Biggest Android Annoyances and How to Fix Them

Utopie

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We asked, and, boy, do our readers have some issues with their Android phones. Here's a few of the biggest sticking points, how to fix them, and a few tiny-but-aggravating issues our commenters figured out on their own.
Phone Occasionally Lags or Freezes, Especially Heading Back to Home Screen

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Our own Whitson Gordon has essentially written a novella on the alternative home screen launchers available to aggravated Android owners. Right now, he's digging on Zeam, a fast alternative launcher that also offers multi-finger gestures and a few customization tools. Otherwise, you can speed up your sluggish Android with LauncherPro, which is both highly customizable and fairly snappy.
Can't Remove Certain Apps (and They're Annoying, and Take Up Space)

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We hear you—believe me, as a Nexus One owner, I very sympathetically hear you in terms of minimal install space. There are a few options, both sanctioned and slightly hack-y. We've run them down before, but for a recap:
First up, if you're running Android 2.2 or later, head into your Settings, choose Applications, then pick the All column. Press your phone's Menu button, and click the "Sort by size" option that pops up. Click on one of the most space-hogging apps at the top. In the next screen, you might see a button providing a "Move to SD Card" option. Hit that button, and nothing inside your app changes, but its storage space (or at least most of it) moves to your phone's SD card. Obviously, you can't operate that app when you've got your SD card mounted as a storage device, but that's less annoying than having to uninstall certain apps to allow others.
You can also check in that same application management page to see if an app is using an overly huge amount of storage, and clear that storage space out. That is, at best, a temporary fix, as the app will eventually take back the space, and you'll probably have to log in or reset your preferences. Still, if you just need a smidge more space to install an app, it's a quick fix.
Finally, if you're annoyed to the point of breaking your warranty, you can root your phone and install a firmware that allows for removing apps you can't otherwise remove, such as the carrier-specific games and music/video "stores" that you'll never use. It's what commenter LARPkitten did, and they're loving it.
Getting Access to the SD Card is Annoying

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Agreed. On "stock" Android phones, the USB mounting process is multi-step (plug, pull-down, click, click, wait, wait more, go). On customized Droids and HTC phones, you've either installed special Windows/Mac software to recognize your phone, or it's the same kind of annoyance.
You've got a few options if manually mounting and un-mounting your SD card, Linux-style, isn't how you'd like to get at your Android files:
  • doubleTwist, which offers continually improving desktop software for Windows and Mac that syncs your music, videos, podcasts, and pictures back and forth from your phone. There's even wireless syncing, which you can make totally automated, so you might just throw that USB cable into storage.
  • For quickly dropping a few files onto your phone, there is Awesome Drop, and it is, in fact, awesome. For snagging a few files off the card, we've previously enjoyed WiFi File Explorer, but commenters on that post have many, many alternative suggestions.
  • If you're regularly shuttling files back and forth between your system, you might want to invest in setting up your laptops, desktops, and phone with (wait for it) Dropbox. The Android client can both download and upload files to and from the SD card.
  • If you're good with an FTP setup, you, along with Bradley Shaner, might dig SwiFTP, a free app that turns your phone's SD card into an FTP server that works over your local Wi-Fi connection, or across the internet.
  • To simply ease the process of hooking up your phone for USB access, try an app named Auto Mount Your SD Card that doesn't need much further explanation. You can also click an option in the doubleTwist Android app's settings to do the same auto-mounting on USB connection.

The Market

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It can only be searched from the phone, and even then, it's an unwieldy thing—finding the official Google Reader app, even, requires quite a bit of thumb-scrolling.
Until recently, our favorite solution was the AppBrain web market, and its own Android apps that allowed for some neat direct-to-phone installation on Android 2.2. That ability, sadly, has been knocked down by a recent Market change pushed out to many phones. AppBrain is still the better search tool, and offers manual sync-and-install/uninstall, along with a pick-and-push wallpaper browsing tool that still works. Official Android over-the-air installing is apparently on the way, but until then, AppBrain and recommendations from friends (and, er, blogs) are our imperfect curation tools.
Poor Battery Life

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The solution to a battery that can't get you through the day, we're afraid, is all about detailed tweaking of when and how your phone connects to the net, turns on its screen, and runs its GPS and Bluetooth modules. If it's any consolation, the answer is generally the same on an iPhone.
The How-To Geek has a good, step-by-step, illustrated guide to maximizing Android battery life, moving through the settings you can change. Otherwise, there are apps that automate your phone's functions in ways that can save you juice: JuiceDefender, Locale, and Tasker, to name a few.
How You Fixed Your Own Android Annoyances

Our original call for annoyances and fixes yielded a treasure trove of aggravation and salvation, often through an app or tweak. Very often, too, the solution was an alternative launcher, or the rooting of a phone to install custom firmware, like CyanogenMOD. We're fans of both those solutions, but they're not the only tool for getting things right on your portable computer. Here's a few more:
ThomasSchoof:
No Reminders for a missed SMS!
Fix: Download "Missed Reminder" for it, but it's still missing something. I mean, running an extra app for getting a reminder for your missed sms?
MMT86:
HTC Incredible ...
2. GPS takes forever to get a lock. I mean sometimes 5-10 minutes.
We found, during a trip to Florida and subsequent inability to get a GPS fix for an hour after landing, that the GPS Status & Toolkit app is a good, if desperate, fix. It contains a function for totally wiping your GPS cache. Your next location fix may take a bit more time than usual, but at least it will (usually) work.
adamdavidcrawford:
How about the fact that alarms for daily events go off at midnight by default?
Timerific sets my phone to silent overnight.
Dave Freeman:
1. Having to change settings so often that I needed to put the Power Control widget on a homescreen.
FIX: CyanogenMod 6.2, where I can add these buttons under the notification shade.
2. Putting my Droid in the car dock doesn't default calls to speakerphone.
FIX: installed Car Dock Speakerphone from the market (free).
3. Putting my Droid in the multimedia dock makes the soft buttons too bright.
FIX: rooted and installed LEDs Hack, set to automatically disable all LEDs when docked, and reactivating them when undocked.
4. Not a very customizable dock.
FIX: Launcher Pro, pick one dock (you can scroll up to three), set all five places to launch two apps (including the swipe action), giving me 10 apps in a very small space. Reset the Home softkey button to move to my Home screen, then open/close the drawer, freeing up even more space.
There are so many things CyanogenMod helps with.
1. Hide apps in the Drawer. Now I don't put anything on my screen since my drawer only shows the dozen or so apps I want. Top ten most used apps are on the LP dock anyway. (Ed. note: this is actually a LauncherPro feature)
2. Removes most of the bloatware.
3. Phone is MUCH faster!
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Thanks mate, launcher pro looks the dogs nuts!
 
some nice pointers there but i wouldnt recomend doubletwist (with airsync), i purchased it thinking it would be the perfect drag and drop wireless solution but all i found was it synced with the pc, took forever and a day to upload large quanititys, recoded video files to be compatible even when switched off, and worst of all it would remove any files that were not in the sync list, i found myself loosing books i was listening to as soon as sync was activated, also any files that were downloaded directly from the net on the phone would also be deleted.
this maybe perfect for some people that have moved away from itunes, but i perferre 100% control not a vague form of control.
 
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