Related
Hoping you can help. I've become 'the phone guy' at my office (i'm already one of the 'desktop guy's'), and as such i have to help with our various Touch's, Diamond's, Touch Pro's, Touch Pro 2's, HD2's and even the occasional Treo (plus E71's, E72's and most of the Blackberry range).
Most of it i've figured out, having been around Winmo since the QTEK 9100, but there's one issue that has escaped me. Outlook/email/activesync, whatever you refer to it as on the device.
All our smartphone users (except the BB's) connect via an exchange connection. But i've found that if you hose up the setup (mis-spelling the server name, user name, domain, etc) without realising it and then try and connect, obviously you don't connect but when you find the error and correct it, the device still won't connect until you do a hard reset and set it up again.
In addition, our AD policy requires a password change every 60 days. Too often, even when the user knows how to update the password in WinMo Outlook, it gets hosed up, and we have to hard reset (again). 60 days is plenty of time for some users to have installed plenty of extra apps, so its always enjoyable to explain that we have to hard reset the phone....
Yes, normally i'd expect to 'right click' "*Outlook E-mail" and select 'Delete', but that's always greyed out.
So, how can you delete the outlook account settings without having to hard reset the phone?
Thanks.
Never mind, i found the answer.
Open Activesync on your smartphone and click Menu - Options. Selct your account and click Menu again and select Delete.
lol yip that was gonna be my advise to you lol, well done!
Not sure the best place to post this but since I'm more into development, I figure getting this information out to the community should allow us to develop a fix/patch before Sprint/HTC get around to it.
Leaked news from internal Sprint technical support regarding known issues with the EVO. Im linking to the original source of the leak for the full original information and any updates which might also be leaked.
Known issue: HTC EVO 4G - Front screen lens panel not flush near "Home" button
Known issue: HTC EVO 4G - WiFi Signal Indicator Shows Low Strength
Known issue: HTC EVO 4G - Qik Video Chat Update Available
Known issue: HTC EVO 4G - Browser could slow when using bluetooth and WiFi
Known Issues: HTC EVO 4G - Monitor doesn't support video out
Known Issues: HTC EVO 4G- Proximity sensor still active when in hands-free call
Known Issues: HTC EVO 4G - 720p Video Recording
Known Issues: HTC EVO 4G - MicroSD Card Permissions Issue
Known issue: HTC EVO 4G - Google Search Bar Widget Displaying Incorrectly
Found another.
If you have device security enabled on an Exchange server that forces devices to create a device password to sync, it will not allow the EVO to reboot after creating the password.
1. Set up ActiveSync Exchange account on EVO
2. Authenticate with Exchange server
3. Create device password as you are forced to do with the Exchange policy
4. EVO will sync and download content
5. Reboot EVO and it will not boot beyond 4G animated boot logo screen, gets stuck in a loop.
Just got off the phone with Sprint. This is a known issue in their build of 2.1 that should be fixed in 2.2
Soupskin said:
Found another.
If you have device security enabled on an Exchange server that forces devices to create a device password to sync, it will not allow the EVO to reboot after creating the password.
1. Set up ActiveSync Exchange account on EVO
2. Authenticate with Exchange server
3. Create device password as you are forced to do with the Exchange policy
4. EVO will sync and download content
5. Reboot EVO and it will not boot beyond 4G animated boot logo screen, gets stuck in a loop.
Just got off the phone with Sprint. This is a known issue in their build of 2.1 that should be fixed in 2.2
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Ahh this is horrible! I wish i had known this b4 i got this phone, not using exchange server is not an option for me.
I'm going to try this option and see if it works:
http://www.zdnet.com/blog/cell-phones/touchdown-exchange-android-app-updated-to-version-30/1149
TripFlex said:
Ahh this is horrible! I wish i had known this b4 i got this phone, not using exchange server is not an option for me.
I'm going to try this option and see if it works:
http://www.zdnet.com/blog/cell-phones/touchdown-exchange-android-app-updated-to-version-30/1149
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Let us all know if it works or not, please.
Maybe this will help
I think I found a solution, at least for my evo... When I first made a password, I made it just 4 digit number because I was annoyed I had to have a password everytime I turn on my screen. That's when I first couldn't reboot. I coincidentally put in a longer one the next time and didn't have any problems. Long story short, I had to ensure I had a combination of letters and numbers/symbols.
It won't let you set your password to only letters but it won't stop you from putting only numbers which what caused my evo not to boot.
My current password is 'nnn.' because it has letters and a symbol, and it's fast as hell to put in. Try something like that. I've successfully booted 4 times with exchange running in the background.
Warning: My experience with Android is about 7 hours right now. I'm afraid I won't be able to help much more than that.
Any ideas I did the FOTA update with a Exchange Server password of all numbers and cannot reboot the device - it's caught in a loop of some sort - please help
I use LockPicker to help with the forced password issue. I set up a lock pattern on my EVO, and downloaded LockPicker from the market. Set up my exchange account, and created my password. I then started lock picker, and it overrides the exchange password and uses the previously set pattern instead. I have no problems booting up the phone, and the lock pattern still gives me a certain level of security on the phone.
FatFrosty said:
I think I found a solution, at least for my evo... When I first made a password, I made it just 4 digit number because I was annoyed I had to have a password everytime I turn on my screen. That's when I first couldn't reboot. I coincidentally put in a longer one the next time and didn't have any problems. Long story short, I had to ensure I had a combination of letters and numbers/symbols.
It won't let you set your password to only letters but it won't stop you from putting only numbers which what caused my evo not to boot.
My current password is 'nnn.' because it has letters and a symbol, and it's fast as hell to put in. Try something like that. I've successfully booted 4 times with exchange running in the background.
Warning: My experience with Android is about 7 hours right now. I'm afraid I won't be able to help much more than that.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Sprint called me back to tell me this workaround.
I FOUND A FIX TO EVERYONE'S ISSUE
Here's what you have to do to get exchange server hooked up normally and not have a constant reboot!
Follow these steps and you will not have any problems.
1.) Hard reset your phone (VOLUME DOWN + POWER with the phone off)
You will have to go down to "CLEAR DATA", it will ask you to confirm.
2.) Let the phone reboot, everything will be erased. Setup your exchange and google account.
WHEN YOU CHOOSE A PASSWORD, USE A NUMBER AND A LETTER
3.) Go to the market place and search for "No Lock". Download it. Install it. Run it.
4.) Press the middle button to make the phone no longer require a lock.
Voila! I just did this and it works perfect!
OP you might want to put this in the first thread you posted so other people know about it without having to go through all these pages.
TripFlex said:
I FOUND A FIX TO EVERYONE'S ISSUE
Here's what you have to do to get exchange server hooked up normally and not have a constant reboot!
Follow these steps and you will not have any problems.
1.) Hard reset your phone (VOLUME DOWN + POWER with the phone off)
You will have to go down to "CLEAR DATA", it will ask you to confirm.
2.) Let the phone reboot, everything will be erased. Setup your exchange and google account.
WHEN YOU CHOOSE A PASSWORD, USE A NUMBER AND A LETTER
3.) Go to the market place and search for "No Lock". Download it. Install it. Run it.
4.) Press the middle button to make the phone no longer require a lock.
Voila! I just did this and it works perfect!
OP you might want to put this in the first thread you posted so other people know about it without having to go through all these pages.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Using spaces for your password also works.
I had A time Issue Today At 9:00pm my phone was still saying it was 3:42am On the time in the top bar but the lockscreen time was correct. Just rebooted it and everything was fine
Odd I didnt have any issues using Exchange Activesync on my EVO.
Badious said:
Odd I didnt have any issues using Exchange Activesync on my EVO.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
+1 I never had any problems with mine either. my password is a cd key and it only has letters and its 5 letters. hmm.. weird.. glad i never had a problem with exchange seeing as this is my work phone! im sorry to everyone that did!
Anyone having problems, contact your IT Manager and ask them if they will add you as an exception to the Mobile Services security requirements. They won't open it up to everyone, but might make an exception or two. I do it for certain people in my organization.
Having problem with EXCHANGE "Failed to create the account Please try again later"
I am having problem with my EVO and connecting to exchagne server. It was working fine, however I have to hard reset the phone. Now when i try to setup my exchange account, it goes through and take me to the page "Finish Setup" when i choose finish setup, it just sit on processing and failed with error "failed to create the account please try again later"
It looks like the OP was just pimping that website, sdx forums. No updates have been made at all and there are many other forums and websites out there with noted issues and fixes. For example, why is there not one single xda forum post?
Thanks to everyone for posting the Exchange workarounds!
webs05 said:
It looks like the OP was just pimping that website, sdx forums. No updates have been made at all and there are many other forums and websites out there with noted issues and fixes. For example, why is there not one single xda forum post?
Thanks to everyone for posting the Exchange workarounds!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
the title is "known issues from internal sprint support" which means these posts are based on a leak from inside sprint's technical support.
obviously there are quite a few known issues Sprint has acknowledged internally and i've just updated the list with a few more. not sure its possible to solve all of them here in this thread, but at least propagating the knowledge from sprint's internal technical support to our devs will give us greater knowledge going forward in our development work. the alternative is we could all call sprint and hope they are willing to tell us everything their internal techs acknowledge to be wrong with our phone...
if you know of any internal sprint support acknowledged issues with the EVO, please post and i will update the main post. i will look forward to your contributions of internal sprint leaked information or solutions!
if our internal sprint leak stops posting, and nobody leaks any known EVO issues from sprint here, the updates will stop.
TripFlex said:
I FOUND A FIX TO EVERYONE'S ISSUE
Here's what you have to do to get exchange server hooked up normally and not have a constant reboot!
Follow these steps and you will not have any problems.
1.) Hard reset your phone (VOLUME DOWN + POWER with the phone off)
You will have to go down to "CLEAR DATA", it will ask you to confirm.
2.) Let the phone reboot, everything will be erased. Setup your exchange and google account.
WHEN YOU CHOOSE A PASSWORD, USE A NUMBER AND A LETTER
3.) Go to the market place and search for "No Lock". Download it. Install it. Run it.
4.) Press the middle button to make the phone no longer require a lock.
Voila! I just did this and it works perfect!
OP you might want to put this in the first thread you posted so other people know about it without having to go through all these pages.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Seems to be a bug with No Lock, if you restart the phone and press the home key twice it will not bring up the screen that shows all 7 active screens and also when in another program if you hit the home button it will not take you back to home, the work around I found is after I reboot I have to restart the No Lock program again and then everything is back to normal.
I am getting a password requested when I boot up my phone.
This has been bothering me over the last several days.
It turns out it is forced by an exchange account I have set to synchronize with my phone.
Is there any way to force this password request to be ignored?
It is not the exchange ID password, rather it is a new password that exchange requires to be entered on phone boot-up in order to enforce security on my phone.
I already use pattern lock, so this is redundant... not to mention annoying.
I don't know if it can be bypassed. I'd like to know too, because although convenient for me, I will not put my work email on my device if I am forced to password protect my screen, as was the case with my Samsung Epix. I'd prefer to be forced to enter my credentials each time I were to check my work email than to enter a pass to unlock my screen.
a_fuegon said:
I don't know if it can be bypassed. I'd like to know too, because although convenient for me, I will not put my work email on my device if I am forced to password protect my screen, as was the case with my Samsung Epix. I'd prefer to be forced to enter my credentials each time I were to check my work email than to enter a pass to unlock my screen.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I would think that the pattern lock would satisfy any need for protecting my email from unauthorized use... a 4 digit numeric code is less secure than the pattern lock, which has 9 points and who knows how many possible combinations.
There have been quite a few discussions about this. Lockpicker seems to work but the developer states only for the HTC Sense.
I'm sure IT managers aren't going through any effort to change their security policies and endure all that's involved to change something they feel is currently effective, regardless of the users sentiments. It's up to us the users to find a way to circumvent or deal with it.
a_fuegon said:
There have been quite a few discussions about this. Lockpicker seems to work but the developer states only for the HTC Sense.
I'm sure IT managers aren't going through any effort to change their security policies and endure all that's involved to change something they feel is currently effective, regardless of the users sentiments. It's up to us the users to find a way to circumvent or deal with it.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It is frustrating, given the fact that this is a new change. For the longest time I thought it was something i did while modding my phone.
I will try the "get IT to fix it" route, but I have my doubts anything will come of it.
Otherwise, I will need to get someone to look at lockpicker.
Thanks.
joeybear23 said:
I would think that the pattern lock would satisfy any need for protecting my email from unauthorized use... a 4 digit numeric code is less secure than the pattern lock, which has 9 points and who knows how many possible combinations.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
The problem with the pattern lock is you can almost always figure out the pattern based on the screen smudge left behind by it.
This could be overcome if the lock screen didn't show up the same way every time. Either larger / smaller scale or in a differnt orientation then the last previous time (sometime upside down and sometimes landscape). Then the smudges would overlap / confuse each other a little bit atleast.
If the e-mail account is a business account and is controlled by an IT group that isn't you, they're protecting their business. They don't want devices out there with no password and an open line to their systems. If you want your phone to sync with their e-mail account, then you have to accept their security requirements. I don't know why everyone thinks that they should be able to bypass an IT groups security requirements simply because they're inconvenienced by a passcode. A middle ground would be a passcode just to read that e-mail account, but I don't think any of the mobile devices offer such a feature. The simplest solution is still simply to not sync that e-mail account or check it as an IMAP account if you can.
Remove IT Security.
There is a way to get rid of this prompt but you will need a SQLDB editor like SQLite and Root explorer or something similar.
if you open up root explorer then go to DBDATA\DATABASES and then browse down to com.android.providers.settings then open settings.db
you will see a list of items, if you go under "system" then scroll 3/4 of the way down you will see the section for ITsecurity policy. [this is what the exchange services enforced on your phone.
if you change the section "devicelock_itpolicy_enabled" from a 1 to a 0 this will obviously disable this policy.
once the change is done you will need to restart your phone and you will notice upon the restart that it does not ask you for the password again.
problem with this is that its a remote policy however and the phone WILL be pushed this information again. [probably after only a day or two of use]
someone could probably write a MCR script to take care of this easily.
I've found the best way for me ot make the change is to copy the settings.db to another folder [like on my SD card] then make the change I need there.. and whenever there is a repush of the policy, I just overwrite the one settings.db with the other.
this is a temporary solution.. but it does get rid of the password policy.
another option maybe setting the timeout value listed below that.. some exchange policy will only check for the "password enabled" portion to be checked. but the default timeout maybe adjusted to something crazy..
default for my org is 40 minutes. [IE 2400 seconds] so adjusting it to 4000 minutes may just make me not worry about this value as much
l7777 said:
If the e-mail account is a business account and is controlled by an IT group that isn't you, they're protecting their business. They don't want devices out there with no password and an open line to their systems. If you want your phone to sync with their e-mail account, then you have to accept their security requirements. I don't know why everyone thinks that they should be able to bypass an IT groups security requirements simply because they're inconvenienced by a passcode. A middle ground would be a passcode just to read that e-mail account, but I don't think any of the mobile devices offer such a feature. The simplest solution is still simply to not sync that e-mail account or check it as an IMAP account if you can.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You are correct. They are protecting their interests and spend lots of money doing it.
Now, I did sense a bit of anger or frustration in your post. If so, calm down. These companies have every right to ensure that they deliver their info as securely as possible. Seeing as we do live in a free country, if somone decides they want to circumvent some established policies, then so be it. It'll be them that will have to suffer the consequences of their actions, not you. I for one am annoyed by those security features. Hence the absence of my company email from MY device.
If it bothers you, you do have the right to skip this thread and move on to the next one.
a_fuegon said:
You are correct. They are protecting their interests and spend lots of money doing it.
...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
What is funny is the fact that requiring a 4-digit password at boot up does very little to keep unwanted eyes looking at email on a phone.
How often do thieves steal a powered-off phone... Plus it takes only seconds to hack through that anyway.
It's like gun laws: it only creates another hoop to jump through for the people playing by the rules.
joeybear23 said:
What is funny is the fact that requiring a 4-digit password at boot up does very little to keep unwanted eyes looking at email on a phone.
How often do thieves steal a powered-off phone... Plus it takes only seconds to hack through that anyway.
It's like gun laws: it only creates another hoop to jump through for the people playing by the rules.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I disagree - the idea here is to protect data for certain amount of time - it is a barrier, but not made to be foolproof.
Do you leave your house door unlocked? It takes seconds to smash a window or pry a door, so why lock it? You have an alarm? I can turn off the power and cut the phone line from outside - so i just easily circumvented this too. I can shoot or poison the dog, so that is not perfect either.
I like the PIN Lock, and I wish i could add one to my phone. If you lose your phone, you don't want people getting to your stuff before you can wipe it. The PIN does that it, gives you time.
And it is not that easy to bypass unless you keep your phone in USB Debug mode, and even then Android should prompt for the PIN before mounting drives or granting ADB access - if it doesn't then Android has a major security flaw.
The pattern lock is a joke - as mentioned, i can usually see someones pattern. That coupled with the idea, that although there are 9 starting points, the next point is only one of 3 adjacent points, and so on for the next. If it is really complex it becomes hard to remember - unlike numbers which can be many digits long and easy to remember.
I for one am happy to comply with a PIN lock - it keeps people i know from picking up my phone and rooting around.
alphadog00 said:
...
I for one am happy to comply with a PIN lock - it keeps people i know from picking up my phone and rooting around.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
So you power down your phone after every use?
Because this PIN lock only comes up at boot up...
and the numbers are visible when you type them in.
a_fuegon said:
There have been quite a few discussions about this. Lockpicker seems to work but the developer states only for the HTC Sense.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Didn't work on my captivate, and as I understand it, it shouldn't work on any captivate because it changes Sense-specific settings.
I didn't really read through this thread, but if this is indeed a corporate exchange account, then there is no way around it.
joeybear23 said:
So you power down your phone after every use?
Because this PIN lock only comes up at boot up...
and the numbers are visible when you type them in.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
On my Samsung Captivate it is requiring it everytime the screen goes blank. With HTC WM phone i was able to set this to 24 hours so it would only ask once a day or on power off then back on. If I could make it prompt just a little less I would be fine with it.
mreevimus said:
On my Samsung Captivate it is requiring it everytime the screen goes blank. With HTC WM phone i was able to set this to 24 hours so it would only ask once a day or on power off then back on. If I could make it prompt just a little less I would be fine with it.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Same here. Everytime the phone wakes is a big pain. I set my winmo phone for 2 hours.
I also work from a company that does this. Using the standard email app connection to exchange server, it requires the pin unlock when coming out of standby after a certain number of minutes. VERY annoying.
The best way around it will cost you $20. Using Touchdown, the pin unlock is in the app only. It will only prompt you for it when you actually use the app (again after a certain number of minutes).
Anyone use Seek Droid?
http://www.appbrain.com/app/seek-droid/org.gtmedia.seekdroid
How's it compare to lookout or prey?
Seems like it's pretty feature rich for $.99 and reviews are good, but it's always good to hear from real, live users directly.
Lifehacker liked it
http://lifehacker.com/5745207/seek-droid-is-the-simplest-way-to-find-your-lost-android-phone
I think its the best, but I'm one of the developers. PM me if you have any questions.
I'm sure you do, but I was going to get some real user reviews here.
Give it a shot, write a review. If you dont like it, email support and we'll make it right.
I'm not sure if we have many people that are on xda using the app (yet). We are a really small company, and unlike our competition, we dont a marketing department to get our name out. Just a few developers trying to put out a good lightweight product. We love to see reviews and suggestions, so let us know what you think.
I can gave you a brief snapshot [after finishing my write up I realized it wasn't so brief]. Note: I haven't lost my phone yet so I've only been able to test it. Also, I have not tested other Droid locator apps so I have no point of reference. I've tested this on a Droid X.
Setup is a breeze. The user is asked to enter a username and secret code. The app goes through a registration process. The main screen of the app (on the phone) is organized as follows: View Website; Your SeekDroid.com Login; View Help; Current Status [Registered]; Your Secret Code; Options for Enabling remote formmating of the phone and SD card; Option for retrieving call history settings; Terms of Service; and Contact Us.
At the Seek Droid website, you're asked to enter your username and secret code. A top line menu appears, as follows: Locate; Alarm; Calls; Hide; Lock; Wipe; Help; and Log Out. Locate does just what it suggests: the webpage sends out a search command and a Google map displays the location. The Alarm options prompts you to type a message to be sent to the phone. Once the message arrives, the message pops up on the phone's screen and it beeps and will continue to beep until the screen is touched. When the screen is touched, you're taken to the slide-to-unlock screen. If your phone is secured with a password, you'll be directed to the unlock screen (pattern or keypad). Calls displays a recent call list. Hide triggers your device to hide the Seek Droid app from you list of apps (in your app drawer). Reboot is required. With Lock, you're prompted to assign a new digit lock code (digits only, not a new pattern lock). Whether your device already has a lock code or pattern lock, the new code is applied. I, for example, have a pattern lock. I changed the lock code remotely with Seek Droid and it changed it to the new code I sent. With Wipe you are given a prompt to ensure that's what you want to do. I did not test this feature. I might backup my SD card and try the wipe feature for that...I'll report the results later if I do.
I've tested the app indoors and outside, with GPS on and off. It finds it every time, usually within 3 minutes. I keep Use Wireless Networks and Enable Assisted GPS activated in the Settings screen on my device. Also, I have an app protector app that locks apps on my phone (along the lines of App Protector). I have Settings locked (requires a password to access). Seek Droid is able to change the unlock code remotely with Settings protected and unprotected.
Naturally, Seek Droid does not find my phone when it's turned off or in flight mode. Seek Droid does not provide advanced user controls like deleting individual apps, turning off/on GPS, remotely turning on your phone, etc.
Locating my phone worked with Internet Explorer, Firefox and Chrome. Javascript must be enabled.
One final comment: I encountered an issue with one of my computers locating my phone. I contacted Seek Droid support and received a response within 1 hour. Very helpful and responsive...kudos to them. After some troubleshooting, I discovered the problem rested with my computer. Seek Droid worked well from every other computers I have access to (rather than troubleshoot the problem with the one computer, I simply won't use that one to log in to Seek Droid in an emergency). So, my advice is to test the app from various computers so you know which one to use if and when you actually lose your phone.
I recommend the app based on my limited testing. I also recommend that you use this in conjunction with a device password or pattern lock (or an app protector app to prevent removal of Seek Droid). You simply want to set up controls so another person can't easily uninstall the app or deregister the device.
Price has now gone up to $1.99 and a bit peeved as I left it until today to get it, losing out 62p in the process
Anyway, after taking an aggggggge (months on and off) trying to configure Tasker to do this unsuccessfully I've now binned that idea and got this instead; setting it up alongside Tasker to receive a specific SMS to switch all the location finding stuff on (I have mobile and wifi switched off by default).
Just liked to echo the above comment in that it is really easy to use and the location is nailed down much better than all my previous attempts with Tasker.
Well worth it.
Wow, didn't notice that. I still hadn't purchased yet either and was going to. I really don't need it, I just wanted to play around with it. I'll just pass @ $1.99 and use the free version of lookout without wipe functionality and spend the $1.99 on a game I wanted or something.
Oh well.
is there a secret code default because i donwloaded the app to my phone online but never set it up
Kicknik: After installing the app and opening for the first time, you will be prompted to enter a username and a secret code of your choosing. Then, it will go through a process of registering your device (I guess it syncs up with Seek Droid). The username and secret code are then used to login to the Seek Droid website in order to locate and lock your device remotely.
My impressions:
Bought and installed a couple days ago on my Lg Optimus One. I am very satisfied.
The program installs very easily, once installed it asks you to choose a login name and a password and to set a few options: there's a few boxes to check, like the possibility to enable or disable the remote wipe of your smartphone.
Once you are done setting up you can access the seek droid website from your phone or from any device with internet access and once you are logged in you can monitor your device position (you can remotely enable gps if gps is disabled), check the last calls that were made from your device, lock your phone or wipe it to factory settings formatting internal memory and sd (of course it asks you for confirmation on the website if you click on the wipe button).
Another useful feature that can be accessed from seek droid website is the "hide" button. Once you press it the seek droid app on your phone becomes invisible (requires reboot) thus becoming even harder to uninstall (anyway even wehn visible the program requires your password to uninstall).
I tried every feature except for the wipe one and i can say it does what it says. Position through gps is accurate and is shown on a mini google map on the seek droid site. I monitored battery consumption and it seems almost unexistent.
In conclusion i think every smart needs a security program like this, and seek droid does better than other similar apps that i had tried before.
First I was using Lookout, but I rly didn't liked that story with the chinese developer that got misunderstood with his wallpaper app because of what Lookout said. Every website was telling ppl to uninstall his app. Lookout got a lot of attention, everyone installed their app and uninstalled the poor chinese app. That wasn't nice :T
Then I went to WaveSecure, from McAfee. I think it's $20 per year.
Never worked on my phone. Tryed the support, even installed a "debug version", but couldn't make it work properly on my HTC Desire. Gave up.
I was looking for another app to replace it and then I met Seek Droid. Was very cheap, no monthly fees and such, decided to give it a try.
Dude, I'm VERY satisfied. It's easy to install, got it WORKING on 5 minutes. McAfee WaveSecure didn't worked for me, but I had no issue with Seek Droid. If I had met it before, could save the $20 I paid to get WaveSecure (I should have tested it first, but saw "McAfee" on it, guessed it works.)
Didn't noticed any abnormal battery drain, I could retrieve the latest phone calls made and received, I could lock and unlock from the website, located very fast (I was using wifi when I tested).
I think that it could report the number of the SIM card and keep the alarm message on the screen, I mean, If I just lose it, I would like to keep on screen instructions to contact me :S
Currently If you "click" on the message, it will go away.
Anyway, I'm another happy customer.
It's very cheap, everyone should give it a try!
seijimaddog said:
Anyway, I'm another happy customer.
It's very cheap, everyone should give it a try!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Glad to hear you like it. Dont forget to review us in the Android Market.
I bought it for me (EVO) and my wife (LG Optimus S). Very reasonable price. Easy install and configuration and website control.
We also were using the new Sprint/Assurian TEP app. That has additional features--which I don't want or need (i.e., contacts backup). And, even though my wife's phone also has TEP, their app now says that the subscription has expired--which it hasn't.
I was about to cancel the TEP for her phone anyhow, and this is a nice reminder of why it's a waste for her cheap phone anyhow.
We're happy with Seekdroid and the $.99 price.
sycko,
I have Seek Droid on my Droid and my wife's Droid 2. Love the application. I was wondering if there was a way to get to get Seek Droid to work on my rooted Nook Color? There can be a general location using the WiFi instead of GPS I believe.
Thank you for your time.
How does one set this up? I bought it a while back and never got around to setting it up until today. I launch it on my EVO and it pops up a screen asking for a name and password, and anything I put in it says it's username or secret code is incorrect (obviously, since I've never set up a seekdroid account). I go to the website and it does the same thing. HOW DO I SET UP AN ACCOUNT IN THE FIRST PLACE?
Thanks.
Nevermind. Got it. (Uninstalled and reinstalled and the create account screen popped up.)
Does this work with Google Voice? I don't have text messaging, so thats the issue I have with location/alarm apps
I want to know, what if my phone got stolen and the guy instantly decides to wipe my device clean of any trackers .. will this device still be able to track after such an activity ?
Also, what if the robber doesn't wipe the device clean, but modifies/disables the internet connection on the device ? Or switches to another SIM which does NOT have internet on it ? Will this program still be helpful in any sense ?
Free today on Amazon. Don't know if this is current version, but thought I would pass that along. Clean interface, but I haven't put it through its paces yet.
Great app
I love the app. Very easy to use. I've used it to locate my phone twice.
I just installed mohan's latest ROM for the skyrocket and I am getting a message that seekdroid is not working. Any tips on how to debug. Is there a log of the failure?
I like the ROM, but consider this a must have app.
need a bit of help
sycko said:
I think its the best, but I'm one of the developers. PM me if you have any questions.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
If seekdroid or something like that was installed on my phone. By my psycho gf. How would I totally remove it????
Ok, now I'm going into my third day with this phone, and I'm really struggling to find a way that it has made me happy. I mean, yeah, I like the OS and all, but Sprint still hasn't gotten back to me on whether they're going to send me a free Airave (I spend half the time in my home roaming). I had to reset the device yesterday to get it to connect to Marketplace - even though my account has never said anything but US (last time I left the country was in the Navy 21 years ago) - and even though I could connect to marketplace on Zune software, my phone wouldn't connect to it. Now I've got that working, by resetting the phone.
Now I can't get the phone unlocked. My developer account has been approved, identity verified, and the next step in my process is unlock my phone. I have tried all the tricks I've found so far: start phone, unlock the lock screen, turned off a bunch of services on my PC (like SQL, IIS, and more), reset my phone again, touch marketplace on the phone while connected so it says "connected" on the screen... Between all this and the lousy reception I get at home, I'm ready to just chuck this thing back at Sprint and say, "Thanks, but no thanks." The one thing keeping me from doing that is that Verizon is going to get the Trophy, and I want a phone with a keyboard. I've had keyboards on all my WinMo phones, and don't plan to stop now. I just wish this phone was available on VZW. I'm going to stick it out as long as I can, but iff I don't have an improved experience by day 28, Sprint gets it back... </rant>
Ok... Have I missed any other steps in getting this phone to connect to the Developer Phone Registration tool?
Have you tried following the directions here:
http://social.msdn.microsoft.com/Fo...s/thread/bfa70370-4926-4086-ad0e-febe716b8bf0
Yes, many times.... I never get past step 4.
Someone just told me an another thread that you have to be verfied through GeoTrust and to do that you must first create and submit an app that you have developed.
After you submit the app, supposedly GeoTrust will contact you via email and have you verify some personal information.
Make a fake app. That's all you have to do. Make one, then submit it. This will generate a claim number with GeoTrust. Trust me, I had to do this myself...
Have you got your certificate from msdn yet it takes a couple of days, once you get your certificate your account will be unloced
thealanshow said:
Make a fake app. That's all you have to do. Make one, then submit it. This will generate a claim number with GeoTrust. Trust me, I had to do this myself...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I just finished this. Hopefully by monday all will be well
My account has already cleared GeoTrust, and the next step is to unlock my phone. I'm not a student, but it wouldn't matter - I can't get that far. The reg tool doesn't even detect my phone.
If you're getting the dreaded "Check that the Zune software is running blah blah blah" message, this one is a PITA to deal with. From what I've seen poking around on the interwebs, it's hitting a good number of people. It happened to me too.
I have 2 systems that are identical hardware wise, and running 64 bit OSes.
I have 1 machine running a 32 bit OS (it's a much older system).
I was finally able to unlock the phone without any issues at all on the 32 bit system (after swapping out my phone and nearly a week of struggling with it) the very first time I tried.
I'm loving the phone, especially with it being unlocked, but it was a fight until I tried it on that last machine.
Poke Microsoft about it. The more they hear about it and the more information they get about it the faster they'll be able to fix it (that assumes the problem is even on their end).
I've heard using a USB hub (or if you're already using one then NOT using it) has helped some people. *shrug*
Thanks for all the suggestions - I appreciate them. I have yet to get my phone to get past the check zune... blah blah blah error, with the exception of one time. Here's what I did...
I reset my phone, got past the intro, added my live account, hooked it to the computer, let it sync with Zune (I had deleted the phone's proflie), opened the reg tool, and it found the phone. I entered my login info, and got the dreaded 0x64 error having to do with time on the phone.
Several posts I found had to do with people getting past this by using a different internet connection and finding success. Well, I have a rather odd internet connection going on. I live right behind my church, just beyond wireless range from the pastor's router. So here's what I have:
Scientific Atlanta DSL modem/router combo - pastor's connection
Buffalo high powered router running DD-WRT sitting on the platform (closest part of the building to my house), repeating the pastor's signal.
Buffalo high powered router running DD-WRT sitting in my computer room, repeating wireless to my house, and serving as wired router to the server and the HTPC.
Pastor's is 192.168.1.1, the one on the platform is 192.168.2.1, and the one in my house is 192.168.3.1, so they are all separate networks, each using the one upstream of it as a gateway.
So, given my success connecting to the phone, I walked over to church, phone still connected to the computer, connected to the pastor's router, and by this point in time, I can no longer connect to the phone.
I suspect that there is some update that Sprint is pushing that causes this problem, so I repeated the process several times, each time deleting the Zune profile, resetting the phone, going through enough of the startup to get to the settings, and putting it in airplane mode, then connecting in the specified order, allowing the new profile to be created, and still failing to connect to the phone from the reg tool.
Over on the App Hub forums, there are several of us with this problem, and a Microsoft team member said that they believe that it is something specific about the Sprint Arrive, and they are looking into it.
My main gripe about this whole thing is that since Sprint is a latecomer to the game, all the posts I'm finding about this are like six months old. Many people have overcome this problem, so you'd think that Microsoft would have figured out the problem by now, and fixed it.
I hope to get this figured out soon, as I am presently unemployed, and spent my $99 to join the App Hub, hoping to make a bit of money there until I get a job. I'm working on something, but until my phone is unlocked, I can't put my confidence in testing solely with the emulator.
Thanks for the tips guys. I do appreciate it.
I've heard really good things about the HTC arrive, I hope it works out for you. Who knows, it could be something NoDo related (because to the best of my knowledge those phones come with NoDo stocked on). I kinda hope it is, it would take the sting out of the fact that so many of us can't our hands on that update! haha ;-)
Yes, it does come with NoDo. It's interesting, takes a bit of getting used to, but it seems to work well. I love the phone. It feels more solid than my TP2. The only thing is that I wish the screen tilt wasn't spring-loaded. I got used to not using it most of the time on my TP2, so it's taking some getting used to on here.
Oh, frustration of all frustrations! I just grabbed my wife's phone and tried it for kicks. It took me all of 15 seconds to unlock her Sprint Arrive. So I know the problem isn't my computer. WHY WON'T MY PHONE WORK?????
(oh, and if it makes any difference, she's installed WAY more apps than I have)
did you try going to msdn?
My MSDN subscription has expired, but I have posted on App Hub forums. MS thinks it is something specific to the Sprint Arrive, but who knows?
If anyone else has had this problem, there is an official workaround posted on AppHub, but for those who don't have access to that forum, here's the copy/paste:
Re: Cannot register developer phone (HTC Arrive)
Reply Quote
Hi Folks,
There is now an understood issue with respect to the HTC Arrive that may be the cause of your problem. It can affect both developer unlock as well as the ability to update the phone. A KB article is in the works but here is the gist of it for developers having trouble unlocking the phone:
Windows Phone 7 Developer Unlock Tool cannot detect the HTC Arrive Phone
Abstract:
This article applies to developers of Windows Phone 7 applications who are testing their application using the Sprint HTC Arrive, model number PC93100, OS build 7389 or 7390. Developers may find that they are unable to unlock the Sprint HTC Arrive phone using the Windows Phone Developer Unlock Tool, for the purpose of deploying their applications to the phone for testing. This article offers a remedy.
Symptoms
The developer completes these steps to register the phone:
1. Registers through the App Hub as per the steps described in the App Hub registration walkthrough here.
2. Downloads and successfully install the latest version of the Windows Phone Developer Tools.
3. Owns an activated Sprint Arrive in which they personalize their settings (including date and time, and selecting a language).
4. Registers the Sprint Arrive with the same Live account they used in the app hub registration.
Next, the developer follows these steps for Developer specific registration:
5. Connects the Sprint Arrive to the developer's PC with the USB cable included with their device.
6. Ensures that the Zune software is running/open.
7. Launches the Windows Phone Developer Registration Tool.
8. The registration tool ultimately fails to detect the phone upon launch, reporting the following message:
"Unable to connect to phone. Please check that the Zune software is running and that the Zune's sync partnership with your phone has been established."
Cause
This occurs due to a specific state setting in the HTC Arrive that results in the phone not being able to make a desktop passthrough connection. This state condition can be mitigated by following the steps below.
Resolution
Use the following workaround.
1. If connected, unplug the phone device from the computer.
On the phone device:
2. Press the Windows button.
3. Press the right arrow button (on the top right of the screen) or swipe from right to left to expose the application list
4. Scroll to and select “Settings”.
5. Scroll to and select “Cellular”.
6. Select “Change Network Profile” and wait for this operation to complete (<-- this is a key step; you don't need to actually change it).
7. Press the Back or Windows key to exit the “Settings” menu.
After completing the above steps, follow through with the registration process:
8. Connect the Sprint Arrive to the development PC with the USB cable included with the phone device.
9. Launch the Windows Phone Developer Registration Tool (Zune software must be running).
10. The window titled "Windows Phone Developer Registration" appears which establishes a connection to the phone device and the following status message: "Status: Phone ready. Please enter your Windows Live ID and password and click Register to begin".
11. Enter the App Hub registered Windows Live ID and password, and then press the "Register" button.
12. The following status message appears in the window:
Status: Your phone has successfully been registered.
Click to expand...
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Thank you hopmedic that fixed it for me
this was driving me nuts and the info here solved it thanks
Thanks it worked.
Done the workaround, but nothing for me, still have the 0x64 error.
My phone was relocked after one year of AppHub. But now I can't unlock it again..
Also tried to deelete the phone in the device list on my account and use a proxy VPN network. I'm ttired of this. :/