Category: ‘Darkside’

Last App Switcher – Originally Published September 2014

October 5, 2014 Posted by Tiny

From the Dark Side
by Tiny Ruisch

I’ve been using Lap App Switcher (LAS) for about two weeks now.  This is one of those programs that doesn’t seem to be real great; however, when you use it for a while it becomes almost indispensable.

In the programmer’s description, LAS compares itself to the “last channel” button on your TV remote.  I think that description is most appropriate.  What this app does is keep a floating notification bubble open.  When you tap on it, it will take you back to the last app that you had open.

Over the course of the day, I probably tap it at least fifty times.  It is so much easier and faster than pressing the last apps button on my phone and then selecting the correct item from the list of active programs.  It seems like it only saves a little time but throughout the day it adds up.

LAS is highly customizable.  The developers have also added alternate methods to use this app in case you’re not a fan of the floating button.  The floating button can be re-sized.  Its transparency can be changed.  What I have found to be the most useful feature is that you can easily place it anywhere on your screen.

The application is easy on the battery and uses very little memory.  There is no advertising nor in app purchases.  The developer seems to be responsive to comments.

I think that there will be no in between for this app.  Users will either love it or hate it.  I am in the love it column.  The app is free in the Google Play Store.  I personally would pay to use it.

Download Last App Switcher here.

Red Herring – Originally Published July 2014

October 1, 2014 Posted by Tiny

From the Dark Side
by Tiny Ruisch

I like word games.  If you’ve read any of my game reviews, you’ve probably noticed that I start a lot of them with those same four words.  Red Herring is a word association game that is different than most others.

The object of the game is to slide the word tiles into one of the three category columns.  Each puzzle has only one correct solution.  There is no time limit for finishing the game.  The difficulty in the game comes from the fact that many of the words fit in more than one category.  Each puzzle has four extra “red herring” words that also fit into the categories.

To play the game, drag a word tile and drop it on another tile to swap them.  When four categorically matching tiles line up vertically, they’ll lock into place, with the category revealed at the top.  There are three modes of play. In the easy mode, you start with the category headings and the positions of five of the tiles revealed.  In the normal mode, the categories are hidden.  In the hard mode (which I’ve been playing) there is nothing revealed at the start of the game.  If you get stumped on a difficult level, you can always restart the level with an easier difficulty.

The base game comes with one puzzle pack of 50 grids for free (as well as ten free hints).  You can purchase additional puzzle packs and unlimited hints with in app purchases.  You can view a 47 second video on the official website.

Red Herring was developed by Blue Ox Technologies Ltd.  They also have produced one of my favorite word games, 7 Little Words, which I reviewed in the April Newsletter.  Although I like this game a lot, I doubt if I will keep it after I finish the 50 free puzzles.  After a while it gets a little repetitive.  When you get stumped, it is just too tempting to restart in an easier mode and finish the puzzle.

You can download Red Herring from the Google Play Store.

7 Little Words – Originally Published April 2014

September 15, 2014 Posted by Tiny

From the Dark Side
by Tiny Ruisch

I like word games.  When I reviewed the game Wordiest, one of our club members suggested that I try another word game.  It was another free game called 7 Little Words.  This is one of those games that is doing what seems to be the new gaming trend: In application purchases.  I guess I must like the game a little bit.  I’ve spent money on it.

Like many other excellent games, 7 Little Words is simple to play and difficult to win.  The game reminds me of both anagrams and crossword puzzles.  Each puzzle consists of seven clues for seven different words.  There are twenty letter combinations for you to put together that fit the clues.  The goal of the game is to use all of the letters to solve the clues.

When you download the game, you get three daily puzzles and a puzzle pack of fifty free puzzles.  A new daily puzzle is added each day.  Additional puzzle packs can be purchased.  I’ve purchased an “impossible” to solve puzzle pack.  It hasn’t been impossible, but it’s pretty hard.

A limited number of free hints come with the game.  Unlimited hints can be purchased. I have been sorely tempted to buy the hints but have avoided having to so far.  The game relies on elimination.  If you solve most of the words you can experiment with the remaining letters and usually guess the answer.  I’ll admit that I have searched the web a few times for answers.  For example, I didn’t know that a cherimoya is a Peruvian fruit.  As with many other games, there are cheat web sites with all of the answers.  I haven’t had to use them.

The game has a 4.8 rating in the Google Play Store.  You can Download 7 Little Words by clicking the link.  Give it a try.  I think you’ll like it.

Wordiest – Originally Published February 2014

August 28, 2014 Posted by Tiny

From the Dark Side
by Tiny Ruisch

If you like playing word games, you’ll probably love Wordiest.  It is a great word game available for both Android and iTunes.  After about a week, I’ve already played over one hundred games.

Wordiest is similar to Scrabble.  You have to make two words out of fourteen tiles.  The letter tiles each have different values.  Each game, some of the letters have bonus values randomly assigned to them.  The strategy of the game is to make the highest score you can.  You don’t have to use all of your letters, but the more you use, the higher you score.

It isn’t as simple as making the longest word.  You need to strategically use your bonus word multiplier letters with the high point letters to make higher scoring words.  As shown in figure 1, words you make are defined and tallied before you submit them.  It is easy to shuffle tiles and see if there are higher scores that can be made.

Although there is no time limit, you a

figure 1

re competing against 100 other players with the same set of letters.  When you submit your two words, a graph appears that details how you match up to other players.  Figure 2 shows the graph, the two words you submitted, your score and overall rating.  Long pressing on any of the four graph sections will show you the words and highest scoring words of that particular group.

The game has a really simple interface.  As you make words, the definition pops up underneath.  It is easy to experiment and find words that you didn’t even know.  You learn as you play.  I’ve found myself copying a few words which may appear in a future Mind Bender puzzle.

Wordiest is free from the Google Play Store.  As with many other apps, a contribution to the programmer will remove adds.  The ads in this game are very unobtrusive. As shown in figure 2, they take up only a small portion at the very top of the screen.

figure 2

Download Wordiest from the Google Play Store and give it a try.  I think you’ll like it.

Lose It! – Originally Published December 2013

July 29, 2014 Posted by Tiny

From the Dark Side
by Tiny Ruisch

In 2005, when I moved South to Louisiana, I weighed nearly half of a ton.  A year later, on September 28, 2006, I was diagnosed with diabetes witch turned out to be a good thing.  I started to watch what went into my mouth, lost more than 200 pounds and weighed about 240.  I’m not trying to brag because I gradually started to regain some pounds and went back up to 276, which I maintained for a year or so.  I finally decided that it was time to get serious again.  I’ve found a great Android application that has been a great diet assistant.

Lose It! helps you set a daily calorie budget, track your food and exercise, and stay motivated to make smarter choices and achieve your goal.  After you install the application, you need to input your age, gender, height, weight and an e‑mail address.  Then you need to decide on a goal weight and how much you would like to lose each week.  The program then generates a daily calorie goal and calculates how long it will take you to achieve your weight loss.

After setup is complete, opening the application shows a screen with five tabs.  The “My Day” tab shows your total calorie budget for the day, how many calories you’ve consumed and a chart showing how many grams of protein, carbohydrates and fat you’ve consumed.  There is also an over/under budget chart for the week.

The “Log” tab is where the strength of the program is.  In this section, you enter all of your consumed food and exercises.  You can enter foods by searching the database, scanning a bar code, selecting from your personal food list, copying a previous meal or entering a recipe.  The food list is extensive and includes almost all of the restaurant chains.  So far, I haven’t found any foods not in the database.  Foods that you have previously consumed are saved in your “My Foods” list.  This makes them a lot easier to find the next time.  This is also the section where you record exercises.  When you enter an exercise, the total calories burned is added to your daily budget.  The more you exercise, the more you can chew and still lose those extra pounds.  As with the foods, there is an extensive data base that includes some obscure activities such as croquet, curling, juggling and many more.  Activities are saved in your “My Exercises” data base for easy retrieval.  If you like to do something like doing jumping jacks while roller skating, you can create a custom exercise.

The “Motivate” tab is mostly for social networking.  Here you can create and accept challenges, post to Facebook, etc.  I haven’t used this feature.

The “Goals” tab is where you can view charts and other information about your diet plan.

Finally, the “More” tab is where you set your application preferences, manage you Lose It! Account and access premium features.  Although some of these are tempting, I don’t think I’ll be signing up because of the cost of $39.99 annually.  Some of the tempting premium items are tracking blood glucose, blood pressure, nutritional data, connecting to monitoring devices and much more.  I’ve found that the free app is good enough for me.

If you want to lose a few pounds or are are just interested in tracking your calories, I recommend you give this program a try.  You can find more information on the Lose It! Website. Download Lose It! From the Google Play Store.

Amazon App Store – Originally Published October 2013

July 29, 2014 Posted by Tiny

From the Dark Side
by Tiny Ruisch

Recently, I almost downloaded an app from the Google Play Store.  It wanted me to grant the following permissions:
Network communication
full network access
view Wi-Fi connections
view network connections
add or modify calendar events and send email to guests without owners’ knowledge
read phone status and identity
modify or delete the contents of your USB storage
pair with Bluetooth devices
find accounts on the device
test access to protected storage
prevent device from sleeping
expand/collapse status bar

Did you carefully read that permissions list?  Do you think that an app that can change your calender and send email without telling you must be an awesome program?   You would probably think that it’s a utility for managing your contact list, your important documents, or maybe a super schedule manager.

You’d be wrong.  Those permissions are for the Amazon Audible book reader app.  I stumbled on it by accident when I was searching for a book that I wanted to read that the library didn’t have.  Out of all the book sites: e-book, hardcover and paperback, Audible was the cheapest.  I wonder if the price was so low because Amazon thought they could secretly mine my contacts and sell more stuff to people on that list?

I’d check the Amazon Appstore to see if the permissions are the same, but I can’t.  A month or ago, I removed it from all of my devices.  Back in March of 2011 when I installed it, the Appstore seemed like a real good deal.  There was a free paid app every day and many of them were really good ones.   The Swipe Keyboard, Tune In Radio and Documents to Go are just a few that come to my mind.  There were also many good games that you could download an play without the advertisements.

I don’t know if it was always the policy, but about a half year ago, a lot of my “free” apps wouldn’t open.  I would get an error message telling me that I had to be logged in to the Amazon Appstore to use the program.  Of course, it would always happen at the most inconvenient times.  Oh well, I don’t have that problem anymore.

It’s probably my imagination, but my Android devices seem to be a little faster since I deleted the Amazon Appstore and all of the apps that I downloaded.  Maybe the faster speed will give me more time to read that book I purchased from the Google Play Store.

Kingsoft Office – Originally Published August 2013

July 29, 2014 Posted by Tiny

From the Dark Side
by Tiny Ruisch

I’ve finally decided which office suite to use on my android devices.  My requirements are probably a little different than most users.  On my phone, I mostly use a half dozen different spreadsheets to track my medical data.  On my tablet, I usually connect my portable keyboard to write newsletter articles, etc.  Over the last year and a half or so, I’ve tried all of the major suites in the Google Play Store.  All of them work fairly well, but each has its own idiosyncrasies.  Kingsoft Office for Android is an office suite that is free.  Unlike many other suites, there is no paid version with extra features.

The Kingsoft suite has five modules: a widget, Writer for Android, Spreadsheets for Android, Presentation for Android and a file manager.  The interface is easy to use.  Files are previewed in a large, sliding thumbnail window.  I have found this to be much more efficient than a file list which my clumsy fingers seem to always touch the wrong file.  More that twenty file formats can be imported.  Output file formats are: Microsoft Word, Excel and PowerPoint 97 to 2010 formats: .doc, .docx, .txt, .xls, .xlsx, .pptx and .pdf.

Working on documents isn’t difficult at all, as long as you are comfortable with typing on a touch interface.  When I attach my Bluetooth keyboard, it is even more simple, almost like using a laptop computer.  All the options like save, edit, layout etc. are easily accessible from the toolbar at the top.  Underneath it, you will find all the sub-options on a horizontal ribbon.  When working on a document, a long press on any part of the text will open a pop-up window with options to cut, copy, select, share etc.  Other options include the ability to add images, font size, header/footer, encrypt files, copy/paste, add comments etc.

Working on spreadsheets is also easy.  Formulas are supported, as well as options like wrap text, freeze panes, sort, add charts, auto shapes etc.  The touch interface is a little difficult to learn but is easy to use once you’ve done so.  As with the writer module, connecting a keyboard will make it a breeze.

I have not used the presentation module enough to know how well it works.  It is compatible with power point files.  My only complaint about Kingsoft Office for Android is that it doesn’t support RTF (rich text format) and ODT (Libre Office) files.  For my mobile files, I usually save as either text or word and then do my final edit on either my laptop or desktop.

There are many more features I did not mention in this short review.  One is support for cloud services.  You can learn more at the Kingsoft Store.  The suite is available for download from the Google Play Store.  Give it a try and post your thoughts on the club website.

Clueful for Android – Originally Published June 2013

July 26, 2014 Posted by Tiny

From the Dark Side
by Tiny Ruisch

I’ve written before about one of the real pains of using the Android operating system on your pocket computer.  When you install or update an application, it is important that you check the permissions to make sure the application doesn’t do anything that might be nasty.

I’ve found a 1.6 mg application that will help you monitor the software installed on your device.  The Clueful Privacy Advisor is a free program from Bitdefender.  It monitors all of your installed applications and gives you detailed information about what they do in the background.  Other apps of this type that I looked at usually just check and give you a list of permissions for your installed software.

Clueful goes a step further and reports on what your applications are actually doing.  It does this by keeping a database of apps on a remote server and examining the apps on your device.  It then calculates a precise and personal overview of how vulnerable you are.  You can evaluate and take appropriate actions for each installed app.

Whenever you download a new application from the Play Store, you get your normal notification that it was successfully installed.  You also get a notification from Clueful letting you know of any risks in using your new application.

On an interesting side note, the iOS App Store has removed Clueful Privacy Advisor.  Many tech bloggers have speculated that this was done because the program was too good at identifying applications with privacy problems.  I’ll not give my opinion.  Instead I’ll just suggest you do an internet search and decide for yourself.

Here is one interesting (at least I thought it was) user comment I copied from the Google Play Store User Reviews Section:

Reviewer – It reports their own anti-virus tool in the “slightly dodgy” section 🙂
Bitdefender replied on May 22, 2013
We consider it’s only fair to our users to give clues about all installed apps with no exception!  Some apps have legitimate reasons to access your data in order to run properly.  It’s up to you to decide if a certain app represents a privacy threat for you.

You can download the Clueful Privacy Advisor from the Google Play Store. Give it a try. The price is free.

Google Currents – Originally Published May 2013

July 26, 2014 Posted by Tiny

From the Dark Side
by Tiny Ruisch

Way back in 2003, I bought my first iPAQ pocket computer.  It was a Windows Mobile device and I loved it and every other one I purchased over the years.  When I finally decided to get a pocket pc with telephone capabilities, it had a Windows operating system.  When Microsoft decided not to keep up with the electronic world, I went to the dark side and started using Android.  Since then, Android mobile has had three major upgrades.  Windows has had one.  I’ve found out that the applications make a big difference.

I remember when I was about 12 or 13 years old, I was the talk of the small town that I lived in.  Everyone thought it was pretty amusing when I was walking home from school while reading a book.  I accidentally walked into a tree.  I couldn’t help it.  I’ve always been an avid reader.  I’ve always liked magazines, books and newspapers.

It’s a high tech age now.  I still visit the library every two weeks, but most of my checkouts are audio books.  I only get two actual magazines delivered by the mail person.  The rest are electronic versions I read on my tablet.  The books I read are either on my tablet or pocket PC.  In fact, the only paper book I read any more is the one by my bed stand.  I tend to fall asleep while reading and drop it on the floor.  Paper books don’t break as easily as electronic devices.

I quit buying the daily newspaper about four months ago.  It is so much easier to read the news on my mobile devices wherever I happen to be.  A pocket PC or a tablet is just more convenient than an over sized printed sheet of paper.  There are several newsreader applications in the Google Play Store.  Many are very good and some have a nice graphical interface.  They all claim to aggregate the best news sites.

My newsreader of choice is Google Currents.  The main screen shows the news categories that are available.  They are News, Business, Science & Tech, Sports and Entertainment.  Tapping on a category opens the sub-menu.  The first time you open a category, you get the option to read breaking stories or customize the category.  In each section there are several newspapers, magazines and blogs that you can add to your news feed.  There are also many international publications you can subscribe to.  Google translate can be used to translate them into 44 languages.

Reading your subscriptions is really easy.  Tap on the publisher you want to read and you get a screen where you scroll through all of the headlines and when they were posted.  Tapping the headline will open the article.  From the article window you can share the story via social networks, email, messaging, etc.  You can also save the article to Dropbox, Evernote, or other note keeping applications you have installed on your device.  You can even save the article to your Currents for later off line reading.

I haven’t tried it yet, but the latest update is supposed to create a play list for audio files.  The application is free.  It takes 5.2 mb of space.  If you’ve got an Android device, you can download it from the Google Play Store.  Give it a try, you might like it.

Excuse me, but I’m off to read the New York Times, or maybe Maximum PC, or maybe one of those British or Australian publications.

Voice Shortcuts Launcher – Originally Published February 2103

July 25, 2014 Posted by Tiny

From the Dark Side
by Tiny Ruisch

Google Voice has really come of age in the Jelly Bean operating system.  It is so nice to just push a button on my pocket computer and say “Google, find me a place to eat.”  Almost immediately, a list of all the places to chew in the immediate area are listed.  I then go to the nearest McDonald’s and think about how my pocket PC is starting to remind me of a 24th century Library Computer Access/Retrieval System.  I just hope it doesn’t become HAL 2000.

Voice Shortcuts Launcher is a utility program that utilizes Google Voice to allow you to create customized voice commands.  You can open another app, a website or a file on your device.  You can also open your contacts and initiate phone calls by voice.

I’ve installed and tested several other voice assistants, but the Voice Shortcuts Launcher is by far the easiest to use.  Another thing I like is the interface doesn’t talk back to you.  I really don’t need my computer to tell me that it is working.

The application is easy to use.  After installing, all you have to do is open the app, specify the type of shortcut you want to create, and speak in your voice command.  Try to speak as clearly as you can.  You may use any word combination or phrase to launch whatever aspect of your Android you wish to.

Voice Shortcuts Launcher is a free app but it is supported by advertising.  The ads appear at the bottom of the screen but are far away from the command buttons.  There is no free ads-free version of the app, but if ads bother you, you can purchase GVS Pro for $2.33.

GVS Pro combines Voice Shortcuts Launcher and Gesture Shortcuts Launcher, a similar application from the same company.  I was so impressed with the voice program that I purchased the licensed version within fifteen minutes of installing it.

If you’re interested in an easy launcher, give it a try. I’m sure you’ll like it.