Android's New Instant Hotspot Feature Won't Be Available on Samsung Devices (androidauthority.com) 64
Mishaal Rahman, reporting for AndroidAuthority: Google just unveiled its latest Android Feature Drop earlier today, and it's one of the most exciting feature drops I can remember. The two features I'm most excited about are part of Play Services's new Cross-Device Services module, which brings some Apple Continuity-style magic to your Android devices. For example, the new Instant Hotspot feature lets you connect your Android tablet or Chromebook to your phone's hotspot with a single tap. Instant Hotspot works with phones running Android 11 or newer, with one notable exception: Samsung devices. According to Google, Instant Hotspot will not be available on any Samsung devices. [...] It's not clear exactly why Instant Hotspot isn't available on Samsung devices. The feature is part of Google Play Services, which is available on all Google-certified Android devices, including those from Samsung. It's likely that Samsung opted out of this particular feature, perhaps to encourage users to buy devices within their ecosystem.
Re: That's fine (Score:5, Funny)
Found the Microsoft Surface user. :)
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Ironically it's the Samsungs that suck beyond belief. Surface Pros got actually perfectly fine no-drama devices ever since the bigger form factor and nicer screen (Surface Pro 4?). 5 was the one called only "Pro" and I have it as a workhorse since 2017. Just handles even multiple external monitors as a regular PC, and it works well as a tablet (oh, Windows and touch what a disaster ... there isn't that much to it, and ergonomically the Surface kickstand is something shockingly practical and absolutely NOT c
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Like for most other tablets media consumption, I might have scored thousands of movie hours on that thing (maybe I should've kept count and consider myself an expert in that after 10k hours). Ironically the contemporary Samsung Tab S3 was unbelievably awful for movies, despite having just about the best AMOLED screen humans made for any portables - not because of the screen itself but because of how the OS was tuned (and of course being Android completely locked down so you couldn't tune anything https://xd [xdaforums.com]
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While I have used one in the past for events at bars, no.
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Just buy an Ipad like a normal person that doesn't hate the environment and doesn't like burning money.
Somebody forgot to take their meds.
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iPads are literally the worst of the worst. Samsung tablets are, sadly, better than Apple's, but not by much.
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Just buy an Ipad like a normal person that doesn't hate the environment and doesn't like burning money.
Somebody forgot to take their meds.
Having a Samsung tablet and in iPad, I gotta say if I had to choose one, it would be the iPad. Only reason we keep the Samsung around is it has one game the SO likes. But the iPod has better sound, better connectivity, better screen, better touch and gets updates - I guess Android devices are so perfect, they never need updates.
Anyhow, if you prefer the Samsungs, that's cool.
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I take issue with:
"normal person" - like people who use Android tablets are some sort of weirdos. They are not.
"hating the environment" if you buy a non-apple device. How does their repairability score fare, again? Hint: not very good. https://www.ifixit.com/repaira... [ifixit.com]
"burning money" - I just checked, iPads are consistently more expensive than any of their their Android counterparts. Surface devices are arguably more expensive, but that's a different story.
It happens that all my mobile phones were Samsung s
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I take issue with: "normal person" - like people who use Android tablets are some sort of weirdos. They are not. "hating the environment" if you buy a non-apple device. How does their repairability score fare, again? Hint: not very good. https://www.ifixit.com/repaira... [ifixit.com] "burning money" - I just checked, iPads are consistently more expensive than any of their their Android counterparts. Surface devices are arguably more expensive, but that's a different story.
It happens that all my mobile phones were Samsung since 2014-ish or something (yes, I use the pen), but I have a Lenovo as ultra-portable device (the X1 which can turn into a tablet). No tablets, because I don't see their point.
If the Android system is everything you've ever wanted, and if a critical metric for you is cost - then you are happy with Android - and that's cool.
On the other hand, people like myself do a sort of calculation. If my Apple product costs say 500 dollars more than an Android or Windows, and I keep it 6 years, I've spent very little a day more for it - like 28 cents. And I really don't spend 500 dollars more, I just pulled that number out of my hat (some might say my ass)
That's assuming that I kept my
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My Lenovo X1 is made in 2020, still going strong. Yes, I upgraded the OS to W11 (for no particular reason) and it's amazingly snappy for a low-power 2c4t CPU. It's on 24/7 because I use it in my workshop to monitor 3D printers among other things. Windows 11 eligibility is a software check, nothing more, and it's trivial to circumvent. I actually sold a 2016 PC recently which I had installed a fresh Windows 11 on.
Only my phones are Android - and yes, I upgraded from my previous Note9 from 2018 to a S22 Ultra
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"Hating the environment" the Samsung's don't last long, don't get updates, end up in landfills. if you're going to use a device make it last. Ipads aren't reparable, but they are durable and get updates for a very long period of time. Ipads are cheaper over time because they don't break down as much, aren't obsoleted. If the initial price is too much buy a used one, you'll still get m
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You can root most Android devices to make them do whatever the hell you want them to do.
I was using an old Samsung S7 as a wireless USB-based surveillance camera with no rooting, just for fun.
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My 2+ year old samsung shitter tablet that I use as a remote keyboard for some shit here still bitches almost every month that it wants to do yet another update. I can't wait until samsung stops supporting it just so I won't have to reboot the god damn thing every time I turn around.
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My 2+ year old samsung shitter tablet that I use as a remote keyboard for some shit here still bitches almost every month that it wants to do yet another update. I can't wait until samsung stops supporting it just so I won't have to reboot the god damn thing every time I turn around.
I haven't received or been offered an update for several years now. If they are updating you every month, that's a great thing.
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I gotta say if I had to choose one, it would be the iPad.
I say that as an Android phone user. Nobody seems to make any Android tablets that aren't either trash or more expensive than an iPad.
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It's odd you would say that the screen is better on the iPad. Is it a cheap Samsung tablet?
Samsung actually make a lot of the screens that Apple use, and have probably the best AMOLED tech while Apple is still stuck on LCD panels for iPads.
Samsung do tend to come by default configured for somewhat saturated colours, but they usually have a "natural" mode that gives accurate ones, along with AMOLED levels of contrast and backness.
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It's odd you would say that the screen is better on the iPad. Is it a cheap Samsung tablet?
Samsung actually make a lot of the screens that Apple use, and have probably the best AMOLED tech while Apple is still stuck on LCD panels for iPads.
Samsung do tend to come by default configured for somewhat saturated colours, but they usually have a "natural" mode that gives accurate ones, along with AMOLED levels of contrast and backness.
It's a few years old, the wife's iPad is new.
Or I could just be wrong.
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I have to agree, my former phone was Huawei, the current one is Motorola and I found both of them better than Samsung counterparts. Saw some Samsung devices in the family and they suck: battery life, UI customization, connectivity. They might have better cameras and maybe rounded edges, but that's all.
Instant hotspot is very useful on Macs (Score:3)
For many years I remained strictly an Android user. As a heavy user of the hotspot feature, one day I experienced how good the hotspot function was in the Apple world. I grudgingly then switched to the Apple ecosystem. Now that I have been using it for some time, you couldn't pay me to go back.
It is quite surprising that the Android phones and Windows laptops have not been able to replicate the excellent hotspot experience of Apple for more than a decade. And even this announcement only covers Google devices and not Windows laptops.
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For many years I remained strictly an Android user. As a heavy user of the hotspot feature, one day I experienced how good the hotspot function was in the Apple world. I grudgingly then switched to the Apple ecosystem. Now that I have been using it for some time, you couldn't pay me to go back.
It is quite surprising that the Android phones and Windows laptops have not been able to replicate the excellent hotspot experience of Apple for more than a decade. And even this announcement only covers Google devices and not Windows laptops.
I use my iPhone hotspot all the time. Definitely works better than either my Android or Windows hotspots.
But srsly, the Apple Mac/iPad/iPhone/watch ecosystem is damn nice. Even in the car. And the similar Android offerings all seem kinda kludgy.
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What is the difference for you?
On my Android device and my iOS device: hot spots work exactly the same.
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What is the difference for you? On my Android device and my iOS device: hot spots work exactly the same.
Not connecting, or dropping out.
Re:Instant hotspot is very useful on Macs (Score:5, Interesting)
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It just saves you the immense effort of entering the WiFi password or scanning a QR code. I think you can do it by NFC touch as well. This seems to be either using Bluetooth or going through the cloud.
It's nice but there are so many huge advantages to Android that such a minor inconvenience isn't going to make me switch.
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If you connect via USB and install iTunes on Windows, it will have a driver to connect to the hotspot through a virtual USB ethernet interface. While I get that wired is better than wireless, you're still connecting to an imperfect carrier cellular connection over a very short distance either way.
If you use an Apple laptop, you do get to see the cell signal strength from the WiFi dropdown no matter whether you are connected USB or over WiFi. It's not a huge selling point.
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What's so good about the Apple hotspot? I just turn on the hotspot on my Android phone with the button, and that's it, unless the device is new, then I have to add the SSID on the new device.
I guess that for some people digging out their phone, unlocking it, and turning on the hotspot is too much trouble. And as an occasional hotspot user, I kinda get that.
My phone's hotspot turns itself off fairly soon after it no longer has anything connected to it. So if I'm switching my laptop between local-WiFi-which-is-a-bit-dodgy and my phone's hotspot - which I did recently while we were on vacation and I was already approaching my phone's 10 gig limit - turning the hotspot back on repeatedly gets prett
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What's so good about the Apple hotspot? I just turn on the hotspot on my Android phone with the button, and that's it, unless the device is new, then I have to add the SSID on the new device.
Exactly. I don't see the point of this "feature." It seems to be as useful as Amazon's "one-click" ordering, which I never use. For people who think a one-click feature is useful, I wonder if they would prefer an AI-based "zero-click" feature?
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It can be added to the control center, which is also a swipe and a tap away.
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It is the same on Apple, facepalm.
Re:Instant hotspot is very useful on Macs (Score:5, Interesting)
I am genuinely curious. What is easier than finding your hotspot in the list of wifi networks and then connecting to it (or automatically connecting to it when it is a saved wifi profile?)
I am not really seeing the inconvenience factor here.
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It sounds like the only difference is that it can pull the hotspot password from the phone automatically, which only matters on first time setup. I don't know why I would care if this isn't available on Samsung devices or even Google Pixel devices.
Re:Instant hotspot is very useful on Macs (Score:5, Insightful)
I've no idea about apple right now, but current android hotspot is literally draw down the top menu and tap hotspot.
That's it.
Literally any modern device, including apple devices can just automatically connect to it when they see it, so long as their scanning is on.
Does apple have a dedicated hardware button for hotspot or something?
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This appears to be for the first time you use it. You can connect to the other device without having to select the access point and enter the password.
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... Ok, so the problem is clicking the hotspot name and entering a password once? That is the awfulness of the hotspot experience?
Oh my god, Apple's devices are fucking trash then. You have to do just that when you log into the device for the first time!
Re:Instant hotspot is very useful on Macs (Score:4, Funny)
Hello linuxguy, it appears your account has been hacked.
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I was an iPhone user for a decade. If I could get real firefox with plugins, a headphone jack, and a fingerprint scanner, I'd switch back in a heartbeat. The fingerprint scanner is kind of negotiable I guess, but faceID sucks when you are wearing a respirator and safety googles.
Artificial crippling (Score:2)
And this is yet another reason why artificial crippling should be illegal. It's one thing to not support a feature do to no expenditure for funds to do so. It's something completely different for a manufacturer to remain in control of a device you own and actively take action to stop you from doing things with your own device or using whatever feature, software, or company you choose to use or do business after you own the device.
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Samsung has this feature already (Score:1)
https://www.sammyfans.com/2020/11/03/how-to-use-auto-hotspot-in-samsung// [sammyfans.com]
but agree, it's only working between Galaxy devices and the reason they opted out of Googles feature is probably to keep users in their walled garden.
Instant Hotspot with Tasker (Score:2)
I have my phone set up with Tasker to automatically turn on the hotspot when it detects a Bluetooth connection to my car's Android head unit, which the head unit then automatically connects to. It's seamless. And after the Bluetooth connection has been gone for five minutes, Tasker turns off the hotspot.
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Oooh, good idea!
AP Mode? (Score:2)
Does Samsung silicon support AP mode?
Could it be that simple?
I don't play 'bootloader lockdown' so I don't know but among desktop chipsets you need to choose carefully if you need AP mode.
The sentiment in TFS is a good thing (Score:2)
I see the feature as utterly pointless given that devices I own will already connect to the hotspot by virtue of it being on. But the real kicker is that someone thinks this is exciting.
This is it, we've reached the endgame. When utter pointlessness is so exciting we've reached stable maturity in our devices. Long gone are the days of varying APIs, applications that may or may not support an OS feature. We just have stability now.
Actually, it's been like this for 5+ years already which is incidentally why I
Samsung hardware is nice but ... (Score:2)
because the level of surveillance is absurd.