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Google Android Communications Software

Google Launches App That Can Help You Track and Conserve Mobile Data (venturebeat.com) 46

Google has taken another small step forward in its mission to connect the "next billion" users with a new app designed to optimize your mobile data usage. From a report: Datally for Android has been in testing for several months in the Philippines, and now it's ready for prime time globally. To activate Datally, you will have to give the app access to many facets of your device, including giving it the ability to "make and manage calls," "send and view SMS messages," and view the device's location. But then again, any app that wants to monitor background processes on your smartphone will need fairly comprehensive access to the device.
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Google Launches App That Can Help You Track and Conserve Mobile Data

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  • Background app? (Score:4, Informative)

    by DontBeAMoran ( 4843879 ) on Thursday November 30, 2017 @11:06AM (#55650697)

    I'm not advocating a systemd scenario here, but shouldn't this kind of pretty basic thing be built-in the OS itself? It's just three big fucking counters... one for cellular, one for wi-fi and one for bluetooth.

    • by Tomahawk ( 1343 )

      Some of those counters are available (certainly Mobile Data used is available at the OS level, and you can set a warning level for it), but this app will allow you to view them better, and to control stuff. For example, if an app that you don't really use is using too much data, you can stop it using mobile data with this app.

      Google these days try to push out stuff in apps rather than in OS upgrades, as that way these can be used on devices where the manufacturers don't update the OS. Maybe system apps a

      • Some of those counters are available (certainly Mobile Data used is available at the OS level, and you can set a warning level for it), but this app will allow you to view them better, and to control stuff. For example, if an app that you don't really use is using too much data, you can stop it using mobile data with this app.

        Even my ancient android device allows me to restrict mobile "background data" on a per-app basis. What's the difference? What specifically does this app provide that does not already exist?

        • by piojo ( 995934 )

          Can you restrict foreground data? I can on my phone, but I'm not sure whether that's a core Android feature. Moreover, manufacturers may re-skin the OS to hide features like that. This tool may be a way to get around manufacturers that don't care about customer choices.

          Personally, I just avoid phones with defective UIs--Samsung, Huawei, I'm looking at you!

    • Re:Background app? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Orphis ( 1356561 ) on Thursday November 30, 2017 @11:22AM (#55650815)

      I'm guessing that it's easier to update an "external" app than getting all the phone providers to update their OS in time when making changes.

      Pretty much why Chrome on Android is a separate app too.

      • Pretty much why Chrome on Android is a separate app too.

        Or maybe Chrome on Android is a separate app because ... you know ... it's a web browser which qualifies as being a separate app and doesn't have anything to do with the core OS. There's pretty much no reason to build a browser into your core OS unless you're Microsoft ala "trust us it's too complicated to remove and we didn't put it in for anti-competitive reasons" or Apple ala "fuck you all, all your browsers are nothing more than skins and must use our rendering engine".

    • It's the apps that are the issue. My girlfriend had an appp that used 2 gigabytes of mobile data in 4 days downloading "ads"

      When we realized what happened the app was uninstalled and we had to disable all mobile data for 3 weeks until the end of the billing month. Do you know what doesn't work withouht constant data stream.? Basically every app

      We were on a long car ride and she played solitary.

      What Google and Apple needs to do is to start banning any app that uses more than 100 megs of advertisements a m

      • There should be a data limit PER AD too.

        And if everyone is forced to use plain static images then they'll stop trying to out-do their competitors with animated GIFs and javascript+canvas crap. That takes too much data and CPU, which drains the batteries.

        Force them all to use basic plain PNG. Most problems will be solved by this simple-to-enforce solution.

        • by gnick ( 1211984 )

          There should be a data limit PER AD too.

          Hallelujah. The biggest data consumer on my phone by far is 'Words With Friends'. Fucking Scrabble. Unless they're really inefficient about the way they store game boards, that's all ads. Hundreds of MB/month; a noticeable portion of my data allocation. I assume they're reloading the ads every time they're displayed because I don't see another explanation of why the same dozen ads could be so massive.

      • My girlfriend had an app that used 2 gigabytes of mobile data in 4 days downloading "ads"

        This is the VERY reason I wil NOT have an Android phone that I cannot root. Said rooting allows me to install/use Adaway, the ONLY ad-blocker for Android (that I'm aware of) that completely blocks ALL ads, both in browser and internal ads in apps. Adaway requires root as it modifies the /etc/hosts file to actually BLOCK connections to ad servers. Since I do not have "unlimited data", but pay the data I use, I refuse to waste that data on mindless ads in both webpages and apps. I can VERY well believe the "2

        • How about adguard? (https://adguard.com/). It uses a VPN running on your phone to block ads on android (same as datally uses to save data, which probably makes them incompatible with each other) It isn't free but it works great to block ads and also can be used as a simple firewall to block individual apps from accessing WiFi or cellular data.
    • I'm not advocating a systemd scenario here, but shouldn't this kind of pretty basic thing be built-in the OS itself? It's just three big fucking counters... one for cellular, one for wi-fi and one for bluetooth.

      Are you saying this feature does not already exist in Android? How is this app different from per-app I/O statistics already available in Android?

      Have always been able to see charting of WiFi and Cellular usage both globally and on a per-app basis over time. From limited screenshots and description looks as if this app is reporting substantially similar information to facilities having existed for years. What is the difference? Is there a more detailed explanation?

      It's not like anyone really needs a cru

    • by mspohr ( 589790 )

      This is merely an app which gives detailed access to the information already collected and which is currently available under settings.
      Interesting that when I was in the Philippines last year I bought a burner phone which had a similar app pre-installed. It was useful for monitoring my data access although it got to be a bit of a nag with too many alerts.

  • It seems like this stuff ought to be built right into Android.

    • by swb ( 14022 )

      Data consumption management could be built into any smartphone at the OS and allow all manner of functionality, from data ceilings, rate-limiting and calendar based data quotas.

      Any time I see a thing that could be done and isn't done on smartphones, my first reaction is that it must run contrary to what the carriers want. If people could use tools to manage their data consumption easily, there would be no overage fees and fewer people would be moving to higher data tiers.

      Smartphone makers see the carriers

  • by Anonymous Coward

    There, problem solved. 100% data saved on android devices.

  • ...the less I like it.

    Fortunately, I have an ancient Android tablet quietly rotting in a drawer. Maybe it's time I recharged it and figured out how to put CyanogenMod's successor on it.

    The reason it's in a drawer is I absolutely hated the way every app available wanted every scintilla of data on the tablet, plus whatever else it could trick or steal out of any device that e-touched the tablet in any way at all.

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • On dial-up times i used WWWOFFLE https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org] on debian. Was very convenient since had the ability to browse pages offline and when clicked any link not on the cache, saved for later retrieval.

      That and fetchmail + inn for retrieve mails and news, and also fidonet mailer, all on a crontab in the early mornings. In very few minutes connected a day had lots of content to use offline.

  • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Thursday November 30, 2017 @11:37AM (#55650919)
    "Google launches App that can help them track mobile data usage".

    There, FTFY. Also, every phone I've ever had has one of these.
  • Eat your own dogfood (Score:5, Interesting)

    by chrylis ( 262281 ) on Thursday November 30, 2017 @12:00PM (#55651109)

    In other news, Google Maps still pulls a megabyte of data when you open it to display a useless "what's nearby" panel that can't be disabled.

    Maybe start with cutting out data-hungry misfeatures in your own applications?

  • by Imazalil ( 553163 ) on Thursday November 30, 2017 @12:03PM (#55651127)

    Here's another idea for Google.

    Stop wasting data pre-loading junk in Chrome and Maps. If I want to find a breakfast place, transit or traffic directions, they are a click away. Same with Chrome's suggested stories or whatever they're called.

  • I watched the video to see what Datally would do (btw, I think the name is really good).

    To me I didn't see anything other than the wiFi finder, that I can't do already from the Cellular section in iOS settings, it lets me see how much data each app has used, and lets me disable apps from using cellular data if I wish.

    I'm assuming Android has some similar data/control pane in system settings, does it not?

    It is a really good idea to let users control this as it's easy to forget how many people across the worl

    • It is a really good idea to let users control this as it's easy to forget how many people across the world are still on very tight cellular data plans.

      Its not just the third-world, even right here in the good ole' USA, if you don't want to pay thru the nose for cellular, there are carriers (MVNOs) like Ting, where you pay for only what you used, at the end of the month. Their prices for minutes/texts are dirt-cheap, and data rates a bit higher. For example, 0-100Mb/mo = $3, 101-500Mb/mo=$10, 501-1024Mb/mo=$16, 1025-2047Mb=$20, and more=.10/Gb above that.. My bill averages around $30-$40 for my phone and the wife's phone, and I drive part-time for Uber, wh

  • by XSportSeeker ( 4641865 ) on Thursday November 30, 2017 @12:22PM (#55651281)

    Erm... to all the people saying this should be built into the OS - it is.
    This app makes visualization easier I guess, but if you are on Android, you can go into Settings -> Data usage -> (hamburger menu) Data usage control.
    From there you can choose what apps can and cannot use mobile data. In fact, you have 4 options:
    Allow - Wi-fi + mobile
    Forbidden - none
    Wi-fi only
    Data only (mobile only)
    Unless this is something that's available only on Oxygen OS (which I don't think it is), there you go.

  • I decided to try this today.
    Very interesting some of the programs that are constantly trying to use your data.
    The only problem is this app uses a lot of power! Normally I would be at about 45% power, just after installing it, and some other programs that were using data when they shouldn't have, I was at 2%.
    Interesting program, but way to power hungry for my taste.

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