Platform Pivot Possibilities


Anyone who has read my musings before already knows that I have loved technology for a very long time. You are also aware that I’ve used many different forms and flavors of technology. The list of operating systems is quite long. On the server side, I’ve used: Univac Exec 8, IBM MVS, IBM VM/ESA, IBM MVS/ESA, IBM z/OS, SunOS, Solaris, Irix, DG-UX, HP-UX, IBM AIX, Windows NT, Win2K(x), Linux and a host of other platforms. On the desktop, I’ve used: CPM, UCSD Pascal, HDOS, MS-DOS, PC-DOS, Windows (many flavors), MacOS (many flavors), Xenix, OpenBSD, FreeBSD, Linux (many flavors) and a plethora of experimental OSes.
As you look at this list, you have to be thinking a few things:

  • Roo is really old,
  • Roo is fickle,
  • Roo has been through a lot of tech transitions, and
  • Roo is really, really old

So why would I recite this list?  Am I building a new resume?  [No, I’m not.]  Am I a preening, arrogant technology elitist?  [Yes, I am.  But that’s not the reason I recorded the list.]  I wrote the list because I’m becoming convinced that it is time for yet another technology pivot.
There are some big trends that are becoming absolutely obvious:

  1. Computing technology is for everyone.  So it must necessarily be simple and bullet-proof.  Over the past three years, I have deployed more “appliance” devices at home than I have deployed computers.  Yes the appliances are computers.  But for the average consumer, they are plug and play functionality.  This includes: set top boxes, wireless routers, wireless extenders, wireless printers, wireless cameras, wireless phones, wireless monitoring systems, etc.
  2. Everything is becoming mobile.  Computers are getting smaller.  They are embedded in everything (including my heart).  And they are increasingly becoming disconnected from fixed structures (like an office or a home).
  3. We are finally starting to see new user interfaces.  Just as the keyboard was displaced by the mouse, the mouse is now being displaced by human touch.  Haven’t we had pen computing for almost a decade?  Yes, we have.  But the iPhone made touch computing ubiquitous.  More importantly, touch is not the only new user interface.  Speech recognition is becoming ubiquitous as well.  I can now talk to my phone and place calls (or write emails).  I can now talk to my car (or its GPS) and get driving directions.  With speech and touch replacing the hands and fingers that were tethered to a swivel chair, we are accelerating the move towards mobility.
  4. Retail purchasing and provisioning are finally reducing the need to go to the store.  It is very possible to sit in your chair at home and order anything for delivery right to your door.  I won’t go into the moral impacts of promoting such sedentary lives.  But I do think that this change is transforming the way that we live – and the computer systems that we utilize.

These trends (and a few other minor trends) are allowing new competitors to jump into prominent positions.  And these changes are putting strains on older competitors.
The big boys do see these trends.  Microsoft recognizes these changes.  And I think that they are trying to compete in these spaces.  But their corporate identity (based on sales pros getting commissions) is becoming outdated.  Their corporate ethos allowed them to miss the entire music resurgence that Apple inspired.  Sure, Microsoft is now in that business.  But not before Apple seized the entire market.  The Zune is cool.  And the Zune market is feature-complete.  But the battle was lost because Microsoft was trying to protect their existing channel model.
The Microsoft phone strategy has been equally anemic.  They did indeed recognize the mobility trend.  But Windows Mobile was incomplete and clunky.  Can WP7 and its successors thrive?  Uh, using the number ‘7’ in your name won’t repeat the Windows 7 success.  Did Microsoft have a chance?  Yes.  Can they seize market from both Google and Apple?  Sure, but they are taking table scraps from their competitors.  And their corporate heritage is holding them back.  Android has succeeded because it is repeating Microsoft’s PC success: Google has built an open platform.
Microsoft isn’t the only company at a crossroads.  Apple is also at a crossroads.  Their model of retail purchase via iTunes and delivery to a desktop device is now under assault.  The iTunes infrastructure has always used the desktop as the hub of your music experience.  But staying with that model would be like staying with high-end audio equipment.  Sure, some audiophiles still have a stylus and all of their other component gear.  But component audio was replaced by compact discs and then by PC audio.
The new model is to buy the rights to the music and to store the music remotely.  This allows you to access your content anytime and anywhere.  You don’t have to be at your desktop. You don’t have to stream from that same desktop.  And you don’t have to sync with that desktop.  You store your licensed content in the “cloud” and then stream it to wherever you want to play it.  For me, this meant that I could stream some cool music to Meredith’s outdoor wedding site while we decorated that site.  It also means that I can have my entire library available while I’m at work or in the car or on my bike.
And as of this morning, I’ve now switched all of my podcast content from my desktop (and iTunes) to my mobile device.  I’m playing with both Doggcatcher and Google Listen.  I haven’t chosen my final podcast catcher, but the choice to push content to my mobile device is now made.
That’s a horribly long setup to the real point of this article: I have finally broken the musical cord that tied me to my desktop computer.  And last year, I severed the cord related to web content browsing.  For me, this mobility push has been thanks to Google and Android.  For others, they are thanking Apple and iOS.  But the trend is obvious: cloud-based music is yet another desktop tether that can be severed.  And with cloud-based services like file storage (via Google Docs, or Dropbox or any number of other tools), I can snip yet another tether.
Think of a bundle of helium-filled balloons.  I’m slowly snipping the strings that hold them down.  And I think I may soon be cutting the last of the ties that hold me to my desktop computer.  Once I can effectively type on a mobile device, I may be able to come out of the cave where my desktop computer is connected.
The final straw will be whenever I purchase a tablet.  And when that happens, I will be free of both Microsoft and Apple.  I may end up being dependent upon new vendors (like Google or Amazon). But it is just about time to change things up in my computing ecosystem.  I can’t wait for yet another technology transition.
-Roo

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A Welcome (And Unexpected) Resolution


Last weekend, I tried to get my Android phone to scrobble the songs that I listened to via Google Music and Amazon Cloud Player.  I tried the Last.fm Android client.  I loaded the ScrobbleDroid client (which did work with the Android Music app).  But I had no success.  So I set the problem aside for a few days.
And then things started to work.
I decided to play something at the office.  And I noticed that there was a message in the information bar of my phone.  The message was simple: my music was being scrobbled to Last.fm (via the Last.fm client).  This was great news.  But as an analytical geek, I was disappointed because I had no idea which change resulted in the successful outcome I was experiencing.
Unsatisfied with success, I’m now trying to reconstruct my apparent success.  The only thing that changed during the time between when it wasn’t working and the time that it began working was that a new version of the Last.fm client was deployed to my phone.  [Note: I used passive voice in the last sentence because I didn’t deploy it by choice.  I had selected automatic updates for this app.  And it got updated.  Using active voice, I would say that my phone (and the app market) updated the application.]
Since this is the only change I can identify thus far, I must lean towards this change as being the probable source of my success.  But I am not wholly convinced – yet.  There is an obvious interaction between Google Music, Last.fm and ScrobbleDroid.  And since one of those components did change, then I could just close the book: problem solved.  Unfortunately, I haven”t seen the code for any of these components, so I can’t really say which is the root cause for the change in status.
But at this moment, I am going to accept victory as a desirable outcome.  I now have one cloud music application that does meet the majority of my listening needs.  That system is the Google Music client.  I also have one retail music channel that meets my needs.  That music channel is Amazon.
On the whole, I have one question: what’s changed?  That’s easy.  I’ve finally broken the leash that iTunes has on my music library.  Now that I am not wholly dependent upon Apple, I can objectively evaluate the iCloud offering whenever it becomes available.
For now, there is peace in the music valley at Chez Roo.
-Roo

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Google Music Is A Real Beta


I have spent a great deal of time this week working with the new Google Music Beta.  And I am finally at a point where I can speak with a degree of confidence.  What do I think of the new Google service?  I think it is a real beta.  It has some very rough edges.  But it is chock full of promise.  It has some unique and innovative features.  And there are some things that are simply undone or they are incomplete.
The Good
There are a lot of outstanding features in the Google offering.

  • The current Google offering provides for storage of up to 20,000 songs.  This is outstanding.  If this model is carried forward, Google Music will destroy the competition by starving the market.  My song base alone is over 12GB.  So if I stay with Amazon, I will need to pay for a 20GB allotment.  That will mean ~$20 per year.  That’s not much.  But when it’s compared to a free product, I will always take free – unless free doesn’t meet my minimum feature requirements.  [Note: Google may get themselves into some trouble with such a generous storage limit.  The government might choose to bring a case against Google for anti-competitive practices.  I don’t think that I’d agree with such a claim.  But I can see where Amazon and Apple might support someone else bringing such a claim to the federal courts.]
  • The service itself is stable and the music streams reliably.  While I have had some challenges with streaming to my phone, most of my experience has been outstanding.
  • The user interface on the phone is beautiful.  It is a joy to work with the mobile tool.  While the “look and feel” of the Amazon tool is eminently functional, it is positively clunky.  Google has obviously spent some time making the mobile experience very appealing.

The Bad
Despite all the good features, there are some serious shortcomings in the initial offering.

  • The tool that loads music onto the service is positively anemic.  As noted in my previous post, loading music is an all-or-nothing proposition.  To load individual songs (or new sub-folders in a nested hierarchy), you have to reconfigure the music loading tool to point to specific folders.  Then you have to find the option in Settings that allows you to manually load music.  Then you have to push the Start Now button.  Google really needs to spend some time working on this process.  You can “stretch” the tool to do your bidding.  But ease of use in music loading is a definite weakness.
  • The view options are really limited.  Yes, you can navigate around in the web client.  But it is not a beautiful and robust client: it is a functional client.  That said, the Android client is beautiful.  And it has some of the view options that I like.  But it would be nice to have similar options between dissimilar clients.  Whether for good or ill, the Amazon client has a common appearance across every platform – including the Apple platform.
  • There is no music store interface.  When I went through the process of loading files, I noted that some of the songs (that I had on my hard drive) came from questionable sources.  In my case, I had gotten a copy of “Riders on the Storm” (by the Doors) from the web.  I had used the song for a video that I had made for my son a few years ago.  But I had never gotten around to buying a copy of the song.  So I used Amazon’s service to buy the “Best of…” album from The Doors.  Having an integrated service (from any vendor) would be most welcome.  I have found that since using the Amazon client, I’ve probably purchased a half dozen albums that I would have otherwise not purchased.  This is especially true of impulse purchases.  Having an electronic wallet and an “always on” connection has allowed me to experience impulse buying in a whole new light.
  • There are no tag searching or tag editing options at all.  For some folks, ID3 tags are vitally important.  And there is no attention to this subject at all.
  • There is no support for scrobbling music to Last.fm.  Yes, there are ways of scrobbling when using the web client.  Dan Slaughter has put together some excellent scripts that work with both Google Music and Amazon Cloud Drive.  You can find information about these tools here.  But it must be noted that there is no support currently available for the mobile (i.e., Android) client.

The Ugly
Finally, there are some ugly issues that really need to be resolved before this product can become a traditional Google beta (i.e., a complete product).
It took me almost a week to get the product to work on my phone.  The product would install successfully. And I could see all of the local music, but I couldn’t see anything that was on my cloud drive.  At first, I thought that this was a problem with my custom ROM.  I use Liberty 2.0.  And some apps have trouble with some of the things that jrummy does with the ROM.  But that was not the case.
I was about ready to give up on it when I had an unforeseen (and problematic) product upgrade for LauncherPro.  My entire LauncherPro config was wiped out and needed to be rebuilt.  Once I solved that problem, I went back to the Google Music service.  And what to my wondering eyes did appear, but my music collection (but no tiny reindeer). I have to assume that the cleanup of LauncherPro solved my issues – though I have no way of proving it.  Either way, the Google Music product now works superbly – though I wish I really knew what caused the trouble in the first place.
But to me, the most troubling aspect of this service (as well as the Amazon service) is the issue of privacy.  It is one thing to believe in the safety and security of your own home.  But when you store your media on an external service that is not within your home, do you have any degree of privacy?  Perhaps you do.  Then again, perhaps you don’t.
Part of me is very troubled that I have my musical tastes  (and my reading tastes) exposed to any corporation.  But it would be even more troubling if that same corporation made my content tastes accessible to the government.  Do I have anything to fear currently?  No, I really don’t.  I try to ensure that all of my content is licensed.  And I am pretty darned pedestrian in my reading and musical tastes.  In fact, most people call me a prude.  But I don’t want the government to know what I think.  It’s none of their business.  Finally, I broadcast (via blog, tweet and scrobble) all of my media-related activities.  So am I concerned that anyone will use this information against me?  No, I’m not.  At least, I’m not concerned currently.
But what happens if corporations (or the government) change and become more insidious?  Or what happens when they try to use my data for their own selfish marketing needs?  For me, this possibility is real.  And it gives me reason to pause.  I don’t want to see the firemen break down my front door and seize my copy of the Bible (or the sonnets of Shakespeare, or the music of The Doors).
Bottom Line
I am impressed with the Google service.  I really like their Android client.  I hope that they will create a common client interface across all platforms (including Apple’s iOS).  And I really hope that they take time and care in developing their EULA.  There are some real challenges that must be solved.  Nevertheless, the “all you can drink” service is far more compelling than a “pay per gigabyte” service.
But for now, I’m leaning towards the Amazon platform.  It is a little more polished and a lot more ubiquitous.  Moreover, the Amazon case for privacy is a little more comforting (given Google’s historic willingness to work with the repressive Chinese government).  Finally, Amazon’s integration with a working retail channel is far more compelling.  But if Google can overcome some (or all) of these hurdles, they do have a chance to win my business.
-Roo

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Quick Takes on Music Beta (by Google)


After spending quite a bit of time (and devoting a little coin of the realm) to the Amazon Cloud Drive, I received an email informing me that Google has requested me to participate in the private beta of their new music service.  I am more than a little surprised that I was included.  But who am I to complain.  It’s that much more tech to play with.
But don’t expect this post to be a complete review.  This is just a few quick takes from what I’ve seen so far.
Here are my first thoughts (in order of relative importance to me):

  • Google is offering this service for free.  And that means free.  I can store up to 20,000 songs free of charge.  Period.  This simple truth is more than worth the price of admission.  And it surely beats the pricing that Amazon is offering.  [Note: I do wonder how Google will monetize this.  I suspect that it will be context-driven ads.  But without a retail engine, where will they drive the traffic to?]
  • The music selection and loading tools are blunt instruments, at best.  You can select everything from iTunes or everything from Windows Media Player.  You can also select everything in a directory.  This is hardly a precise instrument.  You can take a big swing at everything or take no swing at all.  The crudity of this method is heart-wrenching.  With the Amazon Cloud Drive, you have far more options to selecting and loading your music.  But both tools really need to take advantage of metadata that you may already have in your music.  I want to do complex Boolean searches on tags and have the selected files loaded.
  • I really want to control the loading of all files onto the service.  I still have a bunch of files that came from unclear origins.  Don’t get me wrong, I own all the music that I have on my hard drive.  But sometimes I have downloaded songs rather than record them from LP.  And after spending years of using tools like MusicBrainz and MP3tagger, I have files with some really oddball ID3 tags.
  • I would really like more social media tools.  Thee is no Last.fm integration.  There is no way to comment and tweet those comments to my followers.  And there is absolutely no interaction with Facebook.  I really want my cloud music service to be more social.  After all, music is a community affair.  Sharing occurs within fan groups.  Even the folks at Myspace knew that.  I really think that Google should link this offering to Buzz, Wave, Facebook and Twitter.
  • Finally, where is the integration with a music retailer.  Apple (and iTunes) integrate with the Apple iTunes Music store.  And Amazon integrates with their well-established MP3 sales channel.  Without a retail engine or agreements with the labels, I am skeptical of the overall success of this offering.  I am sure that these things will be added.  But their absence in the initial product is rather troubling.

I will write a much more comprehensive review when all of my songs are loaded.  Right now, I am +4,000 files of my +6,500 song iTunes library.  Let’s see how this car drives when I have all of my clutter on board.  But for now, the truck is a good one.  It will haul my stuff.  I just need to drive it around for a while to see how it handles.
-Roo

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Does Amazon Have the Whole Enchilada?

For those who have read my musings for some time, you’ll know that I use a lot of Amazon services.

  • I have purchased music from Amazon for many years.  Why would I use Amazon’s music service when iTunes owned the market?  Because I really believe in competition.  And I really believe in good prices.  And I really believe in digital freedom.  Consequently, I’ve bought many dozens of albums from Amazon’s music service.  And recently, I’ve purchased from both my home computer and my Android phone.
  • I’ve also used Amazon’s Video service for a few years.  Amazon decided that they would boldly venture into the same market that Netflix and Blockbuster had already captured.  I originally chose Amazon because they weren’t Apple.  But then I began to use their service more fully.  And I realized that because they weren’t Apple, they were intrinsically better.
    Yeah, that’s an exaggeration.  But not by much.  I bought a Panasonic Blu-Ray player.  And it included streaming from Amazon VOD.  Because both Amazon and Panasonic had an established history of leveraging open source technologies, it was a natural harmony.  And as my Viera Cast capabilities grew, so have the Amazon VOD capabilities – especially with the Amazon prime membership that my wife has.
    But while I’ve had Amazon VOD for about two years, I haven’t really exploited it much until I had the right wireless infrastructure at home.  Now that I have that in place, it’s been wonderful using the Amazon service.  I can get almost any video I want whenever I want it.  And if I choose to buy it, then Amazon has provided a video locker to store the digital content in.
  • Since getting my Android phone last year, I have been waiting for Amazon to open up their own Android market.  This week, they finally made it official and started vending apps using their retail purchasing engine.  I haven’t bought a lot of apps from them yet.  But if they provide the same application re-installs that the Google market does, then I may switch my purchases to Amazon.  [Note: I really love automatic reinstallation of apps from the Android market.  Every time that I switch ROM’s, I need to reload my system.  So this is a sticking point for me.]
  •  

I’ve used a lot of “cloud-based” storage in the past.  While at Microsoft, I tinkered with SkyDrive.  BTW, this was a revolutionary concept that suffered from a horrible implementation.  [Note: That is quite typical for many Microsoft technologies.  They can always out-market you on technology that they acquire.  And they can almost always build really cool new things.  But they oftentimes have trouble building and marketing first-generation technology.]
But when SkyDrive didn’t seize the market, the most notable cloud-based storage tool in the market became DropBox.  DropBox got a lot of the technology right.   And they really captured a chunk of the geek market.  Indeed, Cindy and I have used DropBox for several years.  And it has been a wonderful success whenever she has needed a collaborative storage platform for her master’s degree classwork.  But like SkyDrive, DropBox never made a big enough splash in the market to begin to seize the consumer marketplace.
And now it’s Amazon’s turn.
I REALLY love the cloud storage offering that Amazon released this week.  If you’ve had your head in the clouds (or had your head stuck somewhere else), then I will tell you that the Amazon service is called the Amazon Cloud Drive.  I love the name.  It leverages the notion of the cloud (as popularized by Microsoft ads) and adds to it the simple and well-understood notion of the “drive” as storage.  Hence, Cloud Drive may well be a marketing winner.
And the Cloud Drive offering is fairly complete.  You can use it on your PC or Mac.  And you can use it on your phone.  And you can use it on a tablet.  So far, it seems to really “sing” with music-based files.  Of course, that makes sense as music files are the largest commodity that will be stored.  It will be months (or maybe even years) before videos will become a ubiquitous on the service.  So adroit mastery of music files hits the Amazon sweet spot.
And they have chosen a good niche for the amount of free storage.  It is larger than either DropBox or SkyDrive.  The current offering is 5GB for free.  I suspect that Apple and Google may try and best this with a 25GB offering.  But we’ll have to see.  The folks at Forbes think that the first major reply will be to up the storage limits.  If that happens, I would bet that Amazon will respond.  That might be a fun price war to watch.
So far, I really like the first volley in the impending digital storage wars.  Like the folks at Forbes, I see Apple and Google jumping in on this.  And I think that Google may just buy DropBox.  They don’t need the DropBox tech.  But they may want the customers and the buzz.  But I also think that you may see some other folks jumping in.  I do believe that Microsoft may burnish and re-launch SkyDrive.  If they do, this might be hella fun.
And I really think that storage vendors and media player vendors are going to want to get in on the action.  While they may not be able to make a complete offering themselves, it will be nice to see how they are used as channel providers to the bigger players.
So what will it take to win?  Winners (and survivors) will need the following:

  • They will need capital to purchase and implement the vast quantities of storage that may be required.
  • They will need established data center management skills to make the cloud-based storage initiative viable.
  • They will need marketing to get the message to customers
  • They will need partners for channel depth and diversity of correlated features/capabilities.
  • They will need digital content.
  • They will need a retail channel (with a strong purchasing and delivery engine).

Google has many of these.  I do think that they lack diverse content – although YouTube does help.  What they really need is some content partners – like Sony???
Apple has some of these.  Nevertheless, they lack a robust and diverse partner ecosystem.  Yes, they have lots of partners.  But they re so closed that they are technologically inbred.  And they don’t have a lot of online storage already in their pipeline.  Yes, they sell content.  But they don’t really store it for their customers.  They move it to their customers’ devices.
Amazon has most of these (except for the brand identity across many markets).  They do have all of the pieces in place.  But no one knows that.  They have content.  They have storage.  They have the retail channel.  But they need critical mind-share in the consumer marketplace
I think that the market can bear all three of these big players – for now.  And Amazon is first out of the gate.  If they can capture enough early market, they may be the big winner.
I just wish that I could get “credit” for all of the Amazon MP3 purchases I’ve already made.  I hate to move all my stuff right back to them – and then have to buy additional storage.  It’s not fair! Wah! Wah! Wah!
-Roo

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Roo’s “Must Have” Root Apps


On July 26, 2010, the Library of Congress ruled that rooting your phone is legal.  Indeed, it is now a legal exception to the DMCA and its prohibitions against copyright infringement.

So my phone is rooted.  And I can’t imagine running an Android phone without root authority.  But what can you do with root?  I’ve learned that the best way to teach is by example.  So here is the list of things that I do which require root:

  • I use adb to push content to my phone.  And I use adbWireless to avoid connecting my phone to my PC.  Don’t get me wrong.  I do use the wired USB sometimes.  But there are times that I need adb and I don’t want to un-mount my SD card from my running phone.
  • Every sysadmin needs a good terminal emulator.  And Android has a whole lot of them.  But I use the Better Terminal Emulator Pro.  It does the basics well.  And it also adds Dropbox and SSH support.
  • Bootstrap Recovery is a must-have if you ever do decide to go beyond root and install a custom ROM.
  • NTPClient is a great way to set the time on your phone.  Does the network do this for you already?  Well, yes it does.  But don’t you want to be in sync with the US Naval Observatory?
  • If you want to ensure your anonymity and your privacy on the network, then you might want to consider Orbot.  When used with root, you can transparently proxy all IP traffic through an encrypted tunnel.
  • If you don’t want to use Orbot’s transparent proxy, then you will need to be able to set the proxy for your browser.  I use the HTTP Proxy Settings tool to set the proxy for Android’s default browser.
  • If you decide to deploy custom ROM images onto your phone, then you need a tool to backup ROM images and/or deploy these ROM’s on your phone.  ROM Manager is the preeminent tool to manage all of your custom ROM’s.
  • There are a lot of file managers.  But the best of the best is Root Explorer.  It does it all – including digging into the all-important data folder.
  • There are times when only a good protocol analyzer can solve a problem on your network.  For such times, the typical solution has been WireShark.  So the Android equivalent of Shark for Root is a must-have for any self-respecting system administrator who has an Android phone.
  • Whether you are a blogger or just a sysadmin, there are times when you have to get a screenshot from your phone.  And you can’t always be certain that you will have a USB connection to a system that has adb installed.  For these times, I use ShootMe as a means of quickly capturing a screenshot (see above).
  • Titanium Backup is the best Android backup app out there.  Whether or not you load custom ROM’s, you still need to backup and restore your phone.  A good backup is a must-have.
  • One of the best reasons for rooting your phone is to be able to tether other devices to your phone.  Wireless Tether is a simple and powerful tool that justifies all the effort you put into rooting your phone.

These are the root apps that I use.  They may be a good start for you and your phone as well.

-Roo

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Roo's "Must Have" Root Apps



On July 26, 2010, the Library of Congress ruled that rooting your phone is legal.  Indeed, it is now a legal exception to the DMCA and its prohibitions against copyright infringement.
So my phone is rooted.  And I can’t imagine running an Android phone without root authority.  But what can you do with root?  I’ve learned that the best way to teach is by example.  So here is the list of things that I do which require root:

  • I use adb to push content to my phone.  And I use adbWireless to avoid connecting my phone to my PC.  Don’t get me wrong.  I do use the wired USB sometimes.  But there are times that I need adb and I don’t want to un-mount my SD card from my running phone.
  • Every sysadmin needs a good terminal emulator.  And Android has a whole lot of them.  But I use the Better Terminal Emulator Pro.  It does the basics well.  And it also adds Dropbox and SSH support.
  • Bootstrap Recovery is a must-have if you ever do decide to go beyond root and install a custom ROM.
  • NTPClient is a great way to set the time on your phone.  Does the network do this for you already?  Well, yes it does.  But don’t you want to be in sync with the US Naval Observatory?
  • If you want to ensure your anonymity and your privacy on the network, then you might want to consider Orbot.  When used with root, you can transparently proxy all IP traffic through an encrypted tunnel.
  • If you don’t want to use Orbot’s transparent proxy, then you will need to be able to set the proxy for your browser.  I use the HTTP Proxy Settings tool to set the proxy for Android’s default browser.
  • If you decide to deploy custom ROM images onto your phone, then you need a tool to backup ROM images and/or deploy these ROM’s on your phone.  ROM Manager is the preeminent tool to manage all of your custom ROM’s.
  • There are a lot of file managers.  But the best of the best is Root Explorer.  It does it all – including digging into the all-important data folder.
  • There are times when only a good protocol analyzer can solve a problem on your network.  For such times, the typical solution has been WireShark.  So the Android equivalent of Shark for Root is a must-have for any self-respecting system administrator who has an Android phone.
  • Whether you are a blogger or just a sysadmin, there are times when you have to get a screenshot from your phone.  And you can’t always be certain that you will have a USB connection to a system that has adb installed.  For these times, I use ShootMe as a means of quickly capturing a screenshot (see above).
  • Titanium Backup is the best Android backup app out there.  Whether or not you load custom ROM’s, you still need to backup and restore your phone.  A good backup is a must-have.
  • One of the best reasons for rooting your phone is to be able to tether other devices to your phone.  Wireless Tether is a simple and powerful tool that justifies all the effort you put into rooting your phone.

These are the root apps that I use.  They may be a good start for you and your phone as well.
-Roo

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War-strolling With Bailey

One of the biggest blessings each holiday is having all of my kids at home.  And this holiday is no exception.  Bailey was here for almost a week.  And while she spent much of her time with her beau, she also spent time with her father.  And for the past couple of days, she and I have had a chance to stroll through the neighborhood.
Today, we made it a point to go to the neighborhood public library.  And the weather was quite accommodating.  Today, we walked +4 miles.  And we also just chatted.  We chatted about life, about long-term love and about our Savior.  It was quite a refreshing and adult stroll – and I got a chance to walk down some streets that I don’t ride on.
So I took the opportunity to run the Wigle WiFi war-driving app on my Droid 2.  And what to my wondering eyes did appear but a few hundred more access points as we strolled around the neighborhood.
I also got a chance to check out some mapping functions and use some real estate apps (like Zillow).  It’s always good when my location-based tool chest get a little bigger.  But while all of these technologies are very cool, the best part of the stroll was the time that I spent with my daughter.  I am truly blessed to have children that are still willing to talk to me!
-Roo

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DoubleTwist = Android Sync + Markets


A few years ago, a fellow named Jon Johansen (aka, DVD Jon) exploded onto the scene with some really cool technology: he released DeCSS as a means to “liberate” DVD films from onerous copy protection.  I don’t want to go through the legal and moral arguments that his actions provoked.  But later, he became more legit when he helped to form DoubleTwist.
When DoubleTwist first hit the market, it was a means of decrypting iTunes music files for use by other applications on your PC.  This meant that it was a very speculative venture.  First, it was taking aim at folks who were ostensibly “protecting” musicians and their copyrighted works.  Second, the folks who needed decrypted versions of music (on their desktops) were a limited community: most of them were using songs that they had purchased as input to other programs (e.g., DVD authoring tools, etc).  So while I tried the product, I decided to buy music from Amazon instead.  So until recently, DoubleTwist was cool – but not very useful for me.
But Jon & Co. have finally pulled together a more expansive reason for DoubleTwist: syncing media with Android devices.  DoubleTwist is now a free product that can sync any (or all) of your iTunes files with your Android device.  The product is free to use.  So DoubleTwist is making its money in a different way – it is now a distribution channel and an advertising platform.  For those that have an Android device, you can buy apps from within DoubleTwist.  And you can also buy music and movies from Amazon through the DoubleTwist tool.
So the way that you can legitimize a hacking tool (that decrypts protected media) is to become a media intermediary.  I am sure that DoubleTwist is giving the media “market” owners a “cut” of their business.  That way, a previously offensive technology is now legitimized.
But is it a good tool?  After a few hours of playing with the tool, I am thrilled to have a free tool like this.  Yes, you can buy tools to sync with Android phones.  But I am happy to recommend this tool.  It syncs the music I want to sync.  It scrobbles to Last.fm.  It allows you to set songs as ringtones.  It also downloads and displays album art with ease.  After a few more weeks, I may revise and extend the recommendation.  But for now, I give DoubleTwist a qualified “thumbs up” on the Roo-meter.
-Roo

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