It's smart, it's fully touch and S60 5th Edition-optimised, and it
can help you remember to get icing sugar for your partner while down
the supermarket. Now how many other bits of software can do that? Handy Shopper represents the archetypal PDA shopping list manager application, here on Symbian OS, but Ewan's been reviewing it and reckons that the code could form the basis of a pretty 'handy' project manager or to do list system as well...
"Epocware's suite of lifestyle applications have made the jump to
S60 5th Edition, and the enabling of touch in many of them is not only
smooth, but augments the functionality of a number of them for the
better.
That's certainly the
case with Handy Shopper. The remit of this application is simple – to
let you add to a series of shopping lists throughout the day so when
you do get to whatever stores you go to, up comes the relevant list.
Hopefully you won't forget anything!"
Epocware's suite of
lifestyle applications have made the jump to S60 5th Edition, and the
enabling of touch in many of them is not only smooth, but augments the
functionality of a number of them for the better.
That's certainly the
case with Handy Shopper. The remit of this application is simple – to
let you add to a series of shopping lists throughout the day so when
you do get to whatever stores you go to, up comes the relevant list.
Hopefully you won't forget anything!
Much like any
productivity tool, and you should be clear that Handy Shopper
definitely falls into that remit, it's all about trusting the
application both to capture all your ideas (which needs special
commitment from the user), and knowing that the information entered can
be recalled with ease when you need it.
Take those ideals in
turn and you can see that Handy Shopper is a winner. When you have to
add something to a list, you just open the app, choose the list and you
can speedily add an item from a pre-populated list. When you need more
coffee, just call up Handy Shopper and away you go. The hardest part
may be deciding which list to use – for example, I could add coffee to
either weekly shopping or office supplies. Handy
Shopper can ask you to suggest an amount you need, but for me this
application is about speed and jogging my memory, so I've switched this
option off.
The pre-populated list
is very traditional, and while there are some strange omissions (hot
dog buns but no hot dogs?) and some not so surprising missing items
(Haggis, anyone?) it is easy enough to add your own items, and place
them either in the supplied sub categories (such as snacks or baby
goods to pick out two) or in the “My Own” category. Once added, they're
always available and included in all the views, including the global
search.
Reading lists is just as
simple, as the list contents are always on view when you first click on
a list. If you've added quantities, these will be on show, otherwise it
defaults to '1'. Alongside each item is a tick-box, to keep track as
you presumably go round the shops. The tick-box is probably one of the
main beneficiaries of the touch interface, although you still have to
tap twice: once to highlight an item, and once more to tick (or untick)
the box.
Epocware have used this
'double-tap' method throughout Handy Shopper, giving a nice consistency
to the application. After a few days of use, muscle memory starts to
take over and navigating shopping lists becomes second nature. I'm
still not convinced that the search method using the big letter tiles
on the screen, and only showing the ones available (as in Contacts)
helps the speed, as you need to look for feedback to find the next key,
but as it is the method Nokia use, the consistency with S60 is probably
more important to an application like this than other methods.
Epocware are to be
commended for their shareware policy – Handy Shopper is fully active
for fourteen days from the time it is installed. That should be more
than enough time for anyone to decide if they want to continue using
it. I suspect that it won't take as long as that for many people.
Handy Shopper doesn't do
anything fancy – it does lists. But it does them very well, and effort
has been put in to make sue that any new user can get to grips with the
application intuitively from the first screen. It might not be a 'sexy'
application but it can fill the gap in people's lifestyle, and make
that life just a little bit easier. Can you ask any more from a
software tool?
PS. There's a lot of
code here that could be re-used to make a half-decent To-Do list
manager. Perhaps if I stare at Epocware long enough....
|