

Well, I’ve had my Samsung Captivate for a week. Probably one of the most useful purchases I’ve made in quite sometime. This will be real brief but in the past week I have done pretty everything on this phone. I have paid bills, balanced my checkbook, listened to Little Brother’s entire album discography, wrote this WordPress article, recorded HD video, taken pictures, checked work email, updated my Facebook and Twitter statuses, waste my time playing paper toss, kept track kf appointments, streamed the Bob Marley channel on Pandora, etc.
A couple negatives. First the phone will slow down for some unknown reason. It just becomes really laggy. This happens when the phone is syncing tweets sometimes. The GPS is shot. I can rarely locked on to GPS satellites, even when I am outside with clear skies. Facebook syncing has been broken from day one. This maybe a good thing because I don’t always need this social sites all up in face all day. Hopefully Samsung can work out the kinks in the next update. Battery life is also a but below satisfactory…but then again I’m always using this device.
The positives…there are just so much to list. This thing has so much utility. I’m probably able to conduct all the business in my life on this one device alone.
This was pretty informal, just want to put a few more thoughts out there. Also those pictures might look terrible because they were uploaded using this WordPress app.
Posted: July 25th, 2010
Categories:
Android,
Gadgets
Tags:
Android,
galaxy s,
Samsung captivate
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First of all -> all the credit goes to ‘chaoscentral’ for the rooting procedure and ‘maerlim’ for instructions on removing the “features” added by AT&T.
Disclaimer: Â I am not responsible for any damage that may occur to your handset or your life following the procedure laid out here.
How to root
- Download the following file -> http://www.emuneee.com/downloads/SGH-I897_root_update.zip
- Copy it to the root of your internal storage card and rename it to ‘update.zip’
- Turn off the phone
- Hold the Volume Up & Down buttons  and the Power button simultaneously.  Release the Power button once the ‘AT&T World Phone’ logo appears
- In the next menu, select ‘Reinstall Packages”. Â Use Volume Up/Down to navigate the menu.
- The phone will reboot automatically and now your Samsung Captivate is rooted
How to remove AT&T software (most of it anyways)
Prerequisites: Android SDK, a rooted Samsung Captivate, Samsung Galaxy S USB drivers – Windows (64-bit OS | 32-bit OS)
- Turn on USB Debugging on your phone – Settings > Applications > Development > USB debugging
- Open the command prompt on your PC and CD to to the Android SDK installation directory
- Navigate to the ‘tools’ folder
- type the following:
- adb shell
- su
- mv /system/app/ATTNav-Samsung-Vega-1488.apk /system/app/ATTNav-Samsung-Vega-1488.tmp
- mv /system/app/ATT_Radio_2.1.07.apk /system/app/ATT_Radio_2.1.07.tmp
- mv /system/app/MobiTV_800x480_320_20100610_1.0.0.15-118829.apk /system/app/MobiTV_800x480_320_20100610_1.0.0.15-118829.tmp
- mv /system/app/MobileBanking.apk /system/app/MobileBanking.tmp
- mv /system/app/attmaps20-1094.apk /system/app/attmaps20-1094.tmp
- exit
- exit
You are done. Â This procedure will remove
- AT&T Navigation
- AT&T Radio
- MobiTV
- Mobile Banking
- AT&T Maps
You can reverse the procedure by typing the follwing after the ‘su’ command in Step 4:
- mv /system/app/ATTNav-Samsung-Vega-1488.tmp /system/app/ATTNav-Samsung-Vega-1488.apk
- mv /system/app/ATT_Radio_2.1.07.tmp /system/app/ATT_Radio_2.1.07.apk
- mv /system/app/MobiTV_800x480_320_20100610_1.0.0.15-118829.tmp /system/app/MobiTV_800x480_320_20100610_1.0.0.15-118829.apk
- mv /system/app/MobileBanking.tmp /system/app/MobileBanking.apk
- mv /system/app/attmaps20-1094.tmp /system/app/attmaps20-1094.apk
There are other items such as AT&T Family Maps and AT&T Hotspots that will remain although those appear to be links to web apps. Â You can also enable sideloading of applications as well. Â I haven’t completed that procedure, but the instructions are available here.
I am on my lunch break typing this post on my Samsung Captivate. Just a few quick observations.
The Captivate is a very quick device. However as I soon found out, installing too many Widgets will slow things down. You can definitely shoot yourself with all this freedom. The Android Market is full of apps though. I am typing this article using the WordPress app.
The super AMOLED screen looks great. The build quality is also pretty nice.
The software is nice as well. I wasn’t a fan of TouchWiz so I installed LauncherPro beta.  So far so good.
Music sounds nice as well. I used my Captivate in place of my now sold Zune HD during my morning run.
I’ll do some new articles down the road.
Posted: July 20th, 2010
Categories:
Android,
Gadgets
Tags:
captivate,
galaxy s,
samsung
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If you’ve been following me, you’ll notice I am somewhat biased towards the Samsung Captivate coming to AT&T on July 18th $199.99. Â Just thought I would list all of the review and hands-on articles and videos that debuted this past week.
I’ll update this as more reviews and hands-on articles are published. Â Whenever I get mine, I’ll throw up a short review.
Posted: July 13th, 2010
Categories:
Android,
Technology
Tags:
Android,
at&t,
bgr,
captivate,
engadget,
galaxy s,
hands on,
mobileburn,
pocketnow,
review,
samsung
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I am a little late with this, but here are my Android power rankings for released and announced (but not released) Android handsets.
Released Android Devices
- HTC EVO 4G
- HTC Incredible
- Motorola Droid
- Google Nexus One
- Sony Ericsson XPERIA X10
Announced Android Devices
- Samsung Galaxy S/Samsung Captivate (AT&T) – 1GHz A8 Samsung Hummingbird/512MB RAM/16GB ROM/Bluetooth 3.0/WiFi BGN/4″ Super AMOLED screen/720P video recording
- Motorola Droid X
- Motorola Droid 2

Personally, I am extremely partial to the Samsung Galaxy S / Captivate (as it’s called on AT&T). Â The Galaxy has iPhone 4 hardware specs (except the front facing camera) but it runs Android 2.1, but it’s not nearly as big as the HTC EVO 4G or the Droid X. Â In my opinion, those are huge. Â To me, the best of both worlds. Â It’s a good things I had ALL TYPES OF ISSUES trying to preorder an iPhone 4 earlier this week. Â
Here is my ranking of currently available Android phones
- HTC Droid Incredible (Verizon)
- Google Nexus One (ATT, T-Mobile)
- Motorola Droid (Verizon)
- Sony Ericsson Xperia X10
- HTC Legend
Here is my ranking of future (available in next 4 months) Android devices
- HTC EVO 4G – 1GHz Snapdragon/512MB RAM/8MP Cam/720p video recording/WiMax radio
- Samsung Galaxy S – 1GHz custom Samsung ARM processor/512MB RAM/5MP Cam/4″ Super AMOLED Screen
- Motorola Shadow (codename?) – 1GHZ Snapdragon/512MB RAM/8MP Cam/720P video recoding/HDMI/QWERTY/4.3″ screen
Personally, I’d get a Nexus One if I could get one for for $199/$299…not $570.  I’m trying to hold out until the Samsung Galaxy S (if it lands on AT&T)….that for the Dell Lightning looks fantastic, even though its a Windows Phone 7 device.
Check back in June for June’s rankings!
Posted: May 4th, 2010
Categories:
Android,
Gadgets,
Uncategorized
Tags:
Android,
droid,
htc evo,
incredible,
rankings,
samsung galaxy s,
shadow,
xperia
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I’ll have this dilemma. Â My current device (Xperia X1) is literally falling apart in my hands. Â This past week, half of my keyboard went dead for some time. Â Luckily it came back to life. Â I’m going to try and nurse it until the summer time, then I have to make a decision…Android vs. Windows Phone 7 Series devices.
Just a quick blurb. Â I have use Google for pretty much everything…
- email
- documents
- calendar
- voice
- chat
- rss feed aggregation aka Google Reader
- Youtube
- maps
- search
- news
So it seems as though an Android device, which I can get now if they would release a AT&T 3G compatible Nexus One! Â Or I can wait for the unique experience of the WPS7 device. Â We’ll see.
On another note, as soon as I can get my hands on some WP7S developer tools, some new applications will be developed and ready for launch in the fall.