A general observation on Tasker: when I first got it (a few years ago) I thought I’d use it for all sorts of things. In reality, whenever I set something up in Tasker, it’s usually either superseded by a more appropriate service or app a few months later, or broken by security fixes in subsequent versions of Android.
None of them were that important, really. They were more customisations to how I wanted the device to work. “Make sure GPS is turned on when Maps is turned on” sort of thing (which you now can’t do without rooting the device and jumping through a few hoops, so I just turn it on manually these days).
I had some stuff to conserve and report on battery consumption, which now has a zillion different apps. I also had some location-based contexts and automatic email actions which are now handled by IFTTT. It’s easy to forget how rudimentary smartphone apps and services were, even just a few years ago.
Made the phone report it’s location if you texted it the password. Security updates added hoops to jump through, and FindMyDroid came out for free with all the functionality.
Made the phone autoplay music when headphones were plugged in. I stopped needing these when I got a new car with a bluetooth stereo and stopped using the aux plug in.
Made the phone report it’s location if you texted it the password. Security updates added hoops to jump through, and FindMyDroid came out for free with all the functionality.
Thank you kind stranger for showing me something new. I’m glad to have learnt that.
But to paint the full picture, I used that location password to find my lost phone very rarely. It was mostly used during festivals, conventions, and travelling so that my friends and co-travelers could easily find me. People are uncomfortable adopting it, but it is a real easy fix to the ‘I’m here, where are you?’ coordination problem.
A general observation on Tasker: when I first got it (a few years ago) I thought I’d use it for all sorts of things. In reality, whenever I set something up in Tasker, it’s usually either superseded by a more appropriate service or app a few months later, or broken by security fixes in subsequent versions of Android.
What are the most important things you replaced with other apps?
None of them were that important, really. They were more customisations to how I wanted the device to work. “Make sure GPS is turned on when Maps is turned on” sort of thing (which you now can’t do without rooting the device and jumping through a few hoops, so I just turn it on manually these days).
I had some stuff to conserve and report on battery consumption, which now has a zillion different apps. I also had some location-based contexts and automatic email actions which are now handled by IFTTT. It’s easy to forget how rudimentary smartphone apps and services were, even just a few years ago.
Made the phone report it’s location if you texted it the password. Security updates added hoops to jump through, and FindMyDroid came out for free with all the functionality.
Made the phone autoplay music when headphones were plugged in. I stopped needing these when I got a new car with a bluetooth stereo and stopped using the aux plug in.
Even without an App there’s also the Android Device Manager.
Thank you kind stranger for showing me something new. I’m glad to have learnt that.
But to paint the full picture, I used that location password to find my lost phone very rarely. It was mostly used during festivals, conventions, and travelling so that my friends and co-travelers could easily find me. People are uncomfortable adopting it, but it is a real easy fix to the ‘I’m here, where are you?’ coordination problem.