle, Netflix, and I already had a news, sports and mail app. Once I updated to Windows RT 8.1, I was all set. I also get Office, and I do not mean an Office clone, like you get on Android or iOS, I mean Office, the original and still the best. I haven't installed many games, but that will come as I work my way through figuring out what I want.
One big thing for me was that I wanted a keyboard. 10"+ tablets are a little useless without one. I had a 10" Android tablet and it screamed out to me constantly for a keyboard. I ended up trying out three different ones. Swype is nice, but it is really hard to do more than a few words. By the way I prefer Swype to Swiftkey. Swype is fine for stuff about the length of a text message. I am sure it works great in Twitter...then again I do not use Twitter. But, for longer emails, or writing something like this post...not so much.
The only other Windows tablet in my price range was the Asus T100, which is a great machine at a great price....with an unusable keyboard. At least, it is unusable for someone with my big hands...or at least me with my big hands (no, you can't have them). I have tried out both the TouchCover and the TypeCover at my local Microsoft store and surprise, I can use both of these. They are actually full size keyboards.
I have a TypeCover that I hope will be arriving this week.
Most importantly, the price was right. None of the other tablets I was looking at could match the price. Oh, there were some lesser Android tablets, but the ones in the same price range are not ones I want. The Samsung Galaxy Note 10.1, which would be my Android preference was twice the price.
So, I am starting off the new year on the Surface, and as the year progresses I will let you know what it is like to live with the Surface.
For my birthday, I bought myself a refurbished Microsoft Surface. Yes, the one that runs Windows RT. No, not the new Surface 2, but the original Surface. I found a very good price on a refurbished Surface and I jumped on it when I had the money.
So, some of you may be wondering why I decided on the Windows tablet that may be doing least well of them all. Well, that is why I am here writing today.
First, I reject completely the argument that Windows RT is bad because it does not run Windows legacy apps. That is completely and utter balderdash. No, I do indeed understand that Windows RT does not run Windows legacy apps. What I reject is the idea that this is a mark against it. Will Android run Windows apps? No. Well, is that a mark against it? Does iOS run Windows apps? No. Does iOS run MacOS apps. No. Why is Windows RT judged differently from iOS and Android? Windows RT is Microsoft's attempt to enter the low end tablet market. Just like the tablets that it competes directly against, it does not run Windows or MacOS apps intended for desktop systems. So, all three are even.
Windows RT only fails when compared to Windows 8 tablets, and that is understandable, except that with an ARM processor, it can have a much longer battery life, and a lighter weight. I would put that as two in the plus column for Windows RT.
I have a new Windows 8 laptop that I am typing this on, so I do not really need a full Windows 8 tablet. Though I must admit to being tempted by the Dell Venue 11 Pro, but at more than twice what I paid for my Surface, I was willing to sacrifice a few things I did not really need.
There are plenty of apps in the Microsoft Store. I have installed Kindle, Netflix, and I already had a news, sports and mail app. Once I updated to Windows RT 8.1, I was all set. I also get Office, and I do not mean an Office clone, like you get on Android or iOS, I mean Office, the original and still the best. I haven't installed many games, but that will come as I work my way through figuring out what I want.
One big thing for me was that I wanted a keyboard. 10"+ tablets are a little useless without one. I had a 10" Android tablet and it screamed out to me constantly for a keyboard. I ended up trying out three different ones. Swype is nice, but it is really hard to do more than a few words. By the way I prefer Swype to Swiftkey. Swype is fine for stuff about the length of a text message. I am sure it works great in Twitter...then again I do not use Twitter. But, for longer emails, or writing something like this post...not so much.
The only other Windows tablet in my price range was the Asus T100, which is a great machine at a great price....with an unusable keyboard. At least, it is unusable for someone with my big hands...or at least me with my big hands (no, you can't have them). I have tried out both the TouchCover and the TypeCover at my local Microsoft store and surprise, I can use both of these. They are actually full size keyboards.
I have a TypeCover that I hope will be arriving this week.
Most importantly, the price was right. None of the other tablets I was looking at could match the price. Oh, there were some lesser Android tablets, but the ones in the same price range are not ones I want. The Samsung Galaxy Note 10.1, which would be my Android preference was twice the price.
So, I am starting off the new year on the Surface, and as the year progresses I will let you know what it is like to live with the Surface.
Labels:
Microsoft,
Microsoft Surface,
Surface,
tablets,
TouchCover,
TypeCover,
Windows RT
Thursday, December 26, 2013
100 Books
Well, for any who are regular readers of my blog, you know that I set myself the goal of reading 100 books this year. Bad news...I am not going to make it. Now, there is a second problem and that is that I have fallen way behind in posting what I have been reading. I have 10 books I have read but not posted because I am a lazy bum. So, today I am going to catch up. Without further ado, here are the rest of the books I have read this year.
#28 - Bradshaw's Railway Handbook 1866: Volume 1
I
am an avid fan of Michael Portillo's Great British Railway Journeys,
and so when I found Bradshaws as an ebook on Amazon, and at a very
reasonable price, I snapped it up. Much of the book is quite boring, so
I cannot really recommend it to anyone who is not into that sort of
thing.
#29 - Swords and Ice Magic, by Fritz Leiber
When
I started reading the Fafhrd and Grey Mouser stories, this was the last
book. Unfortunately, it is not the best of the series, though still
good. They travel off to Rime Isle and get involved with magic and
gods...meaning that they are doing the same thing they have been doing
through the rest of the series. Highly recommended.
#30-32 - The Northworld Trilogy, by David Drake
This
is a weird book. The premise is so convoluted that I will not even
bother. You are better off reading it. The problem is that the books
are a little predictable. And at the end he still does not answer the
biggest question posed by the books, and that is just annoying.
#33 - Storm Over Warlock, by Andre Norton
Warlock
is a planet, and the storm is an attack. This is another of Norton's
books that basically mix magic and science, though the magic may
actually be very advanced technology. There are some very good parts to
this novel, and a few that lag well behind the rest. It's free on
Kindle, and worth what you pay for it. A pleasant dalliance.
#34 - The Knight and Knave of Swords. by Fritz Leiber
The
last of the Lankhmar series and the final curtain call for our heroes.
The first two stories are up to the old standards, but the final one,
which is by far the longest is just odd and leaves a sort of bad taste
in my mouth. I did not want to see them go out in a blaze of glory, but
one last real adventure would have been nice, and we did not get that.
#35 - Pictures From Italy, by Charles Dickens
A
travelogue written by Dickens after a sojourn in Italy in 1844. It
starts off with the author moving to Genoa and all of this observations
of Genoa. By the way, he does not like it. Then, he travels to all the
major sights in Italy and while he likes the sights, he does not like
much else that he sees in Italy. This is interesting to read, but it
includes very little of Dickens. There are no amusing encounters with
locals, or the tales of the happenings along the road. I was a little
disappointed. Free on Kindle.
#36 - Goblinopolis, by Robert G. Ferrell
Robert
is a friend I have known for many years, so when I saw his book on
Amazon for only $0.99 I had to buy it. I almost felt back because he
cannot have made much off a $1 sale. This is another book that mixes
technology and magic. The only real problem with the book is that it
requires the telling of a great deal of history as background so that
you understand the world where the novel is set. That can get a little
tedious, but if you muscle through you will be well rewarded. This is
still available on Kindle for a very low price, though not $0.99. I can
recommend this one.
#37 - Going Under, by Justina Robson
This
is the fourth book of the Quantum Gravity series. This one involves
our cyborg heroine going to Faery, the land of the Fae. To say the
least, it is bizarre. We start off in Deamonia where Lila tries to
answer various questions and avoid various assassination attempts, then
goes for a short time back to Otopia, Earth, where things are falling
apart because of something bleeding in from Faery, and Lila needs to
find an answer....in Faery. It ends with an encounter with Jack Frost,
Fae edition and a long lost legend, and all sorts of other confusing
things. If this brief review is confusing, then look back and find the
rest of the books I have reviewed from the Quantum Gravity series. I
like these books, but I am not entirely sure that I would recommend them
to anyone else. Too odd.
So, that is my reading for the year up to date. I did not do very well on my goal, but I did read some interesting stuff.
Sunday, November 24, 2013
Book #27
Key Out of Time
Andre Norton
This is another of the Time Agent novels, that includes Ashe Gordon and Ross Murdock. In this one, they are on a distant planet and use the time machine to try to learn some of the history of the planet. When things go wrong, they get involved in that history.
I won't go into greater detail for fear of giving away the plot. This is a good book in an older style of Science Fiction, and it is much like the Science Fiction I cut my teeth on, 40 years ago. You must understand that this was not the most recent Science Fiction even then. It has a pretty good story, and Ashe and Ross are good characters that are familiar to those who have read books in the Time Agents series. I have only read two others, and I was not sure about one of them until I read this one.
Much of Norton's catalog can be gotten for free on Kindle, so there is plenty to read if you want to come to know one of the lesser, but still significant writers from the middle years of Science Fiction. She was not really on the cutting edge, but she had a good career as a writer.
This was a good read, especially at the price.
Labels:
100 Books,
Andre Norton,
reviews,
Science Fiction,
The Time Agents
Tuesday, November 19, 2013
Book #26
The Swords of Lankhmar
Fritz Leiber
The Fifth Book of Fafhrd and the Grey Mouser, and the first novel.
The
enemy is rats, but the book takes a rather roundabout way to get to the
final battle scene, where Fafhrd arrives in the nick of time and the
Mouser shows that is the trickiest of thieves and the most dangerous
swordsman in Lankhmar. Of course, Mouser isn't trying to steal anything
in this one.
The story begins
with our heroes returning to Lankhmar, and finding rather their
reception rather warm. Our heroes are up to the challenge of an angry
mob, and then find themselves addressed by the Overlord's Chamberlain
as, "Fafhrd, the northern barbarian and brawler," and "that mongrel and
long-suspected burglar, cut-purse, swindler and assassin, the Gray
Mouser." This brings the offer of a job, to protect a grain ship, and a
special passenger. Now, I won't go into too many details, except that
they meet a two headed seamonster, and it's German speaking master.
Yes, you heard that right, German.
That
is just one of many twists and turns in this excellent adventure
novel. The split up after arriving at their destination, Fafhrd
lingering behind while the Mouser travels back to the Overlord with
unusual tales that the Overlord will not listen to. Fafhrd fights his
way back around the Inner Sea, avoiding raiders and finally meeting up
with his wizard, Ningauble. Mouser goes through his own adventures
while rats threaten Lankhmar, and finally seeks his wizard, Sheelba.
The ending involves....big breath....mummies, rats turned to human size,
Ghouls with transparent flesh, regular sized rats who use swords, pikes
and crossbows, and thirteen god-like War Cats, and a feisty kitten who
finds his true destiny.
So, yes,
there is a lot going on and toward the end is can be a little confusing,
but it is fun throughout and our heroes get the jewels and the girls at
the end, but not the recognition they deserve for saving the city.
Labels:
Fafhrd,
fantasy,
Fritz Leiber,
Grey Mouser,
reviews
Wednesday, October 9, 2013
Book #25
Arsene Lupin, gentleman-cambrioleur
Maurice LeBlanc
Yes, a second book about the great French burglar, Arsene Lupin. This time though it was in the original French. I have not had so much fun reading a book in a long time. It took me several pages to get back into the way of reading French with any speed, and it was hard sometimes to pick it up and get going again, but as I read it, the transition become easier and easier and I also found myself learning more and more new French words. I learned French 30 years ago, but I do not have a very large vocabulary and increasing my vocabulary is always a nice treat. Though I do worry that I might be learning Victorian era words that are no longer in use in current French.
This volume is more of a collection of short stories, but the stories are related, at least most of them. We see Arsene on a ship, and being saved by a young lady, though saved is a relative term. He is arrested, but outsmarts the police to secure his release. He then returns to his usual sort of crimes, though we see his very first theft, and finally at the end, we see him solve a rather tricky problem to find a way in to commit a crime and then he recants his crime for the sake of the same lady that he met on the boat in the first story.
Now, this final problem, which involves finding a lost secret passageway also involves the famous English detective, Herlock Sholmes. Obviously, this is not much of an attempt to hide the identity of the detective he is borrowing from Arthur Conan Doyle, and LeBlanc does a pretty good job of presenting Sholmes in an accurate way. Not entirely accurate, but close enough for those with a casual acquaintance with the detective. Sholmes finds and opens the secret passage in just a few minutes, showing that he is not less smart than Arsene, and in fact he might have caught him, if Arsene had not gotten that one step ahead, by figuring out the secret before Sholmes even arrives.
Overall, it was a great read, and I can highly recommend it, if you read French. If not, then the English translation should be available.
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