Friday, August 30, 2013
Nexus 4 now available from Japanese electronics retailers
I figured it would be available through the play store, but that is not the case. It is available through Yodobashi camera, for a mere ¥49,800. Here's a list of reasons why we aren't interested. In case you do want to get one simply in Japan, try this.
พรีวิว LG G2 จากเว็บต่างประเทศ
หลังจากเปิดตัวเมื่อช่วงต้นเดือนที่ผ่านมา ตอนนี้ทาง LG เริ่มทยอยส่งเครื่องให้บรรดาชาว blogger ต่างประเทศได้รีวิวกันแล้ว หลายๆ เว็บเริ่มปล่อยพรีวิวสั้นๆ ออกมาให้ชมกัน เราจะมาดูกันว่าหน้าจอที่กว้างถึง 5.2 นิ้วและการย้ายปุ่มไว้ด้านหลังทั้งหมดจะมีผลต่อการใช้งานไหม
รูปลักษณ์และขนาดของตัวเครื่อง
เป็นเรือธงรุ่นแรกของ LG ที่ไม่มีปุ่ม (home, setting, back) ทางกายภาพ (physical) แล้ว ทุกปุ่มย้ายเข้าไปอยู่บนหน้าจอทั้งหมด
ถึงแม้ว่าหน้าจอของ G2 จะมีขนาดใหญ่ถึง 5.2 นิ้ว แต่ตัวเครื่องกลับไม่ได้ใหญ่มากนักเมื่อเทียบกับ Nexus 4 ที่มีหน้าจอกว้าง 4.7 นิ้ว เป็นเพราะการย้ายปุ่ม power, volume locker ไว้ข้างหลังหมดทำให้ขอบจอบางลงอย่างเห็นได้ชัด ทำให้ขนาดไม่ต่างจากมือถือเรือธงค่ายอื่นที่มีหน้าจอขนาด 5 นิ้วเหมือนกัน
Nexus 4 | LG G2 | Galaxy S4 | Xperia Z | |
หน้าจอ | ||||
ความยาว | ||||
ความกว้าง | ||||
ความหนา |
ในส่วนของปุ่ม power และ volume locker ที่ถูกย้ายไปด้านหลัง หลายๆ คนคงคิดว่าการปลดล็อคหน้าจออาจจะยุ่งยาก เพราะต้องยกเครื่องขึ้นมาเพื่อกดปุ่ม power ที่ด้านหลัง แต่ฟีเจอร์ knock knock ทำให้การปลดล็อคเป็นไปได้ง่ายขึ้นด้วยการแตะหน้าจอสองครั้งติดต่อกันเพื่อเปิดและปิดหน้าจอ
ดูเหมือนว่าฟีเจอร์ knock knock นั้นฉลาดพอสมควร ในหน้าจอปกติถ้าต้องการดับหน้าจอจะต้องแตะหน้าจอสองครั้งที่แถบแจ้งเตือนเท่านั้นหน้าจอถึงจะดับ ที่เป็นเช่นนี้เพื่อเป็นการป้องกันการเผลอกดหน้าจอสองครั้งติดกันโดยไม่ตั้งใจ
กล้อง
นอกจาก LG G2 จะเป็น Android รุ่นแรกที่มีระบบ OIS กันการสั่นไหวในขณะถ่ายภาพแล้ว ยังรองรับการโฟกัสแบบหลายจุด (multi-point auto-focus) เหมือนที่กล้องรุ่นใหญ่อย่าง DSLR ทำได้ด้วย (น่าจะเป็นสมาร์ทโฟนตัวแรกที่มีระบบนี้)
UI/UX และ ฟีเจอร์ที่น่าสนใจ
มีการปรับปรุง UI ให้มีเอกลักษณ์เป็นของตัวเองและดูแตกต่างจากคู่แข่งสัญชาติเดียวกันมากขึ้น นอกจากนี้ยังมีลูกเล่นสามารถปรับแต่ง navigation bar (front touch buttons) ได้ด้วย
Slide Aside เป็นอีกหนึ่งฟีเจอร์ที่น่าสนใจ Slide Aside เป็นการใช้สามนิ้วปาดหน้าจอพร้อมๆ กันเพื่อสลับ app คล้ายๆ กับปุ่ม recent app แต่ Slide Aside ทำให้การสลับ app ที่เปิดค้างไว้ดูลื่นไหลกว่า (การเข้า recent app บน G2 นั้นค่อนข้างยุ่งยากต้องกดปุ่ม home ค้างไว้)
และนี่เป็นพรีวิวคร่าวๆ ที่สรุปเรื่องที่น่าสนใจของ LG G2 ส่วนใครขี้เกียจอ่านเนื้อหาด้านบน สามารถดูวิดีโอพรีวิวตามด้านล่างนี้ได้
ที่มา Android Central
Wednesday, August 28, 2013
Nexus 4 finally released in Japan. So what? Who cares?
It goes on sale tomorrow, but no one cares. There is no reason to buy this and many reasons not to:
- Jacked up price
- Old hardware
- No LTE, so it'll be slow
- No keitai osaifu, so no FeliCa mobile payments
- No Foma Plus area (800 MHz), so no reception with MVNOs in the countryside
Think about that, $249 for the 16 GB version would be ¥24,175. Sure round up to 3 man if you will but, 500 bucks? For that old thing? おま国だね。
(「売ってやるがお前の国が気に入らない」もしくは「お前の国には売ってやんねーよ」の略)
Tuesday, August 27, 2013
How to navigate sp-mode to manage your docomo ID and password
Eido Inoue summed up the deal with all the different docomo usernames and passwords in a post comparing mobile carrier wifi options:
Below I'll show you how to verify your docomo ID, or if you don't have one, how to create it. Being able to instantly do it from your phone is wonderful. When I created mine (before sp-mode), I had to wait over a week because my password was mailed (as in postal mail - paper). You'll need to have your network PIN. It's probably written down somewhere in your contract materials.
Regarding the network PIN, we were recently discussing if the forcible APN switch that docomo does when tethering is active could be partially a security feature. Maybe. Maybe not.
2. Find the Customer Support link, either at the top or the bottom of the page.
3. Scroll about halfway down the page and click docomo ID/password. Confirm that you are not tethering or connected to wifi (you must be using the spmode APN).
4. From here you can A) create a docomo ID, B) verify it, C) change it or unlock if it was locked following too many bad login attempts or D) delete it. Here I chose option B, verify, but if you have never created one (or if you want to completely reissue it) select option A.
5. Enter your network PIN.
6. Finally you can see your Docomo ID and password:
From the next screen you will have to enter your network PIN, and then you'll be brought to the following confusing page. It says that if you are only unlocking docomo ID, then to just enter the password twice where indicated, but my username was pre-entered. Does this mean I should delete it, then just enter a new password? Or, should I just leave it as is? I dunno.
Anyways, your password and username cannot be the same, you must mix numbers and letters, it is case sensitive, and if you chose a phone number, it has to be your own mobile number.
I found configuring the special ID and passwords can be trickier than the other services. docomo goes overboard on security/configurability where it wants a separate user id and password for a lot of its services. Sometimes it difficult to remember which docomo username/password/pin corresponds to which service.Man, was he not kidding. Add on to this the i-modeish labyrinth of menu options, and when accessing a docomo site via your phone, it really is confusing. I personally have four separate sets of various docomo identifying/authenticating/authorizing credentials:
- docomo ID (user/pw combination)
- wifi credentials (user/pw combination)
- sp-mode (pw only)
- Network PIN (4 digit number)
Below I'll show you how to verify your docomo ID, or if you don't have one, how to create it. Being able to instantly do it from your phone is wonderful. When I created mine (before sp-mode), I had to wait over a week because my password was mailed (as in postal mail - paper). You'll need to have your network PIN. It's probably written down somewhere in your contract materials.
Regarding the network PIN, we were recently discussing if the forcible APN switch that docomo does when tethering is active could be partially a security feature. Maybe. Maybe not.
Retrieve a docomo ID
1. Navigate to https://smt.docomo.ne.jp/ using your phone's built-in browser (I've confirmed mobile chrome also works). Below is a QR code.2. Find the Customer Support link, either at the top or the bottom of the page.
3. Scroll about halfway down the page and click docomo ID/password. Confirm that you are not tethering or connected to wifi (you must be using the spmode APN).
4. From here you can A) create a docomo ID, B) verify it, C) change it or unlock if it was locked following too many bad login attempts or D) delete it. Here I chose option B, verify, but if you have never created one (or if you want to completely reissue it) select option A.
5. Enter your network PIN.
6. Finally you can see your Docomo ID and password:
Create a docomo ID
If at Step 4 above, you chose to create a new docomo ID (or reissue it), after entering your network PIN, you'll see the following screen. Click agree (同意する) but note that if you already have an ID, it'll be reissued with a new username and password.Unlock a docomo ID
If you have entered in your password incorrectly too many times, then your docomo ID will be locked and you'll need to unlock it. Continue from the above Step 4 by selecting "modify/unlock" (変更/ロック解除).From the next screen you will have to enter your network PIN, and then you'll be brought to the following confusing page. It says that if you are only unlocking docomo ID, then to just enter the password twice where indicated, but my username was pre-entered. Does this mean I should delete it, then just enter a new password? Or, should I just leave it as is? I dunno.
Anyways, your password and username cannot be the same, you must mix numbers and letters, it is case sensitive, and if you chose a phone number, it has to be your own mobile number.
Sunday, August 25, 2013
LTE version of Google Nexus 7 will probably suck with KDDI, for now
UPDATE: KDDI has announced the sale of the wifi-only Nexus 7, and Engadget Japan has a more detailed article [J]. ¥39,800 for the 32 GB LTE model. Supported technologies and frequencies are:
4G LTE 700, 750, 850, 1700, 1900, 2100 MHz (Bands 1, 2, 4, 5, 13 17)
HSPA+ 850, 900, 1900, 2100, AWS (1700, 2100) MHz (Bands 1, 2, 4, 5, 8)
GSM 850, 900, 1700, 1900MHz
As suspected, it does not support CDMA-2000 and it does not support LTE Bands 11 and 18 (1500 and 800 MHz), which means that with KDDI, the only option will be Band 1 LTE, which in May had extremely limited coverage.
A new post on Engadget is, without any citing any sources, announcing that the LTE version of the Nexus 7 will be available in Japan within a few weeks. Unlike iPads sold in Japan, it will of course be unlocked ("SIM free") for use with any carrier. According to Mat Smith at Engadget:
Instead, what will most likely happen right now is, anytime you would see an "H" or a "3G" icon with a SoftBank or docomo SIM, you'll see a BIG RED X or 圏外 (out of area) icon with KDDI.
It could be as long as a month before it's available if the Engadget article is correct. We'll be sure to keep you appraised of carrier options. As we've long said, an MVNO is perfect for a second, data-only device.
4G LTE 700, 750, 850, 1700, 1900, 2100 MHz (Bands 1, 2, 4, 5, 13 17)
HSPA+ 850, 900, 1900, 2100, AWS (1700, 2100) MHz (Bands 1, 2, 4, 5, 8)
GSM 850, 900, 1700, 1900MHz
As suspected, it does not support CDMA-2000 and it does not support LTE Bands 11 and 18 (1500 and 800 MHz), which means that with KDDI, the only option will be Band 1 LTE, which in May had extremely limited coverage.
N7 LTE with KDDI? |
Google says it'll work on all three of Japan's major carriers (DoCoMo, Softbank and KDDI's au).Technically that is true, because all operate a Band 1 LTE (2100 MHz) network. However, if you intend to actually have a good mobile experience, we recommend staying away from KDDI, for now.
KDDI lacks the appropriate LTE coverage
You may recall that back in May, KDDI was caught greatly exaggerating their Band 1 LTE coverage. They claimed over 95% coverage, when in fact they had less than 15% and no plans for expansion. While KDDI is certainly working to increase coverage, that's just an amazing misrepresentation. KDDI does have the stated LTE coverage with Bands 11 and 18 (1500 and 800 MHz), but unless the modestly-priced N7 has some uber multiband LTE radio, the only way to support all Japanese carriers is with Band 1, and KDDI doesn't have the coverage.KDDI 3G is likely incompatible
If you use LTE in Japan and pay attention to the network displayed in the status or notification bar, you'll notice that it often falls back to "H" or "3G", indicating no LTE signal. The problem is that, unless the N7 LTE model includes a dual WCDMA/CDMA-2000 radio in addition to the LTE radio, there will be no fall back for KDDI users.Instead, what will most likely happen right now is, anytime you would see an "H" or a "3G" icon with a SoftBank or docomo SIM, you'll see a BIG RED X or 圏外 (out of area) icon with KDDI.
Wait for clarification
Of course anything is possible. Yes, LTE coverage will improve with time, and yes, Apple makes LTE hardware that fully supports SoftBank (WCDMA) and KDDI (CDMA-2000). Therefore it's not impossible for the N7 to do the same. It is just highly unlikely to get that in a budget tablet priced between 30,000 and 40,000 yen. Even a Japan-specific model seems unlikely at that price, given the total increase in manufacturing costs.It could be as long as a month before it's available if the Engadget article is correct. We'll be sure to keep you appraised of carrier options. As we've long said, an MVNO is perfect for a second, data-only device.
Friday, August 23, 2013
How to return defective electronics in Japan
I recently bought a junk external battery pack from Green House. It had mixed reviews, that were mostly good, so I just may have gotten a defective one. It is supposedly a 4200 mAh battery, but it can only charge my phone to about 50%. This seems to because the external battery itself doesn't seem to fully charge.
So I need to take it back to the store, but in Japan, the original receipt may not be enough to return a product. You will most likely need the warranty slip, which is often printed by the store at the time of purchase, so don't lose it.
What you need
- Original receipt
- Warranty slip
- Original packaging
- All bits and pieces
保証書貼付用 |
Uniblue Local Cooling - solusi menghemat energy listrik pada pc/laptop
Salam para pembaca sekalian.
Kali ini saya akan share satu software yang bisa menghemat beterai laptop
anda, nama softwarenya adalah Uniblue Local Cooling.
oke deh sedikit penjelasan dari Uniblue Local Cooling Cekidot....
Pendingin Lokal memungkinkan sobat untuk memerangi pemanasan global dari
desktop Anda! Pendinginan lokal secara otomatis mengoptimalkan konsumsi
daya PC Anda
Friday, August 16, 2013
ทดสอบ TriNet กับ 3G ที่ดีขึ้น (รึเปล่า?) จาก DTAC
เมื่อวานนี้ (13 สค. 56) ผมได้รับข้อความจาก DTAC ว่าเบอร์ของผมจะได้รับการอัพเกรดให้เป็น TriNet ผมจึงได้อัดวิดีโอไว้เพื่อเปรียบเทียบความเร็วอินเตอร์เน็ตก่อนอัพเกรด (3G บนคลื่น 850 MHz) และ หลังการอัพเกรด (3G บนคลื่น 2100 MHz) ว่าแตกต่างกันแค่ไหน
ความเร็วอินเตอร์เน็ตก่อนการอัพเกรด (3G คลื่น 850 MHz)
ผมเพิ่งรู้ตัวว่าความเร็ว 3G บนคลื่น 850 MHz ของ DTAC มันช่วงห่วยแตกเสียเหลือเกิน จากวิดีโอทดสอบความเร็วอินเตอร์เน็ต (ด้านบน) จะเห็นได้ว่าความเร็วสูงสุดที่ได้ในช่วงเวลานั้น (บ่าย 2 - บ่าย 3) ไม่เคยเกิน 1 Mbps เลย โดยเฉลี่ยแล้วเร็วกว่าความเร็ว FUP (384 Kbps) เพียงนิดหน่อย (ขนาดโฮสต์ที่แอพ Speed Test ติดต่อได้ ณ ตอนนั้นเป็นโฮสต์ของ DTAC เองนะเนี่ย)
โดยก่อนหน้านั้นช่วงเวลา 11.00 - 12.00 ในวันเดียวกัน โดยคาดว่าน่าจะเป็นช่วงที่มีคนใช้อินเตอร์เน็ตอย่างหนาแน่น ความเร็วที่ได้ไม่เคยเกินความเร็ว FUP (384 Kbps) ทั้งๆ ที่วันนั้นเป็นวันตัดยอดเริ่มต้นนับยอดการใช้อินเตอร์เน็ตใหม่
ความเร็วอินเตอร์เน็ตหลังการอัพเกรด (3G คลื่น 2100 MHz)
ความเร็วต่างกันยังกะหน้ามือกับหลังเท้าเลยทีเดียว ความเร็วเฉลี่ยเกิน 5 Mbps โดยวิ่งได้เร็วสูงสุดถึง 8 Mbps (คนอื่นทดสอบแล้ววิ่งได้เร็วถึง 10 - 20 MB) แต่มีจุดหนึ่งที่น่าสังเกต สัญญาณ 3G คลื่น 2100 MHz มือถือผมรับได้แค่ 2 ขีดเท่านั้น นั่นแสดงว่าคลื่น 3G คลื่น 2100 MHz ของ DTAC นั้นยังไม่หนาแน่นซักเท่าไร
ตรงนี้เป็นปัญหาที่หลายๆ คนบ่นกันว่า "ทำไมเวลาเปลี่ยนเป็น TriNet แล้วแบตหมดเร็วขึ้น" เพราะถ้า 3G คลื่น 2100 MHz ที่ส่งมามีสัญญาณที่เบาบาง (อาจเกิดมาจากเสาสัญญาณที่มีอยู่ ณ ตอนนี้ วางแบบกระจายๆ เพื่อให้ครอบคลุมได้ทุกพื้นที่ของ กทม. และ ปริมณฑล แต่อาจจะไม่หนาแน่น ทำให้บางพื้นที่ที่อยู่ไกลๆ เสารับสัญญาณได้เบาบาง มือถือของเราต้องทำงานหนักมากขึ้นเพื่อขยายกำลังรับ ทำให้แบตมือถือลดลงอย่างรวดเร็ว
สรุป
3G ใหม่บนคลื่น 2100 MHz ของ TriNet จาก DTAC อินเตอร์เน็ตเร็วขึ้นทันตาเห็น แต่ความหนาแน่นของสัญญาณยังน้อยเกินไป ทำให้บางพื้นที่เห็นคลื่น 2100 MHz ได้อย่างเบาบาง เป็นเหตุให้มือถือกินแบตมากขึ้น
ส่วนปัญหา ไม่สามารถใช้อินเตอร์เน็ตได้เวลาคุยโทรศัพท์นั้นยังเป็นเหมือนเดิม และเหมือนว่ามันมือถือจะเกาะสัญญาณ Edge อยู่สักพัก (บางครั้งสักพักใหญ่ๆ) แล้วถึงจะกระโดดกลับมาเกาะ 3G อีกครั้งนึง
ที่ 3G บนคลื่น 2100 MHz ของ TriNet ในช่วงนี้ที่ยังให้ความรู้สึกว่าเร็วอยู่ อาจจะเป็นเพราะว่าคนใช้ TriNet ยังน้อยอยู่ ต้องรอดูกันต่อไปในระยะยาว ถ้าหากคนเริ่มใช้ TriNet กันเยอะขึ้นอินเตอร์เน็ตจะยังเร็วแบบนี้อีกไหม
พื้นที่การให้บริการ 3G (850 MHz และ 2100 MHz) ของเครือข่าย DTAC ในปัจจุบัน
แต่ยังมีเรื่องที่น่าติงอยู่เรื่องนึง เรื่องการวางเครือข่ายสัญญาณที่ดูเหมือนว่า DTAC จะทำช้ากว่าเจ้าอื่นๆ ถ้าเทียบกันกับ AIS ที่เริ่มต้นที่ศูนย์เหมือน DTAC ในเวลานี้ 3G บนคลื่น 2100 MHz ของ AIS ครอบคลุมพื้นที่ให้บริการมากกว่าพื้นที่ 3G ของ DTAC บนคลื่น 850 MHz และ 2100 MHz รวมกันซะอีก
พื้นที่การให้บริการ 3G (2100 MHz) ของเครือข่าย AIS ในปัจจุบัน
นอกจากนี้แผนการวางเครือข่ายคลื่น 2100 MHz ในอนาคตของ DTAC ที่ดูเหมือนว่าจะไม่กระตือรือร้นกับเรื่องนี้ซักเท่าไร เพราะปลายปีนี้ AIS ตั้งเป้าไว้ว่าจะวางเครือข่ายให้ครอบคลุมให้มากกว่า 50% ของทั้งประเทศ แต่แผนการวางเครือข่ายในอนาคตของ DTAC กลับมีพื้นที่ครอบคลุมน้อยกว่าพื้นที่ 3G 2100 MHz ของ AIS ณ ปัจจุบันนี้เสียอีก!!! (ถ้าหากมองโลกในแง่บวกเอาไว้ ข้อมูลบนเว็บ DTAC อาจจะยังไม่ได้อัพเดท)
พื้นที่การให้บริการ 3G (2100 MHz) ของเครือข่าย AIS ในอนาคต
พื้นที่การให้บริการ 3G 2100 MHz ของเครือข่าย DTAC ในอนาคต
ความคิดเห็นส่วนตัว
ผมใช้ DTAC มา 6 ปีกว่าแล้ว แต่ปีนี้เป็นปีแรกที่เพิ่งเปลี่ยนมาใช้แบบรายเดือน ในสมัยที่ยังเป็นยุคของ 2G (ปี 2553) ตอนนั้นสามารถอวดใครๆ ได้ว่า Edge ของ DTAC นั้นครอบคลุมในหลายๆ พื้นที่ที่ค่ายอื่นเข้าไม่ถึง ผมยังจำได้ตอนขึ้นเขาไปเที่ยวที่ภูสอยดาว มีเครื่องผมเพียงเครื่องเดียวที่สามารถอัพภาพขึ้น Facebook ได้ แต่ในสถานการณ์ตอนนี้กลับกัน ดูเหมือนว่า DTAC นั้นมีพื้นให้บริการ 3G น้อยที่สุด
ส่วนตัวผมคงจะรอดูสถานการณ์และให้โอกาส DTAC จนถึงปลายปีนี้ ถ้ายังไม่มีอะไรดีขึ้น ผมอาจจะโบกมือลา DTAC ไปยังค่ายอื่น
เพิ่มเติม สามารถตรวจสอบพื้นที่ให้บริการ 3G บนคลื่น 2100 MHz ของ DTAC และ AIS ได้ตาม link ด้านล่าง
- DTAC (http://www.dtac.co.th/trinet/trinet-network.html)
- AIS (http://www.ais.co.th/3g/th/coverage-checker.aspx)
อัพเดทข้อมูลเพิ่มเติม ทาง DTAC ได้ชี้แจงแถลงไขผ่านเว็บและ blogger ทั้งหลายไปตามอ่านได้ที่ droidsans.com ครับ
มีข้อนึงที่ผมสะดุด
3G 850MHz วางไปแล้วกว่า 60% ของพื้นที่ ส่วน 3G 2100MHz กำลังค่อยๆผุดขึ้นมาตามหัวเมืองใหญ่แต่ในเว็บของ DTAC ตามข้อมูลที่ผมเสนอไปด้านบนดูไม่ค่อยสอดคล้องกัน 60% ที่ว่านี้เป็นของพื้นที่เป้าหมายว่าจะวางเสาสัญญาณ หรือ 60% ของพื้นที่ทั้งประเทศ?
Wednesday, August 14, 2013
Xperia Tablet Z
I got myself a new toy earlier this summer: The Xperia Tablet Z, the newest 10 inch tablet from Sony. It is fast, light, very thin and water and dust resistant. Below is my review, with occasional comparisons to the Nexus 7, my other tablet.
The Thing in Itself
The Xperia Tablet Z.
The design is gorgeous. It's a squared-off, flat black slab of a tablet. It's really very thin; so thin that I think of it as a thick sheet rather than as a flat box. And it is almost unbelievably light. In fact, the first time I picked one up in a store, I thought it was a nonfunctional display model; one of those that's just a shell with nothing inside.
All edges and corners are covered by a thin bezel in softer, matte plastic that improves your grip on the tablet and does a decent job at avoiding small dings and scratches. It is effectively a bumper case wrapped around the tablet, but so thin and unobtrusive you forget it's there.
Tablet Z from the side (artists impression (proportions are to scale)).
The tablet is water and dust resistant. Not that I want it with me in the shower or anything, but it gives me some peace of mind. I can get caught out in the rain, for instance, and not worry that the tablet gets wet. It also makes it easy to remove fingerprints and stains with a drop of detergent and some water. Gently slosh around the soapy water over the screen with your hand, then rinse the tablet off in the sink. Do note that you're not supposed to use detergents on it, but I figure only a drop on the front screen is unlikely to do any damage.
Water and dust resistant means all ports are covered with plastic flaps. It can be a little annoying to find and pop open a small black flap along a black edge of a black tablet to get at the USB port or headhpone jack. But the flaps are solid plastic that open easily and close with a reassuring snap, not some fiddly rubber grommets. Both my phone and my Nexus 7 have bad USB ports and headphone jacks because of the dust and crud they've picked up over time; covered ports should help me avoid that problem.
From left: the Tablet Z; iPad Mini; Nexus 7; and Galaxy Nexus.
The Z and the iPad have the best screens with good colour and viewing angles, though the Z has far better resolution, looks crisper and fits a lot more information on screen. The Nexus 7 has lower contrast and worse viewing angles, though the colour rendition is still OK. The Galaxy Nexus screen is the worst, with a greenish tint and low contrast.
When the screen is off it's a homogenous black surface, only slightly marred by a Sony logo. As you turn it on you get a rich, vibrant display shining out from that deep surface that looks great from almost any angle. It has plenty of contrast and skews slightly warm; that's not a bad thing in general, as warm pictures tend to look more lively. The contrast and saturation is a little too much for me, but fortunately you can turn off the extra enhancement in the settings.
The screen has somewhat higher pixel density than the Nexus 7, but a bit lower than the "retina" iPad and much lower than the Nexus 10. If I wear my close-up glasses and really try, I can sort-of kind-of note jaggies on website text on the Nexus 7, but on the Z I can not. Text and graphics look completely crisp and clear at all times. The screen is quite reflective, and that's more of a problem than it is with a phone or a smaller tablet. There's a lot more surface area to catch and mirror stray lights in the background.
This is as good as the camera gets. Taken using the "HDR" function to keep detail both in the clouds and in the shadows, then post-processed in Gimp. It's only fair to do so, I think; after all, you want to see how good you can make the images, and the images on the net that you compare with are normally post-processed as well.
There's a camera. It takes pictures. The camera app is quite good, with a fair amount of manual settings available. The camera itself is much like any mobile camera, with loss of small detail and low dynamic range. The software is not that bad though; it doesn't oversharpen the images and there's less smearing from the noise removal than in many other mobile cameras.
With that said, do you really want to be seen in public taking pictures with a 10" tablet? Holding it in front of you like someone waving a "will work for food"-sign at people passing by? I didn't think so. The normal use for the front-facing camera is more likely to be scanning the occasional QR code or as a back-up camera if your phone dies.
It takes panoramas too. Here's a cropped one with the view from my desk. There's a couple of ships and a crane barge out on the sea towards the left; you'll have to take my word for it.
There's a built-in FM radio that uses the the headphone cord as antenna. It works well - you don't need to listen through your headphones, just have them connected — and reception seems decent. Now, if there was anything actually worth listening to on the Japanese radio waves.
The Software
The Z comes with Android 4.1.2, though the 4.2 update is rolling out in a matter of weeks, and Sony has stated that 4.3 will come in the not too distant future. This is for the Wifi and Sony-supplied LTE models of course; I wouldn't expect updates to be as fast for the Docomo-specific LTE version.Sony has added their own skin on the tablet. But unlike most maker skins this is subtle and unobtrusive, and many of the tweaks are true improvements on the basic Android design. There's some extra cruft, but most of it can be uninstalled. Some apps are in ROM and can't be uninstalled as such, but Android lets you disable such apps completely. They don't run, don't take up any storage or RAM, and don't get updated. It's effectively the same as uninstalling them.
Some reviews have complained of slowness and choppiness, and indeed, when I first started the Z the home screen was a bit stuttery. The reason is simple: On first boot the home screens are loaded to the gills with active widgets that showcase everything Sony has to offer. I suspect the engineers designed a good, solid interface that works smoothly in normal use. Close to launch the marketing department decided that filling up the screens with widgets was the right way to sell the tablet and Sony services. Remove all widgets you don't want from the home screen and any slowness is gone.
Their "small apps" is really useful. You have a launcher in the bottom bar where you can pop up a list of small apps at any time, no matter what else you're doing. There's a calculator, note-taking app, clipboard manager, a small version of the Chrome web browser and so on. There's more small apps available on the Play market (the Toggle Switcher app is very useful), and you can add any homescreen widget as a small app as well.
This is great when you write notes during a teleconference or chat session, or you look up some info on the web while waiting for daybreak in Minecraft. It's absolutely brilliant in fact; I use this all the time and I hope something like it will find its way into Android itself.
Reading "Dracula", with a small Chrome browser window open at Wikipedia's entry for Bram Stoker. The floating window can be moved and resized at will, and the app will remember its state between activations.
There's an IR transmitter and remote control app. I tried setting it up for our Sharp DVD/Hard drive recorder, and I got a basic working set-up after a few minutes. It's kind of cool, but doesn't strike me as terribly useful. We have a remote with real hardware buttons right there on the table after all. I'm not a heavy TV user though, so perhaps I'm missing the point.
Smart Connect is good but a little frustrating. The app automates connection and disconnection of devices like keyboards and earphones in a convenient way. It can also react to things such as the cradle and the charging cable. You can set it to open a specific app when connecting a Bluetooth keyboard for instance, or turn off the sound when when the charger is plugged in at night.
The app is almost a real activity automation application such as Tasker or Llama, but with a really well-designed UI. It can react to and do so many things already, but for activity automation it has crippling omissions; you can't react to a particular Wifi network being available, for instance. Crippling, that is, if you think of this as an automator. But this is of course aimed specifically at connecting devices, and that it does very well. I do wish that Sony would make it a real automation application in the future.
I've disabled all Facebook-, Twitter- and Sony Play Memories-related services in the "Apps" tab in the settings since I don't use them. "Socialife" seems a decent RSS feed reader and aggregator, but as I use Tiny Tiny RSS already I disabled that too. I don't disable them for the memory but to limit the number of things that wake up the tablet periodically to conserve battery. They're all trivial to enable again should I want them.
There's some good improvements and neat touches. You can double-tap on the screen to turn it on, for instance, rather than use the power button. The screen unlock is a simple upward swipe anywhere on the screen that triggers a ripple-like effect. Together, a simple tap-tap-swipe anywhere will activate your tablet; easier and faster than having to find a power button, then find an on-screen unlock target.
The POBox on-screen keyboard works well (a Swedish dictionary is included) and includes swiping. For Japanese I ultimately prefer Google's Japanese keyboard; I'm used to it as much as anything. The larger screen makes an on-screen keyboard a lot more useful than on smaller devices, and I can tap out fairly long emails without much frustration. The improvement even over the Nexus 7 really is surprisingly large. You still have no tactile feedback so while I can do email with the on-screen keyboard I'd still insist on a real keyboard for longer texts.
In Use
I have a Nexus 7 already, and use it extensively. So why get a second, larger tablet? First, I want to read research papers and other PDF documents, and a 7" tablet is just too small for that. I'd also like to try to do more intensive writing-related tasks such as real email, light paper writing, as well as use for remote login. If possible I want to try using it for presentations as well so I could leave my laptop at home for most short business trips. And of course it should be good for games and general web surfing.The tablet is quite good for reading PDFs. Books and single-column research papers fit neatly in portrait orientation, and both math and figures are crisp and easy to read. Double-column papers are readable but just a little small in portrait orientation for my eyes. If I zoom in to read one column at a time or switch to landscape they're very easy to read and follow.
A double-column paper in portrait orientation. Click on it for the full size. The small text in the equations, table and captions is all crisp and clear, but a bit small for my eyes.
Switch to landscape orientation and both text and figures are very large and easy to read. The text is actually a fair bit larger than the printed copy, and I can neatly fit half a page at a time on screen. This is easier to read for me than the printout.
The Sony notepad mini app is useful here. It pops up in a small separate window in a corner and lets you take notes while reading the paper. You can even add freehand drawings. Unfortunately, the only ways to export the notes are as straight text (losing all formatting and sketches) or as PNG images. Some slightly more structured format would be welcome (even markdown to keep the text formatting would be a big improvement), along with a way to do boxes-and-arrows style structured drawings.
I there was a PDF reader better adapted for this particular use. Acrobat Reader works OK, but lacks a number of features. Ideally it should let you zoom into either left and right, or top and bottom halves of a document, then treat each half of the document as a page, so that a click forward would skip to the next half of the page, not the next page. And it should let you have multiple PDFs open and easily switch between them for comparisons.
I tried editing a PDF as well. I had an eight-page DPF document — a response to reviewers for a paper — and as a coauthor I had some comments and suggested edits for the first author1. So I opened the PDF with Adobe Reader, then used the annotation tools to mark text and add my comments and suggestions. Saved the changes, then emailed the file back to the first author (you need to install a file manager such as Astro to pick PDFs as an attachment in Gmail).
This worked quite well. I spent 45 minutes on the couch doing the entire round of proofreading and commenting with the tablet, and I never once felt like giving up and use my laptop. Reading and editing PDFs works well with the Z. Mission accomplished as far as I'm concerned.
Fiction ebooks are readable, though a little awkward on the Z. The tablet is light enough to hold for long periods but the screen is on the large side. In portrait you get fairly large text or long lines. You can read books in two-page format in landscape orientation (see the Screenshot earlier), but only if you're comfortable with small text. It's not bad, but for fiction I prefer the even lighter, paperback-sized Nexus 7.
Non-fiction texts work better. Graphs, equations and code examples are large and clear and you can fit a lot of information on the screen. Non-fiction books are usually edited and laid out with a larger paper size in mind, so they just work better on a large tablet even with a reflowable format such as ePub. The tablet is especially handy when you keep a page open for reference while you're doing something else. It works great for viewing recipes while you're cooking, and you can rinse off any food stains and gunk in the sink afterwards. The Asahi newspaper app works great on it.
As a working tool it is quite good. The tablet works well for remote logins. I use VX ConnectBot for now, though I also have Juice SSH installed. With an on-screen keyboard the tablet is useful for small tasks such as running a software upgrade, say, or checking on the progress of a long-running simulation. With a hardware Bluetooth keyboard I can use this for real work. I already use Screen or Tmux for persistent logins, Vim for editing and so on, and I can use it all as usual with the Z.
The tablet Z connected to the Microsoft Wedge keyboard. The keyboard cover folds up to become a tablet stand; a neat touch. The whole thing is the size of a netbook, and you can even have the keyboard in your lap if you're truly pressed for space. On the other hand, with the keyboard you do need a table of some kind for the tablet; a true laptop it is not.
The Hacker's Keyboard is a good on-screen keyboard for remote logins; the lack of arrow keys and Escape is a larger drawback of most on-screen keyboards than the lack of screen space, and this solves that issue for you.
Still, for anything more than a few minutes of work at a time you really want a real keyboard with proper tactile feedback, and whatever you think of Microsoft business practices or software, their peripherals are very good. The Mobile Wedge is no exception. While it's too small to rival the Lenovo laptop keyboard or my Happy Hacking Professional keyboard2, it is better than any other mobile keyboard I have tried. I would prefer a longer key travel, and the space bar could be a little more sensitive, but it works quite well.
Teleconferencing works OK, by the way; camera and screen are all good enough, and the microphone seems to do its job. The speakers are fine for this, but you still want to use headphones if you can, to avoid audio feedback.
I have yet to try doing presentations with the tablet. The minimal software is there — I can use Adobe Reader or some other PDF reader to show a presentation in PDF format, and Office Suite Pro can apparently show simple power-point presentations. But the tablet has only a HDMI output, and many places still require VGA connections to the projector. HDMI-to-VGA converters need to actively convert the signal so they're not cheap and need an external power source too. I'll continue to rely on my laptop for now.
Games and entertainment is where this tablet really shines. Almost every game I've tried works really well, with smooth animations, beautiful graphics and good sound. Minecraft was really made for this; I haven't touched the desktop version since I got the Z. Humble Bundle games like SpaceChem and Broken Sword — too small on the N7 — work great on the Z. I've replayed World of Goo once again, just for the sheer pleasure of playing it on the large, beautiful screen.
I don't watch movies or listen to music much, so I can't say how good it is for that. But youtube videos run flawlessly, and the screen is large enough to create an immersive experience. The corner-placed speakers are loud and clear, giving you nice stereo separation. I have no doubt it works well for that too.
It's even surprisingly useful out on the street. My commute takes two hours every morning with a mix of walking, crowded subways and commuter trains. I often play Ingress along the way; it's a good proxy for any kind of outdoor use, such as following a map or looking up directions.
My Nexus 7 really shines at this, but the Tablet Z works much better than I expected. Walking down the street or standing in the train you usually have only one hand free, so the natural way is to hold it in portrait orientation. It's light enough to hold for an extended time and the bezel is wide enough to give you a good grip. The screen is fairly readable outdoors in the sun if you crank up the brightness. On the down side you can view things, but can't really operate apps with one hand on such a large screen. Also, it's large enough that I worry I'll bump into people or things and drop it.
With that said, I usually use the Z on the train nowadays — it's a pleasure to read the newspaper on it — though I still prefer the Nexus 7 when walking down the street or when I'm in the middle of a book. The subway is usually crowded enough that you can barely use a phone; a tablet of any kind is out of the question. I'll still bring my Nexus 7, especially for book reading, but the Z works just as well in practice.
Battery life is good, by the way. My entire commute is two hours, and if I play Ingress (a known battery killer) on the way, the tablet is constantly connected to my Wifi router, the GPS is often active and the screen is on pretty much all the time. I read my RSS feeds, glance at the newspaper, and spend a fair amount of time in the Ingress client. The battery charge goes from 100% to 74% in that time. By comparison, my Nexus 7 (with a 9 month old battery) drains to 66% for exactly the same trip. If I don't use it for Ingress I usually have more than half a charge left when I come home at night, so battery life is not a problem in practice.
What doesn't the tablet do, then? It does not do lunch. I often use a tablet while eating (yes mom, I still read at the table...), especially during lunch at work. There I need to pick up my food, carry the tray to my seat, and bring the empty tray to the kitchen when leaving. The Nexus 7 goes right into my back pocket and frees up my hands, but the Z is too large for that. Instead I have to carry it under the tray with one hand. Not convenient, and not safe. And it's rather big for a crowded lunch table too. I just use the N7 instead; or failing that, my phone.
In short (too late for that, I realize), the Tablet Z is a thin, light, high-performance tablet that's a true pleasure to use. It's good for work-related tasks and for reading research papers; it's great for gaming; and it's light and svelte enough to use on your commute or out on the streets if you need to. After almost two months of heavy use I can say this has been one of the best purchases I have ever made. It's been worth every yen, and I'd buy it again in a heartbeat.
#1 Yes, I was suggesting edits to a revision of the response to reviewers for their suggested edits for the revision of the actual paper. And people sometimes wonder why the academic publication process can take so much time.
#2 It's probably never going to happen, but a portable, battery-powered bluetooth version of the Happy Hacking Professional would have me throwing yen bills at the manufacturer within seconds.
I spend more time using keyboards every day than I do with any other thing so the ergonomics, comfort and function is really important. There are many good keyboards out there, but for me only a very few have really stood the test of time. The IBM Model M; the current Lenovo chicklet keyboard; and the Happy Hacking Professional.
I spend more time using keyboards every day than I do with any other thing so the ergonomics, comfort and function is really important. There are many good keyboards out there, but for me only a very few have really stood the test of time. The IBM Model M; the current Lenovo chicklet keyboard; and the Happy Hacking Professional.
Emulator ePSXe 1.9.0 (FULL Bios + Plugins)
Salam para pembaca, kali ini saya akan berbagi mengenai emulator epsxe terbaru yaitu "Epsxe 1.9.0".
beberapa feature emulator ini tidak jauh berbeda dengan versi sebelumnya "Epsxe 1.8.0",
akan tetapi pihak epsxe team telah melakukan beberapa perbaikan emulator sehingga membuat penggunanya dapat nyaman menggunakannya.
Berikut beberapa perbaikan dan keunggulan pada emulator :
- perbaikan pada
beberapa feature emulator ini tidak jauh berbeda dengan versi sebelumnya "Epsxe 1.8.0",
akan tetapi pihak epsxe team telah melakukan beberapa perbaikan emulator sehingga membuat penggunanya dapat nyaman menggunakannya.
Berikut beberapa perbaikan dan keunggulan pada emulator :
- perbaikan pada
Saturday, August 10, 2013
Improved fix for Docomo MVNO data-only SIM "cell standby" battery drain
There are many data-only SIMs from a number of different Japanese MVNOs, including b-mobile. These may offer superior value over full price data plans from the big carriers. They're also great for a second device, like a 3G Nexus 7 tablet, and the prepaid versions are perfect for temporary visitors.
The problem is that these SIMs are provided by Docomo without a specific component that Android expects. This causes the phone to appear to not have a data connection at all (when it actually does), resulting in excessive battery drain as power to the radio is boosted while searching for a signal.
While the problem has finally been addressed in the Android source code, this will most likely only help for tablets that have no built-in phone capability. A normal Android phone with a data-only SIM provided by Docomo will most likely still not show signal bars. The previous fix required a fair bit of work. The new fix uses a simple Xposed module, so it can be performed entirely on the phone and can be easily disabled when you use a voice SIM.
If you read Japanese, visit oov's blog for a more detailed explanation.
I'd been running a very old beta of unofficial Cyanogen 10 on a Nexus S for about a year now. It was really out of date and buggy, but patching a freshly installed ROM was just a pain. You had to pull the framework.jar file to a computer, decompile it, patch it, recompile it, push it back, and hope everything worked. The previous batch file wasn't really usable because of a bug with virtual box and the Nexus S, and I never got around to making a batch shell script, so I had to do it all manually, which meant that I just never did it.
The problem is that these SIMs are provided by Docomo without a specific component that Android expects. This causes the phone to appear to not have a data connection at all (when it actually does), resulting in excessive battery drain as power to the radio is boosted while searching for a signal.
While the problem has finally been addressed in the Android source code, this will most likely only help for tablets that have no built-in phone capability. A normal Android phone with a data-only SIM provided by Docomo will most likely still not show signal bars. The previous fix required a fair bit of work. The new fix uses a simple Xposed module, so it can be performed entirely on the phone and can be easily disabled when you use a voice SIM.
If you read Japanese, visit oov's blog for a more detailed explanation.
Xposed Installer with oov's signal bars module installed and enabled. |
Requirements
- Android 4.03 - 4.3
- Root
- Xposed Installer (apk)
- Docomo Sim Patcher (Xposed module; apk)
Instructions
- Download and install the most recent version of the Xposed installer. The current version at the time of writing is
XposedInstaller_2.1.4.apk
. - Launch the Xposed installed and tap "Install/Update".
- Reboot the phone
- Download and install the Docomo Sim Patcher module. The current version is
DocomoSimPatcher20130726.apk
. - From the Xposed Installed tap the modules tab and enable the Sim Patcher module by tapping the checkbox.
- Reboot the phone.
I'd been running a very old beta of unofficial Cyanogen 10 on a Nexus S for about a year now. It was really out of date and buggy, but patching a freshly installed ROM was just a pain. You had to pull the framework.jar file to a computer, decompile it, patch it, recompile it, push it back, and hope everything worked. The previous batch file wasn't really usable because of a bug with virtual box and the Nexus S, and I never got around to making a batch shell script, so I had to do it all manually, which meant that I just never did it.
Flashing the latest CM based off 4.2.2 from the teamw.in recovery, which is really full of win |
HSPA and signal bars! |
Friday, August 9, 2013
Why Japanese carriers put "bloatware" on your smart phone (aka Why docomo won't sell iPhone)
If you buy an Android handset in Japan, you will be surprised how much bloatware there is on your phone. It can't be uninstalled without root, and only a small portion of it can be disabled, so you it can be hard to escape all the advertisements being pushed from the bloatware. (fortunately, it seems that the heaviest of the "notification spam" bloatware can be disabled).
To understand why they do this, take a look NTT Docomo's income statement. (Source)
14% of sales from bloatware
Mobile communication service (△7.4%) | 749 |
Device sales (+42.8%) | 212 |
Others (+32.7%) | 151 |
(Others is "Contents, payment services, handset insurance, ads, etc")
You can see that 14% of their sales is from other optional services, such as bloatware, and it's continuously growing.
Carriers sell devices at a loss
They also show ARPU (Average Revenue Per Unit) for the three segments.
ARPU (Yen, the 1st quater 2013) | ARPU |
Voice ARPU | 1,470 |
Packet ARPU | 2,680 |
Smart ARPU | 460 |
You see that 10% of ARPU is from other services. (That they call Smart ARPU)
The point here is that Voice / Packet service need a huge infrastructure investment, but bloatware doesn't require so much - only developing apps - so the profit rate is much higher (and push up your packet usage too!)
Others Sales ≒ Smart ARPU
So, as long as their profit structure is
1. Selling devices at a loss;
2. Earning their profit from packet communication fees and other services;
You can't avoid bloatware. It's their goose that lays the easiest, fastest golden eggs.
(And that's why docomo won't sell iPhone, because they can't put bloatware on it)
Thursday, August 8, 2013
The reason Japan Mobile Tech has no information on rental phones and SIMs
We often get questions about voice SIMs for visitors; this post will serve as the answer.
National law restricts mobile voice plans to residents of Japan. The only way for a visitor to get mobile voice service is to use a rental phone or SIM card. SIM cards can be complicated by the fact that many overseas Android smartphones don't display the required certification mark (giteki 技適) for radio transmitting devices, making them (technically) illegal to use in Japan.
The reason that we don't have any posts or information on rental is because we consider it to be a total waste of money and can't recommend rentals whatsoever.
The average visitor to Japan simply does not need traditional cellular voice, and if you do for some sort of serious business, then you are not the average visitor. You may rely on a voice plan back home, but in Japan, we rely on mail much more than voice - many people almost exclusively. Don't annoy the locals by actually calling them – be cool and send an email ;)
EVERYONE you would contact in Japan can receive your mail. I don't mean SMS, I mean regular email. If you need to call back home, use skype or Google Hangouts or some other VoIP-based solution with free wifi (yes, Japan actually has that now at Starbuck, 7-11 and I think even some vending machines) or a data-only mobile plan because these carry no legal restrictions requiring residency.
We recommend the JCI b-mobile visitor SIMs, which can be picked up at the airport, for data connectivity that is a balance between value and ease of set up. If you want the absolute best deal, get a pre-paid b-mobile SIM from a large electronics retailer for about ¥3,000 for 30 days. These are a better value but require activation with a Japanese mobile phone.
Regarding the lack of certification mark on overseas phones, note the usage of the word technically above. You'll need a phone that support UMTS-2100 MHz (Band 1).
National law restricts mobile voice plans to residents of Japan. The only way for a visitor to get mobile voice service is to use a rental phone or SIM card. SIM cards can be complicated by the fact that many overseas Android smartphones don't display the required certification mark (giteki 技適) for radio transmitting devices, making them (technically) illegal to use in Japan.
The reason that we don't have any posts or information on rental is because we consider it to be a total waste of money and can't recommend rentals whatsoever.
The average visitor to Japan simply does not need traditional cellular voice, and if you do for some sort of serious business, then you are not the average visitor. You may rely on a voice plan back home, but in Japan, we rely on mail much more than voice - many people almost exclusively. Don't annoy the locals by actually calling them – be cool and send an email ;)
EVERYONE you would contact in Japan can receive your mail. I don't mean SMS, I mean regular email. If you need to call back home, use skype or Google Hangouts or some other VoIP-based solution with free wifi (yes, Japan actually has that now at Starbuck, 7-11 and I think even some vending machines) or a data-only mobile plan because these carry no legal restrictions requiring residency.
We recommend the JCI b-mobile visitor SIMs, which can be picked up at the airport, for data connectivity that is a balance between value and ease of set up. If you want the absolute best deal, get a pre-paid b-mobile SIM from a large electronics retailer for about ¥3,000 for 30 days. These are a better value but require activation with a Japanese mobile phone.
Regarding the lack of certification mark on overseas phones, note the usage of the word technically above. You'll need a phone that support UMTS-2100 MHz (Band 1).
Root Docomo Xperia A SO-04E and disable bloatware
DISCLAIMER: do this at your own risk. It will void your warranty.
If you are currently running a supported build (confirm build in Settings > About Phone) then use Root Keeper to preserve root privileges when upgrading to the latest version by OTA. However, if you use the Sony desktop update tool, you will lose root, and root keeper is not compatible with Andorid 4.3 (though this has not yet been announced for the SO-04E).
Step 2: From Settings, make sure you have turned on 1) USB Debugging in Developer Options and 2) installing apps from unknown sources in Security.
Step 3: connect the phone by USB, navigate to the folder you unzipped, and execute the appropriate script for your environment, e.g., on a mac,
(On mac, do this by typing
At first, I thought this was because I had disabled some of the cryptically-named system software, like "docomo service" or "docomo device manager", (as shown below) that was needed to handle the OTA update file. However, after reenabling these, the OTA still resulted in the same "insufficient internal storage space" error. I then reenabled all Docomo apps, and the OTA still failed. So I rebooted. Then it worked, but I am left unable to determine exactly what fixed it, the reboot, or reenabling everything.
These are the Docomo apps that I have left enabled. "docomo" is the docomo account used for sp-mode stuff. Perhaps we'll experiment and figure out just which of these are actually needed.
The redundant docomo system software normally cannot be disabled |
Background
Doing this is trivial. The needed files are available through XDA Developers. I did this on the original SO-04E firmware (4.1.2, build 10.1.1.D.0.179). To date, the SO-04E has received two OTA updates, this method is compatible with the first update (build 10.1.1.D.2.26), but not yet with the second update (build 10.1.1.D.2.31), though support should be coming soon. The developer of these rooting scripts only needs the build.prop and kernel.sin files from a new build to add support, and those have already been submitted.If you are currently running a supported build (confirm build in Settings > About Phone) then use Root Keeper to preserve root privileges when upgrading to the latest version by OTA. However, if you use the Sony desktop update tool, you will lose root, and root keeper is not compatible with Andorid 4.3 (though this has not yet been announced for the SO-04E).
Exploit patched in Android 4.2
It has been reported that for the Xperia Z, this no longer works on 4.2. The process becomes much more complicated, so if you plan to root your Xperia, do it before the update to 4.2 rolls out, then use Root Keeper. 4.2 has been announced for the Xperia Z, and we can only assume that this exploit will also be fixed for the Xperia A.Rooting Steps
Step 1: Down and unzip the "DooMLoRD Easy Rooting Toolkit" from XDA. All dependencies are included.Step 2: From Settings, make sure you have turned on 1) USB Debugging in Developer Options and 2) installing apps from unknown sources in Security.
Step 3: connect the phone by USB, navigate to the folder you unzipped, and execute the appropriate script for your environment, e.g., on a mac,
runme_mac.sh
.(On mac, do this by typing
sh runme_mac.sh
. You may need to give the script execute permission (I didn't), but if so, type chmod +x runme_mac.sh
.)After Root
Install Titanium Backup and disable all the redundant Docomo junk, but be careful that you don't disable the software update, or some of the other docomo stuff needed to receive OTA updates. DO NOT UNINSTALL THE DOCOMO SYSTEM APPS. It appears that the OTA checks for system applications, but I'm not sure if it checks for all or just those required for the update. I had disabled everything and got the following error when attempting to OTA update.At first, I thought this was because I had disabled some of the cryptically-named system software, like "docomo service" or "docomo device manager", (as shown below) that was needed to handle the OTA update file. However, after reenabling these, the OTA still resulted in the same "insufficient internal storage space" error. I then reenabled all Docomo apps, and the OTA still failed. So I rebooted. Then it worked, but I am left unable to determine exactly what fixed it, the reboot, or reenabling everything.
These are the Docomo apps that I have left enabled. "docomo" is the docomo account used for sp-mode stuff. Perhaps we'll experiment and figure out just which of these are actually needed.
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