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Weekend Tech Scan: The whole Android apps truth and nothing but

Showing off one's apps is a major pleasure for smartphone and tablet owners. Here's this writer's list of his top Android tablet apps.

Weekend Tech Scan: The whole Android apps truth and nothing but

by

Skip Ferderber

Showing off one's apps is a major pleasure for smartphone and tablet owners. Here's this writer's list of his top Android tablet apps.

In case no one else has told you, this coming week is probably the worst of the year to think about buying new consumer tech equipment. Not that the prices are bad; it’s just that Monday (Jan. 9) is the kickoff for the giant four-day Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas: the global showcase for many of the developments that will guide the consumer tech industry over the coming year.

Over 60 Washington state companies will be attending the show, according to the show’s official exhibitor list. Although industry leader Apple will once again not be there, there will be enough toys from every quadrant of the globe to satisfy even the most fickle buyer.

So if new equipment isn’t a ripe tech topic this weekend, what is?  Apps, of course — and developers have been on a tear over the last year to bring productivity apps, games, utilities, and more to users of Apple iPads and iPhones, Android phones and tablets, and Microsoft Mobile phones.

The numbers are staggering: Apple reportedly has over 500,000 apps, Android claims its app store has 400,000, and Microsoft, a latecomer to the game, reportedly has about 30,000 for its phone users. (Here’s a website for previewing some of the oft-neglected Microsoft Windows apps.)

The tablet wars are finally becoming a horserace, not a one-sided dash by Apple with its industry-leading iPad. Several reports indicate that low-cost Amazon ‘s Kindle Fire ate into iPad’s holiday  sales — one analyst quoted by CNET said that the Kindle Fire pulled 1 to 2 million tablet sales away from Apple. If the CES show produces some full-featured, reasonably priced Android tablets, 2012 could be a good year for consumers who have been holding back on acquiring one of the better new toys of the digital era.

Meanwhile, what apps are out there for you tablet owners?

Everyone is different, of course, but I thought it might be useful to share the contents of my 7-inch Galaxy Tab Android tablet so people just dipping their toes into the tablet market can see what is available for work, play and just plain fun.  At some future time, I’ll contribute the contents of my iPad.

My Android tablet has 16 gigabytes of memory, and an expansion slot for an SD card. Having the option for additional space is important because apps can be sizeable — sometimes 70-80 megabytes — and performance issues require the apps to work only on your tablet’s internal memory. Too many really big apps can eat up that memory. That’s why it’s wiser to get a tablet with expandable memory — an SD card, generally speaking; many newer apps can be jointly stored on your device’s internal memory as well as the external card.

It’s also useful to know that many apps offer you the option of storing their contents on your SD card. If your app offers you that opportunity, take it.

I find I use my Android tablet for virtually everything: work, play, at home, and traveling. While I have a iPad, I find its size and weight make it impractical for most of the uses that I find important: those being book and news reading, video, movies, and some games.

I use my unit as a WiFi unit only, but I usually can find some wireless access point to make an Internet connection. For those addicted to wireless everywhere, most smartphones sold by Verizon and AT&T, the Seattle area’s largest cell phone providers, offer some form of optional WiFi hotspot service.

With all that in mind, here’s what’s on my tablet. I spend a lot of time organizing my home page. I really don’t want to think about where some service is lurking, so it’s worth it to me to try various combinations until I’m conformable with my selection.

My current front page includes:

Because I write about tech, and because I’m an experimenter, I have close to 150 apps currently active on my tablet. To make life simpler, I’ve set up a series of folders to organize my various interests. Not everyone will agree with my system but at least be aware that you can organize your apps.

My categories are Audio, Books, Games, News, Reference, TV/Movies, Video and Utilities. I’ve taken the broadest possible definition in each category.  For example, any radio apps, podcaster paid audio service winds up in “audio.” “Video,” on the other hand, are utilities useful for viewing. Take time to figure out what format works best for you. It’s possible to simply compile pages of apps, but after a while, the question will arise of “Where the heck did I put that?” or “What the heck is this?” Some organization will help you in the long run.

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