Summary: Still looking for an easy, reliable and extensible Alarm program that can specify what to do when alarm go off?
Requirements:
Android Phone
Arrived: Feb 4, 2010
Found under: Productivity, Alarm, Clock, Time
Requirements:
Android Phone
Arrived: Feb 4, 2010
Found under: Productivity, Alarm, Clock, Time
» OpenAlarm Description
Still looking for an easy, reliable and extensible Alarm program that can specify what to do when alarm go off? Want to toggle mobile network before bed time to save battery power?
OpenAlarm is your solution! In addition to simple UI and easy to use, you can even enhance OpenAlarm by writing plug-ins on your own!
OpenAlarm is a free, extensible and fast alarm application that works a bit like crontab or at in the UNIX system. Most of alarm-like applications on the market only wakes you up at the specified time. Sometimes, we want more. For example, I want to turn on the mobile network at 8am and turn it off at 1am to save battery power or I'd like to text my gf to tell her how beautiful she is at 9am every morning. Things like these should be common in our daily life, but I can't find a good application to do it. That's why I develop this Android application - OpenAlarm.
OpenAlarm Screenshots
How to Use
I've tried to make OpenAlarm's user-interface simple and intuitive so that you don't need to read an user manual before using it (actually it doesn't have one).
Add a new alarm
To add a new alarm, click menu>Add. Because it is a new alarm, OpenAlarm directs you automatically to its settings page. If you don't want to configure this new alarm at this moment, click BACK key. Still, only when all settings of an alarm are configured correctly, you can enable it.
Configure an alarm
To configure settings of an alarm, a touch or Center key on D-pad on the alarm item gives you its settings page. A BACK key submits your changes.
Tell an alarm what to do
What you want an alarm to do when it goes off is specified in Action preference. Touch Action preference brings up Action dialog listing all actions OpenAlarm supports now (Currently, OpenAlarm contains 4 actions and more will be published as plug-ins to OpenAlarm).
Enable/Disable an alarm
To enable/disable an alarm, you check/uncheck an alarm. If an alarm hasn't configured valid, you can't check it and OpenAlarm directs you automatically to its settings page. If an alarm was valid and you make it invalid (for example, by selecting no repeat days), its checked state will be removed when you go back to OpenAlarm's main screen.
If an alarm is checked successfully, it is scheduled and a notification shows up at the left-hand side of the status bar telling you what the next alarm is and when it will go off.
The system AlarmClock put a notification on the right-hand side of status bar without telling you the schedule of next alarm. Moreover, when AlarmClock is killed by Task Manager (not recommended by Google, but everyone does it), this cute notification is left on the status bar and it makes you think your alarms are still scheduled to go off. It is NOT.
When OpenAlarm is killed or removed, all scheduled alarms are canceled and notification is removed.
Delete an alarm
A long touch on the alarm will bring up a context menu with a Delete menu item for you to delete an alarm.
Auto-Snooze
If an alarm is ringing as follows and you ignore it 1 minute (Snooze or Dimiss?), OpenAlarm will snooze it minutes later automatically. How many minutes later is from your Snooze Duration setting. Besides, OpenAlarm does auto-snooze 3 times at most.
OpenAlarm is your solution! In addition to simple UI and easy to use, you can even enhance OpenAlarm by writing plug-ins on your own!
OpenAlarm is a free, extensible and fast alarm application that works a bit like crontab or at in the UNIX system. Most of alarm-like applications on the market only wakes you up at the specified time. Sometimes, we want more. For example, I want to turn on the mobile network at 8am and turn it off at 1am to save battery power or I'd like to text my gf to tell her how beautiful she is at 9am every morning. Things like these should be common in our daily life, but I can't find a good application to do it. That's why I develop this Android application - OpenAlarm.
OpenAlarm Screenshots
How to Use
I've tried to make OpenAlarm's user-interface simple and intuitive so that you don't need to read an user manual before using it (actually it doesn't have one).
Add a new alarm
To add a new alarm, click menu>Add. Because it is a new alarm, OpenAlarm directs you automatically to its settings page. If you don't want to configure this new alarm at this moment, click BACK key. Still, only when all settings of an alarm are configured correctly, you can enable it.
Configure an alarm
To configure settings of an alarm, a touch or Center key on D-pad on the alarm item gives you its settings page. A BACK key submits your changes.
Tell an alarm what to do
What you want an alarm to do when it goes off is specified in Action preference. Touch Action preference brings up Action dialog listing all actions OpenAlarm supports now (Currently, OpenAlarm contains 4 actions and more will be published as plug-ins to OpenAlarm).
Enable/Disable an alarm
To enable/disable an alarm, you check/uncheck an alarm. If an alarm hasn't configured valid, you can't check it and OpenAlarm directs you automatically to its settings page. If an alarm was valid and you make it invalid (for example, by selecting no repeat days), its checked state will be removed when you go back to OpenAlarm's main screen.
If an alarm is checked successfully, it is scheduled and a notification shows up at the left-hand side of the status bar telling you what the next alarm is and when it will go off.
The system AlarmClock put a notification on the right-hand side of status bar without telling you the schedule of next alarm. Moreover, when AlarmClock is killed by Task Manager (not recommended by Google, but everyone does it), this cute notification is left on the status bar and it makes you think your alarms are still scheduled to go off. It is NOT.
When OpenAlarm is killed or removed, all scheduled alarms are canceled and notification is removed.
Delete an alarm
A long touch on the alarm will bring up a context menu with a Delete menu item for you to delete an alarm.
Auto-Snooze
If an alarm is ringing as follows and you ignore it 1 minute (Snooze or Dimiss?), OpenAlarm will snooze it minutes later automatically. How many minutes later is from your Snooze Duration setting. Besides, OpenAlarm does auto-snooze 3 times at most.
Made by: yenliangl
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prince wrote...
thanks