Having been using a T-Mobile G1 “with google” for quite some time now, but it wasn’t until recently that I managed to actually make myself feel at home with the device.

The original wrap of Android that comes installed on the “with google” branded phones is pretty spartan, and only integrates Google’s apps.  This is understandable, of course, but I use flickr for photosharing and like to have access to facebook and twitter, too, and if they can be integrated directly into some of the other apps on the phone (the camera, for instance) it’d make my life simpler.  I like simpler.

Of course I’ve rooted my phone.  And I’ve played with the leaked HTC Hero ROM.  And it does everything I want, only it does it very, very slowly…so over several iterations of testing optimized Hero ROMs and flashing back to Cyanogen’s optimized Google image, I finally started narrowing down what it takes to achieve a happy medium.

I start with the latest-greatest (which isn’t always the absolute latest) build of JACHero (currently 2.63).  I install Open Home (I picked up the paid version – you should too) with the HTC Hero theme, the Glasklart icon pack, and Lock2 (haven’t paid yet, but it’s looking like I will).  I obliterate every last HTC widget from /system/app and follow that up with a good cleaning of /data/data, I set a security gesture, and remove the HTC lock screen.  I tell Lock2 not to disable the system lock screen, thus retaining my security gesture.  Clean off Quickoffice (seriously, will I ever use that? On a phone? Doubtful), make sure there’s no entries in /data/dalvik-cache for anything in /system/app or /data/app that has a compiled odex available.

Sync.

Reboot.

It’s all the bits of HTC Hero I want (minus the twitter widget, which makes me sad) — camera, People, Albums…and none of the lag and slow that I don’t.  Granted loading and switching out of some of the more memory-intensive HTC apps can still be a bit laggy, but that’s to be expected.  And it’s nothing like it was under Rosie / TouchFLO.

Now, the reason for using Lock2 is because once you remove the custom HTC lock screen app, whatever was open on your phone is clearly visible behind the system lockscreen.  If you set your phone down while reading email to attend to some other business, that email will be visible to anyone who wakes up the phone — displayed clearly right beneath the pattern entry field.  By running Lock2 when the phone locks itself, the only thing prying eyes will see under the security screen is the Lock2 interface.  Best of both worlds, though there’s an annoying extra gesture in the mix now…

The Hero build still has some issues, mind you – the LEDs don’t work, the camera button is useless, I still seem to miss an occasional text message, and I don’t know that bluetooth works yet, but it’s fast enough to be extremely usable and still give me the apps and integration I want, so I think I’ll stick with it.  BT is a non-issue for me, and other than the dropping SMS issue everything else is just minor annoyance.

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