Whats the best Password Manager on Android - Verizon Galaxy Note 3 Q&A, Help & Troubleshooting

Hi all,
What password manager do you use.. an app that not only stores your account information, passwords, logins, bank account details, card information.. etc. Something that is pretty secure (a good name brand preferred). When i say good name brand meaning an app that has evolved as a definitive secure app for digital security based information. There are tons of apps in the play store, but i would rather prefer to pay to a company that has been backed up with a team of security experts who work on on this.
A userfriendly UI would be good, including cloud based operation.. that can be used on multiple platforms.. I see a few such as msecure, keeper, 1password.. what do you recommend? Or anything value for money wiht the same options as the above.

Msecure has my vote. Very easy and strong encryption plus the ability to hide the whole app is a nice feature as well.
Sent from my SM-N900V using Tapatalk

1Password is solid for Mac and iOS, but terrible for Android and Windows. I would avoid until their Android client is out of the bronze ages.
Sent from my SM-N900V using Tapatalk

Msecure is my favorite. Great interface and Dropbox support. I liked keepass but haven't tried it since I got Msecure. It was a bit behind it back then. But keepass is free.
Sent from my GlaDos Baked Potato

I used SecureSafe on iOS and am using the same app on Android.
Simple to use, Nice UI/UX, and best of all FREE!! :victory:

Cerebrus is the best there is in my opinion
Sent from my SM-N900V using Tapatalk

Lastpass been using it on my pc and phones for years.

I have tried a few over the years and now use "Safe In The Clouds" the best I have used so far.
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.safeincloud&hl=en

MANswers said:
Hi all,
What password manager do you use.. an app that not only stores your account information, passwords, logins, bank account details, card information.. etc. Something that is pretty secure (a good name brand preferred). When i say good name brand meaning an app that has evolved as a definitive secure app for digital security based information. There are tons of apps in the play store, but i would rather prefer to pay to a company that has been backed up with a team of security experts who work on on this.
A userfriendly UI would be good, including cloud based operation.. that can be used on multiple platforms.. I see a few such as msecure, keeper, 1password.. what do you recommend? Or anything value for money wiht the same options as the above.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
check out RoboForm good on android and computer

I brought mSecure, and i am liking it so far. I had used LastPass and Roboform earlier and find them to be ok. but mSecure is much much better in terms of storing secure digital information of different varities.. with proper layout on the phone.

I use Dashlane.

Safe in the Clouds is an amazing password Manger. Great computer sports and ios/OS X support is coming in December
Sent from my SM-N900V using Tapatalk

I like lastpass because the pro sub is cheap (12 per year), and they have an extension for dolphin browser to auto fill usernames/passwords which is very convenient.
msecure was nice, but it's 10 bucks for the mobile version, and 15 bucks for the desktop version then you have to use their browser to autofill usernames/passwords.
I didn't really use msecure long enough to see if it could do the same things as lastpass, but I do like lastpass because it syncs on the desktops/tablets/phones, and has plugins for dolphin browser, internet explorer, chrome (probably others), and has the ability to add a yubikey for additional security.

kudosmog said:
I like lastpass because the pro sub is cheap (12 per year), and they have an extension for dolphin browser to auto fill usernames/passwords which is very convenient.
msecure was nice, but it's 10 bucks for the mobile version, and 15 bucks for the desktop version then you have to use their browser to autofill usernames/passwords.
I didn't really use msecure long enough to see if it could do the same things as lastpass, but I do like lastpass because it syncs on the desktops/tablets/phones, and has plugins for dolphin browser, internet explorer, chrome (probably others), and has the ability to add a yubikey for additional security.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You are true for LastPass for browsers.. i do like LastPass on my desktop.. but not for phone. I dont really need weblogins option on the phone. Lastpass stores all my browser related passwords on my desktop.. but i think mSecure is good for storing cards, pins, subscription details etc on the phone. I wont be buying mSecure desktop edition.. but will buy lastpass desktop version.

I'm using an oldie called Pocket.
Sent from my SM-N900V using xda app-developers app

I use LastPass on my phone and pc for years.

Not the new roboform. It reeks.
No search. No list. It's horrible if you have more than 10 logins.
I've been using it for 13-15 years. I'm trying to downgrade right now.
Sent from my SAMSUNG-SM-N900A using Tapatalk

+1 for LastPass

I use KeePassDroid on my phone, and KeePassX on my Linux computer at home, and my Windows laptop for work. It has been awhile since I had the hackintosh up and running, but there is a version for OS X. You can also get a portable version you can run from a thumb drive.
I use dropbox to sync the password file across devices.
Sent from my SM-N900V using xda app-developers app

I use LastPass. One of its best features is the ability to work with a YubiKey for true and very strong two-factor authentication. There is even a version that uses NFC (Yubikey Neo) for your mobile device.

Related

Nexus 7 College Student

I'm a college student that owns a Galaxy S III, and will have a 16 GB Nexus 7 when it arrives tomorrow. In addition to playing games, I'd like to be productive on the tablet.
What apps, or functionality, do you think college students could benefit from greatly?
What you studying?
Sent from my Nexus 7 using xda premium
ereaders such as ebookdroid
And office suit like QuickOffice
Sent from my GT-I9300 using Tapatalk 2
Google Drive will be a big part of the productivity. I wouldn't be any productivity suites since Google just bought one of the most popular ones. They will probably incorporate it for free.
Sent from my Nexus 7 using xda app-developers app
I bought the Nexus 7 specifically to use it in college classes. I got the Logitech Android Keyboard along with it and so far I'm really pleased with how well it's made, despite the Nexus 7's finicky bluetooth.
I tried out a few different note-taking apps and honestly, the one I like the most so far is ASUS SuperNote. It seems to work out great with both typed and handwritten notes (especially when used with a stylus! )
Can.I.Haz.Jelly.Bean? said:
I'm a college student that owns a Galaxy S III, and will have a 16 GB Nexus 7 when it arrives tomorrow. In addition to playing games, I'd like to be productive on the tablet.
What apps, or functionality, do you think college students could benefit from greatly?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I just graduated and these tips helped me greatly. So here goes...
For note-taking, stick to a laptop. Yea, you can download various apps, buy bluetooth/wireless keyboards for your nexus 7 but why?? stick with what you got. Use onenote with your laptop to take notes & record simultaneously (search youtube for more detailed tips on onenote).
- Get familiar with google calender. (Keep a designated "personal" calender where you might wanna keep important dates, doctor appointments etc. Then another calender "school" where you will input midterms, exams, assignment dates with reminders. Google calender is awesome. .... ** I suggest "business calender" app for aggregating all your calenders eg "bills", "personal" "college" etc.
- Dropbox - Don't carry flash drive's with you to campus. Put all your assignments for school in appropriate folders (1st year > science > bio ...) on the cloud. I use dropbox. You can easily use cubby, box , skydrive, google drive/docs. Other than your usual word papers, powerpoint notes from professors..**.I suggest you keep a folder for college with your academic calender + resume + GPA calculator etc. This way you can make additions to your resume as your go along your academic career. Plus you have access to stuff like your resume at all times in case you need to email it to a professor, internship, etc.
- Evernote - Evernote is powerful. It's up to you how you use the software which consequently can confuse beginners since they feel lost. I personally use it to store important documents, passwords logins(encrypted offcourse), make checklists (what stuff to bring to your dorms), shopping lists. I have a notebook for my "college" > where my college docs are located according to course. Then for "dental school "> where all my loan information, housing leases's etc. **Check out CAMSCANNER app (buy the pro version) to take scans of important documents and send them to dropbox/evernote/email etc. ... Get in the habit of keeping everything organized right from the start!
- You wanna get stuff done? you need a to-do list app. Take your pick at any of the top ones... Remember the Milk, Astrid etc. I personally prefer Astrid. It sync across my phone, nexus 7, & computers.
- Mint - to keep your finances in order (bank accnts, credit cards, etc. ).
- Another vote for Quick Office /Pro - to open docs like word, ppt, excel etc . It also can access & sync across the major cloud services like dropbox, drive etc.
- Splashtop Remote - I think its 5 bucks but worth it if you need functionality to stream your computer to your tablet. I use it to open flash sites (noobroom) & access my hard-drive remotely.
(optional) Tasker - Google it. Buy it if automation interests you.
Hope this was helpful and not a random rant.
ateebtk said:
For note-taking, stick to a laptop. Yea, you can download various apps, buy bluetooth/wireless keyboards for your nexus 7 but why?? stick with what you got.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Because I bike to campus and my laptop weighs 9 pounds, while a Nexus 7 is pretty much insubstantial. Got the tablet because it would be cheaper than buying a new laptop, and it's really comfortable to type on. Sync Google Drive using wifi on campus, and my notes are ready for me on my computer the second I get to my apartment. Easy.
As for productivity, WolframAlpha is an amazing app for math classes, just waiting for them to update it for Jelly Bean.
Sent from my SGH-I997
Yeah, I bought mine for use at college, and the essentials are a good keyboard you like, a note-taking app you will actually use, and stickmount so you can edit from flash drives on the go. Oh, and a really sturdy stand, if you don't have a stand case. Beyond that, to each their own. I spent five bucks on a screenwriting app, but that's a pretty niche buy. Go look for your textbooks on every e-reader site you can (all but one of mine is Kindle). -Ara
Sent from my Nexus 7 using xda app-developers app
rowanparker said:
What you studying?
Sent from my Nexus 7 using xda premium
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Communication. More specifically, I'm majoring in Organizational Communication
Lennyuk said:
And office suit like QuickOffice
Sent from my GT-I9300 using Tapatalk 2
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Looks very nice! I don't think this will come in handy too often, but it looks like on that rare occasion it will come in handy! It's very unfortunate that the Nexus 7 has no sort of HDMI output. That's my only gripe about the phone as far as I can tell before getting it. However, my Samsung Galaxy S III will be compatible with an MHL adapter, so that may come in handy for making presentations!
kangxi said:
Google Drive will be a big part of the productivity. I wouldn't be any productivity suites since Google just bought one of the most popular ones. They will probably incorporate it for free.
Sent from my Nexus 7 using xda app-developers app
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Google Docs is great. However, formatting can sometimes be a bit funky. I'll save a doc from Google Docs, and it will look different in Word. Formatting is VERY important to me to save documents in specific formats such as APA and MLA. If in the wrong format, it could lead to plagiarism, which would lead to academic dishonesty on my record/failing grades/waste of thousands of dollars. I need to make sure everything is perfect, and Google Docs doesn't have that at the moment. At least, I could never get everything to look the same as Microsoft Word.
farmerbb said:
I bought the Nexus 7 specifically to use it in college classes. I got the Logitech Android Keyboard along with it and so far I'm really pleased with how well it's made, despite the Nexus 7's finicky bluetooth.
I tried out a few different note-taking apps and honestly, the one I like the most so far is ASUS SuperNote. It seems to work out great with both typed and handwritten notes (especially when used with a stylus! )
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I have to learn how to install .apk files manually. However, that app looks very cool! Between having to work with a tablet and a bluetooth keyboard, wouldn't it just be easier to use a laptop though?
ateebtk said:
I just graduated and these tips helped me greatly. So here goes...
For note-taking, stick to a laptop. Yea, you can download various apps, buy bluetooth/wireless keyboards for your nexus 7 but why?? stick with what you got. Use onenote with your laptop to take notes & record simultaneously (search youtube for more detailed tips on onenote).
- Get familiar with google calender. (Keep a designated "personal" calender where you might wanna keep important dates, doctor appointments etc. Then another calender "school" where you will input midterms, exams, assignment dates with reminders. Google calender is awesome. .... ** I suggest "business calender" app for aggregating all your calenders eg "bills", "personal" "college" etc.
- Dropbox - Don't carry flash drive's with you to campus. Put all your assignments for school in appropriate folders (1st year > science > bio ...) on the cloud. I use dropbox. You can easily use cubby, box , skydrive, google drive/docs. Other than your usual word papers, powerpoint notes from professors..**.I suggest you keep a folder for college with your academic calender + resume + GPA calculator etc. This way you can make additions to your resume as your go along your academic career. Plus you have access to stuff like your resume at all times in case you need to email it to a professor, internship, etc.
- Evernote - Evernote is powerful. It's up to you how you use the software which consequently can confuse beginners since they feel lost. I personally use it to store important documents, passwords logins(encrypted offcourse), make checklists (what stuff to bring to your dorms), shopping lists. I have a notebook for my "college" > where my college docs are located according to course. Then for "dental school "> where all my loan information, housing leases's etc. **Check out CAMSCANNER app (buy the pro version) to take scans of important documents and send them to dropbox/evernote/email etc. ... Get in the habit of keeping everything organized right from the start!
- You wanna get stuff done? you need a to-do list app. Take your pick at any of the top ones... Remember the Milk, Astrid etc. I personally prefer Astrid. It sync across my phone, nexus 7, & computers.
- Mint - to keep your finances in order (bank accnts, credit cards, etc. ).
- Another vote for Quick Office /Pro - to open docs like word, ppt, excel etc . It also can access & sync across the major cloud services like dropbox, drive etc.
- Splashtop Remote - I think its 5 bucks but worth it if you need functionality to stream your computer to your tablet. I use it to open flash sites (noobroom) & access my hard-drive remotely.
(optional) Tasker - Google it. Buy it if automation interests you.
Hope this was helpful and not a random rant.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
GREAT post! Thanks for the suggestions! I will utilize a lot of these apps. I already use Google Calendar. I have my personal calendar, and calendars for different organizations on campus that I'm involved in. It's nice to have everything work automatically between my phone, computer, and (as of tomorrow) tablet. Considering Google Calendar is compatible with almost every device out there, everyone should be using it.
Dropbox is great. I just wish that AT&T did their deal with Samsung to get AT&T users the free 50 GB of online storage. I have a feeling I'll be using Dropbox for some things and Google Drive for some things to make sure I have plenty of cloud storage.
I've never bothered to look into Evernote. I've heard only great things about it though. I guess it will be worth looking into.
Astrid looks good. I used to just use the notes app on my iPhone to get things done. As I got things done, I'd delete them. I'll look into this app though. Might as well give it a try.
Tasker... I can't even tell what this app is!
Anyway, thanks for the suggestions.
My goal herei s NOT to replace my laptop. I feel many people are eager to replace their laptops with tablets, and it ends up making their lives more complicated with all the services and accessories they need. I'm looking to make my tablet COMPLIMENT my life right now. The Nexus 7 is not at all a laptop replacement. Right now my life involves me making a daily commute to an internship, taking lots of classes, and working with different organizations around campus. This tablet I hope will enhance everything that I do, boost my productivity, and.... be good for playing some games! A goal I have this year is to go 100% paperless. I don't think I'll be able to do it, but it would be darn awesome if I could do that between using note taking apps, cloud storage, and other services. I want everything digital. If it gets too complicated though, then my Nexus 7 will just become a fun entertainment device for when I want a break.
This is normal.
If you can download the apk's on your laptop, use AirDroid to throw them to your nexus 7. Great thing about AirDroid is that you don't need to download and install it on a computer, its all Web Based.
Also thank you all for these great tips, its going to be my last year in highschool and I'd like to be very prepared for college/uni(for those folks in Europe).
Sent from my Nexus 7 using Tapatalk 2
Shamushand said:
Because I bike to campus and my laptop weighs 9 pounds, while a Nexus 7 is pretty much insubstantial. Got the tablet because it would be cheaper than buying a new laptop, and it's really comfortable to type on. Sync Google Drive using wifi on campus, and my notes are ready for me on my computer the second I get to my apartment. Easy.
As for productivity, WolframAlpha is an amazing app for math classes, just waiting for them to update it for Jelly Bean.
Sent from my SGH-I997
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I obviously don't know what your school is or your major. But what do you do when you take a real math class that actually requires you to use Matlab or Maple IN CLASS as part of a lab or any number of extensive math programs? Or requires you to use any number of specialty programs (CAD, Labview, etc...)?
Can.I.Haz.Jelly.Bean? said:
My goal herei s NOT to replace my laptop. I feel many people are eager to replace their laptops with tablets, and it ends up making their lives more complicated with all the services and accessories they need. I'm looking to make my tablet COMPLIMENT my life right now. The Nexus 7 is not at all a laptop replacement. Right now my life involves me making a daily commute to an internship, taking lots of classes, and working with different organizations around campus. This tablet I hope will enhance everything that I do, boost my productivity, and.... be good for playing some games! A goal I have this year is to go 100% paperless. I don't think I'll be able to do it, but it would be darn awesome if I could do that between using note taking apps, cloud storage, and other services. I want everything digital. If it gets too complicated though, then my Nexus 7 will just become a fun entertainment device for when I want a break.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You're looking at this the right way. Every device is suited well for certain things and not so well for others. I've found my N7 to be awesome for kicking back and playing games, poking around online, and doing a few lightweight tasks here and there. Most serious productivity, however, is best left to laptops, just like most serious gaming is best left to consoles or PCs.
There have been a lot of great app recommendations and I can't add many; I've been out of college for three years and a lot has changed since then. All I can suggest is what I did when I first got mine: copy over everything you have on your phone that you think you'd use, and slowly start adding things you think you'd like better on the tablet. Also, keep an eye on some of the blogs (RSS is good for this), as most of them post app recommendations now and then. It'll never replace your phone or laptop, but over time you'll find things that you like doing best on the tablet and it will end up complementing both quite nicely.
On another note, I can at least help with manually installing .apk files. Just go into Settings -> Security and check the "unknown sources" box. After that, all you have to do is open the file you've downloaded and follow the prompts.
rman726 said:
I obviously don't know what your school is or your major. But what do you do when you take a real math class that actually requires you to use Matlab or Maple IN CLASS as part of a lab or any number of extensive math programs? Or requires you to use any number of specialty programs (CAD, Labview, etc...)?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
He could always use a VPN and RDP solution.
If your college provide specific, it will be a must install
Also you may download some sort of study management apps, like istudiez/ihomework on iOS or Yesterday on Palm. I am not sure if android have similar apps in market
Evernote
Sent from my oc'd cm10 nexus 7
mi7chy said:
He could always use a VPN and RDP solution.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I wouldn't recommend that. I've tried remotely operating Matlab with my Transformer Prime, and coding with lag is not so hot. Even with a mouse the interface is a bit too wonky for heavy duty work.
Take notes? Certainly a tablet can handle the basics. I'd recommend Handy Notes for written (or hybrid written/typed) notes...waaaay better than SuperNote (but costs 0.99 cents). I've tried ALL of them and that's the only one that I think has an intuitive interface for handwriting and isn't laggy (I'm looking at you FreeNote). Plus it allows lots of formatting options.
If you just want to type, any of the word processors will do. I'm perfectly fine working with Google Drive's word processor. Presentations are fine as well--just stay the heck away from spreadsheets.
Three_Bob said:
If you can download the apk's on your laptop, use AirDroid to throw them to your nexus 7. Great thing about AirDroid is that you don't need to download and install it on a computer, its all Web Based.
Also thank you all for these great tips, its going to be my last year in highschool and I'd like to be very prepared for college/uni(for those folks in Europe).
Sent from my Nexus 7 using Tapatalk 2
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Oh, ok. I didn't know that .apk files are the apps themselves. Still learning some things. =P I'll give Asus's program a try then! I think that taking notes on a tablet will be a lot tougher than handwritten notes. I'll give it a try though! Couldn't hurt. It's part of my goal of going 100% paperless. If my notes are digital though, I'd like to be able to upload in the cloud to access them on my phone and laptop. (Not sure if Supernote lets you do that. I didn't check.)
bushpilotwannabe said:
You're looking at this the right way. Every device is suited well for certain things and not so well for others. I've found my N7 to be awesome for kicking back and playing games, poking around online, and doing a few lightweight tasks here and there. Most serious productivity, however, is best left to laptops, just like most serious gaming is best left to consoles or PCs.
There have been a lot of great app recommendations and I can't add many; I've been out of college for three years and a lot has changed since then. All I can suggest is what I did when I first got mine: copy over everything you have on your phone that you think you'd use, and slowly start adding things you think you'd like better on the tablet. Also, keep an eye on some of the blogs (RSS is good for this), as most of them post app recommendations now and then. It'll never replace your phone or laptop, but over time you'll find things that you like doing best on the tablet and it will end up complementing both quite nicely.
On another note, I can at least help with manually installing .apk files. Just go into Settings -> Security and check the "unknown sources" box. After that, all you have to do is open the file you've downloaded and follow the prompts.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thank you!
x-magic said:
If your college provide specific, it will be a must install
Also you may download some sort of study management apps, like istudiez/ihomework on iOS or Yesterday on Palm. I am not sure if android have similar apps in market
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Actually, the way I make myself study is through procrastination. I'm a horrible procrastinator, so I learned to use it to my advantage. I start off every homework/study session by watching an episode of a show I like. Then I make a short goal for myself (like memorize 5 terms if it's memorizing, or get a certain amount of sources for a research paper), and then I watch another episode. Then I make another short goal. I just use my horrible procrastination to an advantage. By the end of everything, I watched a whole lot of TV, and I got a ton done. Thank you Netflix.
Buy a BT keyboard that works for you: that means it should be portable and comfortable to use. If it's too big you'll never pack it in your bag, and if you don't enjoy typing on it it'll never make it out of the bag. Don't go for one of the cramped, squishy rubber key ones you see on eBay or Amazon third party sellers, or a gimmicky keyboard case. Unless you have baby hands no 7" tablet keyboard case will be practical for tapping out more than a couple of emails. Read reviews, buy from a place that makes returns easy, and try a few out. I like the HP Touchpad keyboard, but there are many others out there too.

Why less options for WP apps?

I'm currently an Android phone user. I have windows 8 on my PC. And I have watched so many WP7.5 and WP8 videos.
Simple question: Why same apps on windows phone don't have many options in the app settings?
I am not talking about "Color Pallete", or "custom ringtones". I do not want them, I can live without them. But still Android stock apps have more options compared to WP stock apps. For eg Gmail stock app gives options like " Sync inboxes and labels" to select labels to sync (only those labels which you want) , then "Signature"
Windows mail app on Windows 8 is very very basic. How is email app for WP8?
And is there this thing true in any sense that WP8 apps provide fewer options (may be app developers also following minimalistic approach from Microsoft).
Also those using WP7.5 or WP8, suppose you just turned on your WP8, and you didn't open email app. So if you get a new email, will the app notify you. I mean you didn't open email app, but will it keep checking my email in background? Is this possible for 3rd party email client apps?
Please provide answer, I want to buy WP8.
You do have more settings in android apps but do you really use them? the answer is...really no.
The email app in wp7.5 is great. The email app in WP8 is also great. The email app in W8 sucks balls, although it is useful for quickly checking the email.
The email will be updated in background. It is called a background task. Don't worry, you won't lose anything over your android phone.
GMail is a special case - there are no "Labels" on any other E-Mail services so an E-Mail-client that is not GMail-only obviously doesn't have those.
Aside from that E-Mail checking in the background (and via Push) works without problems although this is only true for the system mail app. You would not be able to realize sync intervals < 30 minutes for alternative Apps - guess that is why there are none.
Yes, windows phone apps in general have a lot less options and functionality. The goal is simplicity at the sacrifice of functionality. I would say if you are looking for as many options and functions as possible, stick with Android.
mcosmin222 said:
You do have more settings in android apps but do you really use them? the answer is...really no.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I would not be so quick to suggest that users don't use features / options. If you're talking specifically about Gmail, maaaybe I can buy it. But I am a heavy business user, and I can tell you I customize many of my apps. Gmail is a bad example... Exchange email and the options for Exchange on Android would probably be a better one.
I prefer AOSP for it's size and simplicity from a GUI perspective, but I also download tons of apps I've found to be better than stock.
I considered a move to WP8, but in my opinion, WP8 just doesn't cut it from an app perspective on any level. I will take flexibility over simplicity any day of the week. I hope WP* matures to be a strong alternative to Android / Apple (I've never owned an apple product), but it just isn't there yet.
Simple answer: development is half-assed for WP.
Sent from my HD7 using XDA Windows Phone 7 App
^ has the xda WP app improved any?
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Nope. After I bought this app, much like WP7, the development stopped.
Sent from my HD7 using XDA Windows Phone 7 App
mcosmin222 said:
You do have more settings in android apps but do you really use them? the answer is...really no.
The email app in wp7.5 is great. The email app in WP8 is also great. The email app in W8 sucks balls, although it is useful for quickly checking the email.
The email will be updated in background. It is called a background task. Don't worry, you won't lose anything over your android phone.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
wait, losing options to view different folders and boxes -is- an issue. loosing the ability to sync which email addy, at different intervals -is- an issue. more settings (or more importantly, LOSING those settings) -is- definitely an issue. having the flexibility to decide what happens is what makes a smartphone, smart.
Dr.8820 said:
Nope. After I bought this app, much like WP7, the development stopped.
Sent from my HD7 using XDA Windows Phone 7 App
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Agreed. The Android version to this app is great, but the WP version is useless. The Board Express app for WP is much better. If app development really picks up, WP will take off in the eyes of consumers.
Sent from my Galaxy Nexus using xda premium
Has board express improved any? Has it gained official tapatalk support?
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Does WP8 have good equaliser like DSP MANGER found in CM7 rooms on android?
I think DSP is the best Equalizer ever on any device or OS.
How do the Nokia Equaliser in WP8 compare with DSP on android?
Sent from my GT-S5570 using xda app-developers app
You shouldn't need an equaliser. No phone or MP3 should need one. You only need one to make up for bad headphones or lousy DAC.
trappxl said:
Agreed. The Android version to this app is great, but the WP version is useless. The Board Express app for WP is much better. If app development really picks up, WP will take off in the eyes of consumers.
Sent from my Galaxy Nexus using xda premium
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It's strange, because the XDA WP7 app is literally just the rebranded Board express. But the board express app is better and has significantly less bugs. From where I'm sitting, it looks like the person in charge of the XDA app doesn't actually need to do any coding, he just needs to push through updates from board express but hasn't bothered to. Or maybe board express doesn't give free updates, in which case their "package" is a joke.
They did the same thing with the android version. Copy of Tapatalk.
Sent from my RM-820_nam_att_100 using Board Express
gilesjuk said:
You shouldn't need an equaliser. No phone or MP3 should need one. You only need one to make up for bad headphones or lousy DAC.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Does that mean "no" or "I don't know" ?
Apourv, the Nokia Equalizer on WP8 is decent. It is not as good in terms of versatility and options as DSP, mostly because of both the hardware and software restrictions. Still, it is a marked improvement over what was there is 7.5. Audio wise, WP8 is a better move forward...for example I don't need the volume as loud on the Lumia 810 as I did with the Focus S during commutes. Comparing Dolby to Dolby, what was found in the Lumia 810 is years ahead quality wise of the HTC Mozart. I don't claim to be an audiophile but the sound is cleaner and more natural. I think as much as some think it is a gimmick, walking into a store and listening to music on a HTC One device vs a HTC 8X should show you that WP8 is an audio improvement.
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The idea is to support the necessary functionality but not to add loads of crap on top of that. Many developers (myself included) belief that your App should be tailored to a specific use case and try to fullfill that as best as it can.
Setting sync intervals for every account is of course possible and of course you can select subfolders to be synced (although it gets tricky to unselect them later). Also you can directly pin subfolder to your start screen if you e.g. have one that contains Very High Priroity E-Mails. And of course E-Mail checks in the background for the system App.
In the end the core functionalities reguarly are there but some add-ons or more complicated settings are often removed and replaced with an often reasonable default.
On my phone, I often download web pages on my PC and transfer them to my SD card so I can read them later on my phone on the go.
On WP8 there's no file explorer. Also no alternate browser like Opera, so Absolutely No possibility of that on WP8.
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Apourv said:
On my phone, I often download web pages on my PC and transfer them to my SD card so I can read them later on my phone on the go.
On WP8 there's no file explorer. Also no alternate browser like Opera, so Absolutely No possibility of that on WP8.
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Basically, everything you did manually can be done some other way on WP8. A little bit of research goes a long way... There are many services that do what you just described; get a pocket (formerly read it later) account. Get an app for it. Done.
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Create Power points on Nexus 7?

What is the best app to create powerpoint presentations on the nexus 7? Thanks in advance!
If you're okay with paying some money, OfficeSuite Pro is pretty good. And you can use it with Google Drive, Dropbox, Box.com and some other online file hosts. You can do Word, Excel and PowerPoint presentations.
---------- Post added at 08:28 PM ---------- Previous post was at 08:26 PM ----------
As a free alternative you could also try Kingsoft Office. Not sure how good or bad it is but it has a 4.5 star rating so it must be pretty good for a free app.
Actually....
I've spent a LOT of time looking for an acceptable portable PowerPoint app, and the best I've found, by far, is
Office 2012 - Presentations Mobile
https://play.google.com/store/apps/...lications.presentations&feature=search_result
It's not well known, it is a bit pricey and all it does is PowerPoints, (although the developer makes other apps that mimic Word and Excel which also are pretty good.)
All the other 'office suite' apps have PowerPoint mini apps that are really only good for editing existing presentations and not really any good at all for delivering presentations. This one can actually do some heavy lifting.
While not without annoyances it works most seamlessly with PowerPoint and is the only one I found that support animations properly and preserves most formatting:good:.
There is also a limited trial version. Give it a try.
QuickOffice from Google
This might interest you
http://www.theverge.com/2012/12/19/3785306/google-quickoffice-free-ipad-app
Though it would be a few days before it hits android
manishyadav05 said:
This might interest you
http://www.theverge.com/2012/12/19/3785306/google-quickoffice-free-ipad-app
Though it would be a few days before it hits android
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Just to make sure to clarify: You must be a paid Google Apps for Business customer, and even though QO is owned by Google, we're still classified as a third party app (if you have trouble logging it, your Apps admin may have locked out 3rd party apps from accessing Drive).
If you still want to use Quickoffice, but aren't a paid Google Apps for Business customer, you can always purchase the app directly via iTunes or Google Play, although I would definitely agree that the current version of QO may be better suited to making edits to and presenting existing presentations than building them from scratch.
+1 for OfficeSuitePro, I use it more for word and I wish the text editor had a dark theme (I wish Google drive had a dark theme, really), but for in the fly power points, it's very helpful. And if you don't mind waiting a bit, Microsoft Office intends to release an android optimized bpversion of their office suite next quarter. -Ara
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How likely will be see Microsoft Office on Note PRO?

I saw the news and as far as I recall, the new CEO of Microsoft mentioned that he wants to have Office running on any devices. Does that hint that we could run Office on the Note in the near future?
Not sure that I care, I am sure I do not care.
Problem is, only Windows will support all macros and such. Their Mac version still doesn't support all macros and it has been around for 20 years or so.
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So, I should not hope that this will happen in 1-2 years?
Who needs office. On the pro 12.2 we have hancom office, a total word clone, and it should be available soon on the 10.1. Also while office is free now in ios, that's just to READ, not to edit. To do everything you hae to pay $100.00 for a one year subscription. Like I said, who needs it.
well, Microsoft announced Office for android for free now and for tablet bit there is a roumer about it coming to android tablet soon. not sure if it is true or not.
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nychotxxx said:
Who needs office. On the pro 12.2 we have hancom office, a total word clone, and it should be available soon on the 10.1. Also while office is free now in ios, that's just to READ, not to edit. To do everything you hae to pay $100.00 for a one year subscription. Like I said, who needs it.
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Can handcome office play PowerPoint presentations that has animations effect?
hajime_android said:
Can handcome office play PowerPoint presentations that has animations effect?
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Click to collapse
Yes it can do animations, but they are a lite choppy. They will be basic, not every one office has.
woowdy said:
well, Microsoft announced Office for android for free now and for tablet bit there is a roumer about it coming to android tablet soon. not sure if it is true or not.
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Click to collapse
Anything Microsoft puts out will be tied to Office 365 at $100 for up to five users. Hanson is great. Add a keyboard and mouse and it has 60% of office. Most people only use 40% of office features anyway.
I think I am ok with the Hancom office, it's about as close as the real Microsoft Office as it can get. And there is no extra charge for it, most likely Microsoft will add an extra charge for office.
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You mean this?
http://www.greenbot.com/article/2127781/microsoft-office-mobile-for-android-is-now-free.html
Anyone using it on their phones? Are you able to open email attachments within it, edit them and send them back? Just wondering since it has been noted that it doesn't allow writing to local storage but works only with OneDrive.
Edit: Just watched Android Authority's review and am unimpressed. Hancom offers far more functionality than the office mobile apps.
http://youtu.be/pYuJIGwloCk
At least with hancom you have the ability to insert and manipulate images.
muzzy996 said:
Anyone using it on their phones? Are you able to open email attachments within it, edit them and send them back? Just wondering since it has been noted that it doesn't allow writing to local storage but works only with OneDrive.
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Click to collapse
I installed it on my Galaxy Note 2 but it seems that it cannot open files stored in the phone. It seems that we have to store the files in OneDrive first. Can anybody else confirm this? It seems to be inconvenience. Anybody tried OneDrive? Is Microsoft trying to make us use this service?
hajime_android said:
I installed it on my Galaxy Note 2 but it seems that it cannot open files stored in the phone. It seems that we have to store the files in OneDrive first. Can anybody else confirm this? It seems to be inconvenience. Anybody tried OneDrive? Is Microsoft trying to make us use this service?
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Click to collapse
Confirmed. You have save files in OneDrive.
You can open email attachments, edit and send, but that is it. The 'back of storage options is sad. I do get why they do it, they have to make money since they are not charging for the app. It needs to support Dropbox or at least local storage.
So, basically it is no use unless I get OneDrive. If I do, will it be fully compatible with the Windows/Mac versions of Office?
You can get 10 GB of free OneDrive storage. I use it solely for backups of my documents and textbooks. Hancom blows Office for Android out of the water at current, and unless they update it to be able to work on files while offline I don't see it beating Hancom anytime soon.
Samsung's agreement with Hancom helps make the Pro series THE Android tablet to own.
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I haven't tried all the functionality yet, but at least for now it appears M$ is also allowing 'office online' for free if you have any kind of microsoft account (xbox, onedrive, etc).
Go to office.com and you can use office online, appears to work fine in chrome browser with 'request desktop site' ticked. Obviously internet connection needed, might chew up a bit more bandwidth than office mobile but hopefully someone finds it useful.
It's not perfect, but it's solid, and FREE
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.andropenoffice
Some of the graphics scaling is off, but not unusable.
Not that these devices are considered affordable, but open source software is, for everyone. It provides opportunities for new, and otherwise-hampered developers to hone their skills. Here's the kicker, though, it can (and sometimes does) keep commercial software developers on their toes, that is, if it doesn't provide them with usable code. My favorite part about it is that it's free of commercial interest, so far, so you don't have to worry about data-mining or time-wasting popups & notifications.
Not that this is open source, but OO is, as are the file formats. Every little nudge helps.

App for storing login/card details?

Hi guys.
Does anyone know of a trust worthy app to store login details for different sites, banks ect? Even one I can store my card details for when I'm away without my wallet. Obviously has to he 100% trust worthy.
Cheers in advance.
Well, I do not think you will find one, that ist 100% trustworthy. Nevertheless, there are several Passwordmanagers, that are used by a lot of people.
Here is a link to an article, where the most used ones are introduced. Sorry, it's german, you can translate it with DeepL
Or you can google the managers, mentioned in this article to find out more yourself.
The basic qustions are: Do you trust your passwords to the Cloud? Do you want it to be open source or not? What kind of encryption should be used?
Hope it helps
Try LastPass https://lastpass.com
I love this app. I set all my credentials and logins with it.
I store all my data with google. Since they are basically a part of everyones life right now, I think that security for them is the no. 1 priority.
I'm using SafeinCloud app. There is no any problem with that.
bitwarden. Same as LastPass but open source.
I use keepass, it's open source and you can keep it local or use cloud storage like Google drive. There's a decent app in the play store and app for Windows.
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=keepass2android.keepass2android
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Samsung pass and Samsung pay should be enough. I won't go for logmein or last pass as they have had security issues in 2017!
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Lastpass for sure. Been using them forever...
They, like keepass, and a few others had potential security issues which were not found to ever be explored. The issues were fixed months before public release, so no harm no foul...
Judging a software by having potential security issues alone is a garbage policy, BTW....
Karlinski said:
Lastpass for sure. Been using them forever...
They, like keepass, and a few others had potential security issues which were not found to ever be explored. The issues were fixed months before public release, so no harm no foul...
Judging a software by having potential security issues alone is a garbage policy, BTW....
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Click to collapse
Well I don't think it's a rubbish policy to judge commercial software's on security issues. Especially if you are planning to hand over your banking details! Plus the ones i have mentioned are proprietary so others can't even audit it unlike open-source applications. I will be wary of using them.
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Samsung pay is closed source
Samsung pay gets security updates
Samsung pay has not been released to be verified
What's the difference....
1password. The large internet company I work for trusts it's passwords to it. They were exposed by cloudbleed and did not get compromised becsuse they had the foresight to not trust ssl.
I use VeraCrypt on my desktop. Creates an encrypted partition and I have an Excel file with my passwords. I just remote in to open the file if I need a pwd when I'm not at home.
I believe their are mobile apps using their API: https://www.veracrypt.fr/en/Android & iOS Support.html
Thanks for all the suggestions guys, will check them all out

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