Credit PCWorld
Two Things Android Can Learn From iOS 4.2
Google should take note of Apple's recent iOS update, and improve Android.
By Preston Gralla, Computerworld Nov 23, 2010 2:50 pm
The just-released iOS 4.2 update was a useful, if not dramatic upgrade to the iPhone's operating system. Android already has some of iOS 4.2's features, such as being able to search for text on a Web page. But there are two new features in iOS 4.2 for the iPhone that Google should add to Android.
Find My Android
From my point of view, the best thing about iOS 4.2 for the iPhone is the addition of Find My iPhone, a free service that finds your iPhone if you lose it, and remotely lock it, wipe it, or display a message or sound on it.
Find My iPhone was previously available to those who paid the $99 annual fee for a MobileMe subscription. Here, for the first time, it's available to everyone for free.
Google would do well introduce a similar feature and service for Android. It certainly would be easy to do. And given that the Find My iPhone service uses Google Maps to show where a missing iPhone is, adding the service to Android would mean more people would use Google Maps.
By the way, you may have noticed a Droid commercial that touts what appears to be a similar app for Android, called Lookout Mobile Security. That app, though, had to be downloaded, isn't built into Android, and if you want to use features such as lock and wipe, you'll have to pay for them. So it's not nearly as good as the free Find My iPhone.
Wireless printing
Android phones are essentially full-blown computers, but they're missing a very basic computer feature --- the ability to print. iOS 4.2 lets iPhones print Web pages and more, although that feature is severely limited, because it works with only a handful of specific wirelessly enabled printers.
Google should introduce a similar feature but do Apple one better, and include a feature Apple originally planned to include in iOS 3.2, but then dropped --- the ability to send a print job to a PC or Mac, and have them do the printing. That way, you would be able to print to any printer to which your Mac or PC has access.
Two Things Android Can Learn From iOS 4.2
Google should take note of Apple's recent iOS update, and improve Android.
By Preston Gralla, Computerworld Nov 23, 2010 2:50 pm
Find My Android
Find My iPhone was previously available to those who paid the $99 annual fee for a MobileMe subscription. Here, for the first time, it's available to everyone for free.
Google would do well introduce a similar feature and service for Android. It certainly would be easy to do. And given that the Find My iPhone service uses Google Maps to show where a missing iPhone is, adding the service to Android would mean more people would use Google Maps.
By the way, you may have noticed a Droid commercial that touts what appears to be a similar app for Android, called Lookout Mobile Security. That app, though, had to be downloaded, isn't built into Android, and if you want to use features such as lock and wipe, you'll have to pay for them. So it's not nearly as good as the free Find My iPhone.
Wireless printing
Android phones are essentially full-blown computers, but they're missing a very basic computer feature --- the ability to print. iOS 4.2 lets iPhones print Web pages and more, although that feature is severely limited, because it works with only a handful of specific wirelessly enabled printers.
Google should introduce a similar feature but do Apple one better, and include a feature Apple originally planned to include in iOS 3.2, but then dropped --- the ability to send a print job to a PC or Mac, and have them do the printing. That way, you would be able to print to any printer to which your Mac or PC has access.