![]() |
Home
| Calendar
| Mail Lists
| List Archives
| Desktop SIG
| Hardware Hacking SIG
Wiki | Flickr | PicasaWeb | Video | Maps & Directions | Installfests | Keysignings Linux Cafe | Meeting Notes | Linux Links | Bling | About BLU |
Shirley M?rquez D?lcey wrote: > One of the nice things about the Amazon Appstore is that it has a full > record of all the apps you have bought including free ones. It would > be nice if the Google Play store had the same kind of record. At least > then you would have a central place to see what apps you have > installed in the past and might want to install again. Google does the same thing. (Mostly.) I recently got a new phone and *most* of my Google Play apps reappeared, but not all. Possibly the missing ones were actual side-loaded, the missing ones were all pretty obscure, they were possibly buggy or ancient in their construction in a way that broke Google's records. As for settings, Google backed up as much as it could via their cloud. It made sense once I thought about it. I now have a phone and a tablet, and I don't want everything synced between the two: icons would be hopping around and volumes would be changing. I do, however, want things like contact lists and calendars to sync. It was pretty smooth. It was spooky when both the phone and tablet knew how to get on the wifi at work. Settling in to a new phone is still a process. Individual apps have their own data, some will store it in some cloudy server. Here you have to be aware of what data you care about and make sure it is backed up somehow. Unfortunately, there is not a way to backup everything on a stock phone to your own server. The DRM aspect makes that impossible in a non-rooted phone. Also, like it or not, phones are not stand-alone things anymore. Restoring a phone image won't necessarily work if the cloud has a different opinion as to your phone's correct condition. The problem has shifted: how do you backup your cloud? (How do you identify what is not in your cloud and backup it?) If you want to live cloud-free, or in your own cloud, you don't want an Android or Iphone; you need some open-source-y phone that doesn't yet exist. Or roll your own from the open-source parts of Android (amazingly complete, but very limited apps...). If you want all the cool stuff that Android and Iphone have, but don't want clouds, you are in for a tough fight. -kb
![]() |
|
BLU is a member of BostonUserGroups | |
We also thank MIT for the use of their facilities. |