torekp comments on A list of apps that are useful to me. (And other phone details) - Less Wrong

10 Post author: Elo 22 August 2015 12:24PM

You are viewing a comment permalink. View the original post to see all comments and the full post content.

Comments (32)

You are viewing a single comment's thread. Show more comments above.

Comment author: Vladimir_Golovin 23 August 2015 08:32:15AM *  1 point [-]

Here's the homescreen of my main Android phone (with some obvious apps omitted, e.g. Phone, Flashlight etc):

  • Google Voice Search - I use it all the time for setting alarms and adding tasks to Wunderlist inbox.
  • Google Fit - mostly for making sure I walk my 12000 steps every day.
  • Opera - I use it instead of Chrome because it's the only browser that reflows text when zooming in.
  • Wunderlist - an essential GTD app which I hate. I'm working on my own todo app to replace it.
  • Barcode Scanner - to grab articles from the desktop PC to the phone via the QRCode Chrome addon.
  • Google Docs - for work, use it all the time.
  • Kindle - I read all my books via the Android Kindle app. I stopped byuing paper books years ago.
  • Dropbox - I like to have all my files accessible to me at any moment.
  • Trello - I use it a lot, for work projects, hobby projects, self-improvement and Internet bookmarks.
  • Workflowy - Was on hiatus, but I came back to it recently. It's an excellent thought capture tool.
  • Evernote - for note-taking (all non-actionable reference stuff goes here). I use premium, PIN-protected.
  • Slack - an excellent chat for work.

Some of the apps I use (Trello, Workflowy, Google Docs) are in your "not used" or "second-tier" bins, but I find them absolutely indispensable.

Another point is that I use mostly cloud-based apps, so if my phone gets lost or stolen, I still have access to my data. The phone is essentially disposable.

Comment author: torekp 23 August 2015 03:19:47PM 1 point [-]

A lot of people like Evernote, but I need to write notes by voice. (My texting skills are lacking.) OneNote integrates easily with "OK Google", and I haven't been able to get anything else to do so. I just say "OK Google," then "note to self," then wait a second, then speak. But I don't like OneNote, because I can't seem to log in to the relevant Microsoft account to download my notes to my computer.

Any advice? My phone is a Samsung Galaxy S5.

Comment author: Elo 23 August 2015 10:13:24PM 1 point [-]

entering in voice is a keyboard-entry feature. Swiftkey has a shortcut to type-via-voice that is on the keyboard part when it pops up. I find it occasionally gets bumped but you would find it useful.

Comment author: Vladimir_Golovin 23 August 2015 03:36:52PM *  1 point [-]

I think Evernote should integrate with Google Now perfectly well. If Wunderlist does that, Evernote must do that as well. Here's an article that implies that this is possible: http://lifehacker.com/5992572/save-a-quick-note-to-evernote-gmail-and-other-apps-with-androids-voice-actions (and here's another one: http://www.getproductivefast.com/2013/03/google-now-voice-notes-to-evernote.html).

As for the text skills, try to use gesture typing or Fleksy. I prefer gesture typing on the stock Android keyboard on Nexus 5. If I remember correctly, Swype (the original gesture typing keyboard) is included with Samsung version of Android.

Comment author: Elo 23 August 2015 10:25:06PM 1 point [-]

Downloading the swype app gives you more features than the stock version.