Need a way to add to my to do list using my Bluetooth headset, on Android Pie - General Questions and Answers

Using Note 9 on Pie version Android. As far as I can tell, it's not yet possible to add things to a Google keep list with the headset that your phone is off. Google will just add them to a shopping list.
I'm fine with using a new productivity system and I've been looking at todoist even though I like Google keep and I also have an Evernote premium subscription that I really haven't taken advantage of but mainly I need a place to immediately put down thoughts without having to pull out my phone. Can anyone point me to a good system that someone else uses? I have a decent amount of experience using Tasker and could probably put something together with an app like IFTTT. However, this seems like such a common need in a common problem that there must be a viable solution that exists already. Again my main problem seems to be that the Google assistant is different when your phone is off versus when you are using Google now on the phone itself.
Thank you for any help and I'll be sure to edit if I find a good solution.

Related

[Q] Apps,Enabling GPS and others Q's

Hi
I know I'm well behind but recently I got my first smartphone and I can't believe how I've been without it since they were made available. I've plumped for the HTC wildfire as it fits my budget and its small size makes it very pocketable.
I've been playing around with various apps and installed "Where's my droid" so that if it gets lost/stolen I can turn it off silent and hopefully track it. However, reading something yesterday I became aware that changes to Android means that apps can no longer directly change system settings meaning that if the GPS is off, I can't track it. (Edit: yet it seems google navigation can do this?)
Is this correct and is there any other way I could implement a safeguard such as this in case the phone goes missing?
A few other queries I have:
> Can the messages widget be used as a more traditional inbox/outbox/drafts? I'm struggling to get my head around it!
> And I've been playing about with swype on another users phone but it won't work on mine due to the QVGA res, I've settled for slideit demo for now but it doesn't seem to work seamlessly, does anyone have anything to add to this?
> Lastly, my Dad (who isn't great with tech) purchased the same phone, apart from the user manual is there a "HTC for Dummies" youtube tutorials channel or anything similar I can point him at? I don't fancy adding another item that I need to maintain to the long list.
Hopefully at some point I can also work out a good way of utilising a speed camera and POI database for google navigation so I can replace the bulky tomtom unit!
Thanks in advance.
Paul

[Q] Chrome to (multiple) phone

Does anyone know how Chrome to Phone reacts with multiple devices?
I have Chrome to phone nicely working on both home/work laptops and Chrome to Phone on my phone
but now I have a Xoom I'd like to be able to push links to either phone or xoom depending on what I am planning on using... I recently tweeted a link from laptop to pick up on Xoom... when I thought it'd be simplier to C2P it...
Had a quick google and search on the forum but couldn't see any/many people doing it without logging out and logging in and using multiple accounts...
just a simple 'where do you want to send the link' a bit like the Android Market works would be good enough...
Thanks
Have the same question! Got a phone+xoom and unfortunately the one i install chrome-to-phone apk the last is the device that gets "registered". no way to choose the device to which to send to!
bummer!
It sends to both. I can't see a way to change it.
Sent from my phone
I wonder if its something we can bug google to add as a feature in an upcoming update...
Would so love to see something like this - send either to my phone or my tablet: it makes perfect sense! Wonder why nobody has made anything like this?
Apparently more than one extension exists for this function.
Use the correct extension, this allows for selecting a device from all recognised devices in your Google profile:
Google support page:
http://support.google.com/chrome/bin/answer.py?hl=en&answer=2451559
Chrome to Mobile extension:
https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/idknbmbdnapjicclomlijcgfpikmndhd

[REQ] App for Sharing Android Services Over WiFi (GPS/SMS/ETC)

Basically this idea came to me when I picked up a B&N Nook Color and I wondered if it would be possible to use the services available to my Cell phone on the Nook in some manner. My concept was to have an application that would "piggy-back" the available services on the phone to the Nook. Now I don't personally have any programming skills, but if any developers would be interested in picking up this idea; I would be more than happy to help out in whatever ways I can.
The first and easiest to do was to set my cell phone as a wifi hotspot to provide internet to the Nook. Since cyanogen mod has this built in, it was fairly painless to set up, and worked perfectly.
Next I was wondering about sharing the GPS service to my Nook. This would allow me to run google maps on a huge display while driving. After a little looking I found a few apps like Tether GPS that make this possible by using a client/server app on each device. http://www.appbrain.com/app/tethergps-lite/com.comptonsoft.tgps_lite
Finally I wanted to get some of my communication services onto the Nook. Mainly the SMS service since I don't really see a use for having my voice services carried to the nook, but the option to wouldn't hurt I suppose. For this I know there are several options available for doing this with a pc, but have yet to find one for another android device.
Not sure if there are any other services that we could make use of in this manner, but would love to hear some more ideas. Ideally I would like to see a single application that provides the ability to easily toggle each of these features on or off.
Also found an interesting link that was made in regards to gps, not sure if any of this could spark an idea on solving the other issues I posted above.
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/5501719/how-to-get-gps-data-from-android-phone

Pet project - Offline Android tablet as personal assistant, private storage, etc..

Hello all!
New to XDA Forums here... well, new on posting, been lurking for years now.
So, I have this new pet project that I want to invest some time and money come 2017, and it's like this:
I want to get an Android tablet that will be kept permanently offline after initial setup, and will hold all sorts of personal information away from the interwebs.
After thinking about it, I decided to share thoughts, receive input and comments here and perhaps in some other forums to see if I can accumulate some interesting ideas.
I'll start with the most obvious question: which tablet brand and model would you think is interesting for something like this?
The ones I considered so far: HTC Nexus 9 for rooting, Samsung Galaxy Tab S or S2 for the fingerprint scanner, nVidia Shield Tab K1 for raw power and futureproofing.
Plan is to go full paranoia, disassemble the tablet, pull out stuff like cameras, microphones, possibly even speakers, and let this become a device that can only be accessed via touchscreen or connecting external speakers and microphones. Wi-fi chip and/or antenna will also go, Bluetooth, NFC if it's there, eventually modify the USB connector for power only. New stuff only via SD card perhaps.
Yes, this means I'll be forever locking it into a certain state, but it's a pet project to see how far I can go without rendering it useless... further, I'll see if there's a way to make those changes reversible, as long as you open the device up again and such. This is of course all gradual, just ideas, might not go so far.
OS and software wise, this will need a relatively recent version of Android for full disk encryption... though it would be kinda nice to have Nougat's file encryption instead. Pros and cons to consider with each device.
Some offline apps I put in a consideration list... some of them I haven't tested just yet, but will be looking into soon enough:
Apps: AppLock
Files: Crypt4All Lite, ES File Explorer
Calendar, Contacts: Flock, Fruux
Passwords: KeePassDroid
Assistant: Utter!
Dictionary: Offline Dictionaries
Translation: Bing Translate
Maps: HERE Maps
Notes: MonoSpace
Again, the idea is to have the tablet fully functioning and connected at first - update, install, configure and load it up with everything needed, and then permanently make it an offline device. I'm not sure how many of those will actually work without any network connection, but my research has been around apps that have offline options.
Any inputs are welcome, I appreciate any recommendations for hardware, apps and custom roms for the task.
You can imagine the device overall as a personal assistant, media consumption device that will securely hold private information like calendar, passwords, contacts and files in general. Not meant to be disposable, but of course, inaccessible if stolen or lost.
Thanks for reading so far, I'll keep this thread updated with progress, but I'll probably only start working on it early next year.
XSportSeeker said:
Hello all!
New to XDA Forums here... well, new on posting, been lurking for years now.
So, I have this new pet project that I want to invest some time and money come 2017, and it's like this:
I want to get an Android tablet that will be kept permanently offline after initial setup, and will hold all sorts of personal information away from the interwebs.
After thinking about it, I decided to share thoughts, receive input and comments here and perhaps in some other forums to see if I can accumulate some interesting ideas.
I'll start with the most obvious question: which tablet brand and model would you think is interesting for something like this?
The ones I considered so far: HTC Nexus 9 for rooting, Samsung Galaxy Tab S or S2 for the fingerprint scanner, nVidia Shield Tab K1 for raw power and futureproofing.
Plan is to go full paranoia, disassemble the tablet, pull out stuff like cameras, microphones, possibly even speakers, and let this become a device that can only be accessed via touchscreen or connecting external speakers and microphones. Wi-fi chip and/or antenna will also go, Bluetooth, NFC if it's there, eventually modify the USB connector for power only. New stuff only via SD card perhaps.
Yes, this means I'll be forever locking it into a certain state, but it's a pet project to see how far I can go without rendering it useless... further, I'll see if there's a way to make those changes reversible, as long as you open the device up again and such. This is of course all gradual, just ideas, might not go so far.
OS and software wise, this will need a relatively recent version of Android for full disk encryption... though it would be kinda nice to have Nougat's file encryption instead. Pros and cons to consider with each device.
Some offline apps I put in a consideration list... some of them I haven't tested just yet, but will be looking into soon enough:
Apps: AppLock
Files: Crypt4All Lite, ES File Explorer
Calendar, Contacts: Flock, Fruux
Passwords: KeePassDroid
Assistant: Utter!
Dictionary: Offline Dictionaries
Translation: Bing Translate
Maps: HERE Maps
Notes: MonoSpace
Again, the idea is to have the tablet fully functioning and connected at first - update, install, configure and load it up with everything needed, and then permanently make it an offline device. I'm not sure how many of those will actually work without any network connection, but my research has been around apps that have offline options.
Any inputs are welcome, I appreciate any recommendations for hardware, apps and custom roms for the task.
You can imagine the device overall as a personal assistant, media consumption device that will securely hold private information like calendar, passwords, contacts and files in general. Not meant to be disposable, but of course, inaccessible if stolen or lost.
Thanks for reading so far, I'll keep this thread updated with progress, but I'll probably only start working on it early next year.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
If you're going to keep it offline then there is no reason to be paranoid about it.
Sent from my SCH-I535 using Tapatalk
Droidriven said:
If you're going to keep it offline then there is no reason to be paranoid about it.
Sent from my SCH-I535 using Tapatalk
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Well, it's going to be offline, but still mobile.
I realize I'm still going overboard with it, but it's mostly for testing purposes... honestly, I'm not really all that paranoid about it, boring life with nothing to hide blah blah.
I wanna see if the tablet can even work if I take all those modules off (cameras, wi-fi, bluetooth, etc). I've tested some smartphones that can work perfectly well even if you physically disconnect cameras, not sure about the rest.
I also have another pet project to have a device that is still online, but with the most security and privacy oriented measures in place... so it's a bit of testing for that too.
The underlying purpose is to see if I can modify multiple types of devices to be used in highly secure and privacy oriented scenarios. Part of my curiosity as a journalist I guess. Already turned an old laptop into a locked down Linux machine, but I didn't do much on the hardware side.
Other stuff like encryption and a strong user login system would need to be in place in case of robberies and such.
In any case, think of it as a testing platform... I know no devices will ever be completely secure and private, but willing to do as much as possible with a single device and no specialized tools to enhance things.

Looking for an app and/or bluetooth expert. To modify an app.

Full disclosure: I dont normally do forums so sorry if I do this wrong.
I purchased a Bluetooth Purification Mask named Atmoblue.
It originated in China. Ive had it for a few months now and it has bluetooth and there is an app for it but it looks like its taking forever for it to be moved over to English.
My question is how hard would it be for a person (or me, with no experience at all) to pull the basic functions out of the app?
For example I want to bypass the wechat login (cause, no) and basically get the pairing function up and running along with the fan speed and some of the auto features in the app and create a basic app til they release the full thing.
If any of you also want to try I can send you the link to the apk. Or if you would do it and require payment at completion how much would that cost?
In case you need to see the device just google Atmoblue.
Thanks again everyone.
mastershino said:
Full disclosure: I dont normally do forums so sorry if I do this wrong.
I purchased a Bluetooth Purification Mask named Atmoblue.
It originated in China. Ive had it for a few months now and it has bluetooth and there is an app for it but it looks like its taking forever for it to be moved over to English.
My question is how hard would it be for a person (or me, with no experience at all) to pull the basic functions out of the app?
For example I want to bypass the wechat login (cause, no) and basically get the pairing function up and running along with the fan speed and some of the auto features in the app and create a basic app til they release the full thing.
If any of you also want to try I can send you the link to the apk. Or if you would do it and require payment at completion how much would that cost?
In case you need to see the device just google Atmoblue.
Thanks again everyone.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
There is pretty much a 99.9% chance that you won't find anyone to do this for you. The best you can hope for is someone might give you some links to guides showing how to decompile and edit apk files. What you would modify in the apk file to achieve your purposes would require you doing your own research to figure it out. You can ask further questions along the way about the things that you don't understand, but there are no guarantees that you will get any useful answers.
In other words, be prepared to dig in and do the work yourself, if you really want to accomplish this feat. If not, get used to dealing with the app the way it is.
Sent from my SM-S767VL using Tapatalk
Yea, i started researching the day I posted this. I've been reading and reading and reading. Ive gotten to the point where I now have access to the battery percentage. Currently, trying to figure out the characteristics in the device itself and the values needed to change each of the modes. Also, it looks like the app from the company is pretty much useless to try to use. Based on the code (from what I can understand after 2 days of research and starting off with 0 coding knowledge) the app has to use wechat to basically be able to access a server and then the server sends it back to the phone then the device. Meaning I can't just look in the code for what values I need, unless I was able to actually sign into wechat and record the log. Which I can't do since I don't have access to wechat.
So now I'm currently looking up how to write code in the programs I've found to write it and create a ui. Ive at least figured out uuids and figured out how to call up the battery percentage now. Only like 3 more settings to go! Wish me luck lol

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