So now that I have a shiny new S4 to play with and it can use NFC tags, I'm wondering what (if anything) you lovely people have done with them? Along the lines of turning on WiFi when you get home and all that. Chaars!
Have you got tags too?
I've done nothing with it ever, other than accidentally try and scan my Oyster card or something.
I don't switch wifi off, it's utterly pointless to do so. Screen use is by several factors the greatest battery eater, wifi averages around 2% for me.
I haven't got tags yet, but they're easy enough to obtain. The WiFi toggery was just an example really, I don't find much use in doing it either. To be completely honest, other than making the phone switch between silent / loud and maybe having my WiFi info ready to be "captured" by a visitor, I can't think of other genuinely good uses! :?
I have one in my car dock that turns wifi off and bluetooth on.
whyyyyy turn the wifi off? It just means you have to remember to turn it on again when you get out (or have more tags to do it). Meanwhile it can actually assist GPS accuracy or something, while using piss-all battery!
Bluetooth for the car and pairing, that's pretty handy though, I'd like that. My problem is sometimes I want the work phone to pair and sometimes my phone, so I can't automate it as far as I know.
The biggest reason is this: Join an open network called linksys, then drive around with your wifi on. Your phone jumps on a fuck ton of networks and messes up your data connection. It's a pain in the ass!
why would I join an open network called that? But if you do then fair enough!
Mostly because people who don't have a clue don't secure their networks and when I'm in a pinch and need internet I join them.
Also, is it just me or are people finally securing their networks? Or more likely, getting them supplied that way by default. I can count exactly 20 wireless networks sitting here in my living room, including mine. Only two of them are open and they're both BTWifi which I think is that shared thing that's meant to be open.
Must be different for the US then - where I am people don't leave them open much and if I'm in a pinch I've got HSPA/3G/whatever.