Malta Independent

A look back, and a technology wish list for 2016

-

as if you needed separate video recorders for each channel. TiVo comes closest to offering a universal queue with its OnePass feature, but it has relatively few streaming TV apps.

Enough with passwords

Passwords are difficult to manage, which is one reason so many are trivial to guess (“password12­345”, anyone?) and so many people reuse the same weak passwords across multiple services.

Yahoo has an easier way to sign in to its services. Using Account Key, you confirm who you are through a text Yahoo sends to your phone. Google is testing something similar. Other services tap the fingerprin­t ID technology found on iPhones and some high-end Android phones. A touch of the home button bypasses the password by confirming you’re the one holding the phone. We need more such mechanisms that offer both simplicity and security.

Getting along

Companies are getting better at acknowledg­ing their rivals. Microsoft, for instance, made its Office apps for iPhones, iPads and Android before tackling its own Windows phone system. Samsung smartwatch­es now work with non-Samsung phones, while Apple made its music service available on Android.

It’s a start. But animated photos taken with Apple’s new iPhones can be viewed only on other Apple devices. And streaming devices made by Apple, Google and Amazon typically won’t play video bought from each other, at least not without using a backdoor relay feature such as AirPlay. So if you have Amazon video, you’re stuck with Amazon’s device. Amazon even stopped selling Apple TV and Google’s Chromecast on its website.

Getting around with no internet

Google Maps for Android and iPhones now works without an Internet connection, so long as you download mapping data ahead of time. That’s helpful when you find yourself trying to leave a remote national park or an undergroun­d parking garage – both areas where cellular service is spotty or nonexisten­t. But the offline feature doesn’t work with walking or transit directions, so it’s not as useful for wilderness hikes or in many subway stations.

Speaking of maps, all services could do better at directing motorists to rental-car centres at airports. Typing in the threelette­r airport code assumes you’re getting dropped off at the main terminals. The rentalcar location might be miles away, perhaps off a different highway exit. It would be nice to see the rental-car location more prominent in map searches. Better yet, how about the closest gas station to refill your tank?

Oops ... I dropped it again

Motorola may have cracked the problem of shattered phone screens. Its Droid Turbo 2 phone ditches glass for shatterpro­of plastic. While the glass used in most leading phones is chemically strengthen­ed, it will still crack if it hits a hard surface with enough force. In testing, the Turbo’s screen withstood normal drops, though plastic does make the device more prone to scratching.

Sure, there’s a trade-off, but it’s time to stop assuming that cracked screens are just something we have to learn to live with.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malta