Hi guys, sorry it's been so long but we're getting back to action. And I say we because there's a new contributor to the blog. A great friend of mine Young Soo Moon. Moon has had his fair share of Android devices, including a tablet so he'll have a lot to tell you guys...
On the last post I was talking about getting Android Open Source Project on my Xperia X10, it did a lot for my device but it was never 100%, never reached a stable enough state to make me happy about it. So after about a year with my X10 it was time to move on... My first choice at the time was the Sony Xperia Arc. It was a beautiful device with good hardware and arrived with an up to date version of android. But it wasn't to be... I went to my operator's store but the VIP section of the store wasn't available because it was a weekend. So I had to wait a little longer, and then in the following week I spotted this article on the blog from my operator (I'm sorry it's only in Portuguese), which means that the Galaxy SII was coming to Brazil and more importantly to my operator!!! By then the Samsung Galaxy SII was the best cell phone available in the world, I wanted it badly and on top of everything, being the thinnest, lightest and faster phone out there it had an UNLOCKED BOOTLOADER!!! In case you don't know why that's important having a locked bootloader was the biggest reason the X10 developers had problems doing anything good for it. So on top of being a top of the line phone it was going to be easy to develop for!!! In other words it's pretty much everything you want in an android device!
So two weeks after that I went to my mobile operator's store to get one for me. I still had a month and a half left on my contract so I had to haggle a bit to get a good price for it. I managed to get it for about U$200,00 which was pretty much my budget for a new phone so I went ahead and bought it. WOW!!! Was I impressed, the phone was ridiculously fast and looked great, the screen looked incredible! But it was riddled with bloatware, but now I knew how to make this device even better.
So I got home and immediately dived head first on XDA forums and found the ROM that looked to be the best one available VillainROM, eventually I discovered that pulser was a recognized developer with great track record on XDA already. So I knew I'd found a keeper. I installed it and then it seems I was too excited about it and forgot to wipe anything when I first installed... That was a big newbie mistake and it caused the phone.apk - which is basically the app that makes your phone a phone - to force close constantly!! After freaking out a bit I calmed down and did it again, wiping everything now, and this time everything worked great!! I had the best phone in the world running the best ROM available for it!!!!
Life was good, but nothing is perfect, one of my favorite features from the X10 was missing completely from the GSII, the notification led... And then BLN came... (Back Light Notification) but that's a story for the next post...
PS: In this time I've been away I got myself an android tablet the Asus Transformer Prime and still have my Samsung Galaxy SII and I'm looking forward for the next Samsung flagship device... http://www.tgeltaayehxnx.com/
PPS: I know it's a little late for the party but if you haven't tried Temple Run you should try it! It's a great and addictive game and it's free!!
Showing posts with label custom ROM. Show all posts
Showing posts with label custom ROM. Show all posts
Sunday, April 22, 2012
Wednesday, July 13, 2011
CyanogenMod for the win!!
Ok, so custom ROMs were not yet available to the Xperia X10, so I let it be for a while and went on to play with my Milestone...
As some people already know the Motorola Milestone is the international version of the Motorola Droid, the biggest difference being that the Milestone has a locked bootloader :-( whereas the Droid has an unlocked one...
For custom ROMs this makes a huge difference, first big difference is that Cyanogenmod does not support devices with a locked bootloader. And you really want Cyanogenmod if you're planning to use custom ROMs. It's the most popular custom ROM in the Android scene. It offers some nice performance and interface improvements. But not all hope was lost because of the best part of having an Android phone is that you have a great developer community behind it...
So thanks to Kabaldan and other great developers a port of Cyanogenmod was made for the Motorola Milestone!!
And as an added bonus Kabaldan's port was of CM (CyanogenMod) 7, which is actually Android 2.3 (Gingerbread)!! Now that I managed to get my Milestone to run CM7 the battery was better than ever, was incredibly fast thanks to the ROM and to the great overclock for the processor which made my measly 500Mhz processor turn into a 900Mhz machine!!
My Xperia was starting to feel like a bad phone, and it was sluggish in comparison, and it has a much better hardware on it! That just goes to show how much difference can exist when you have Android 1.6 (Donut) instead of the latest and much more modern Android 2.3 (Gingerbread)! But I wouldn't just give up on it...
PS: In homage to the MLB All-Star break (congrats to Robinson Canò for his Home Run derby win and the National League for the All-Star game win) here is a nice app to play a little baseball on your Android, is on sale and I like it a lot! Homerun Battle 3D. Hope you guys like it!
PPS: Thanks a lot for all the visits guys, yesterday there was a boom in the visits thanks to my previous post with the new Android Market app, if you didn't grab it yet go ahead and download it!
As some people already know the Motorola Milestone is the international version of the Motorola Droid, the biggest difference being that the Milestone has a locked bootloader :-( whereas the Droid has an unlocked one...
For custom ROMs this makes a huge difference, first big difference is that Cyanogenmod does not support devices with a locked bootloader. And you really want Cyanogenmod if you're planning to use custom ROMs. It's the most popular custom ROM in the Android scene. It offers some nice performance and interface improvements. But not all hope was lost because of the best part of having an Android phone is that you have a great developer community behind it...
So thanks to Kabaldan and other great developers a port of Cyanogenmod was made for the Motorola Milestone!!
And as an added bonus Kabaldan's port was of CM (CyanogenMod) 7, which is actually Android 2.3 (Gingerbread)!! Now that I managed to get my Milestone to run CM7 the battery was better than ever, was incredibly fast thanks to the ROM and to the great overclock for the processor which made my measly 500Mhz processor turn into a 900Mhz machine!!
My Xperia was starting to feel like a bad phone, and it was sluggish in comparison, and it has a much better hardware on it! That just goes to show how much difference can exist when you have Android 1.6 (Donut) instead of the latest and much more modern Android 2.3 (Gingerbread)! But I wouldn't just give up on it...
PS: In homage to the MLB All-Star break (congrats to Robinson Canò for his Home Run derby win and the National League for the All-Star game win) here is a nice app to play a little baseball on your Android, is on sale and I like it a lot! Homerun Battle 3D. Hope you guys like it!
PPS: Thanks a lot for all the visits guys, yesterday there was a boom in the visits thanks to my previous post with the new Android Market app, if you didn't grab it yet go ahead and download it!
Labels:
All star game,
Android,
Android Market,
custom ROM,
Cyanogen,
CyanogenMod,
Donut,
Gingerbread,
Home run,
Home Run derby,
Milestone,
MLB,
Motorola,
New Android Market,
paid apps,
Sony Ericsson,
X10,
Xperia
Tuesday, July 12, 2011
Now the real fun starts!
I've managed to get paid apps to work on my phones and I've got root access, now it's time to start messing around big time!
I've started really reading the XDA forums and started to understand how Android works. I had a Motorola Milestone with Android 2.2 (Froyo) and my Xperia X10 with Android 1.6 (Donut). The Milestone had stock android and was running smoothly, but the battery life was very bad. I had real problems getting through the day with it. The solution came from one of the greatest apps I know in the market: Titanium Backup, with it I could freeze and uninstall system apps. Freezing an app is a less definitive solution to uninstalling. It stops the app from working without actually removing it from your system folder, so if you have a problem after freezing an app you can just defrost it...
So I started freezing the bloatware that was installed on my phone. After I froze a hole lot of apps I've never used and some lame games my battery nearly doubled!! Now was time to address the X10 problems...
The Xperia was laggy and also had a bad battery life, but this time the biggest blame was on the Timescape interface, if sucks battery like there's no tomorrow!! So I froze a hole lot of it, the Timescape app, the Mediascape, and other pointless apps. But the one thing I froze that made the biggest difference to me was the face recognition for the camera, I never used and it worked non stop on the background eating away my battery. The full list of apps to remove after you get root access can be found here. Now that I have a much better battery life with my phones there's no way to improve it....or is there?? That's when I found out about custom ROMs...
PS: You can only freeze apps with the pro version of Titanium Backup. It's not the cheapest app on the market but you'll not regret getting it for a second!
I've started really reading the XDA forums and started to understand how Android works. I had a Motorola Milestone with Android 2.2 (Froyo) and my Xperia X10 with Android 1.6 (Donut). The Milestone had stock android and was running smoothly, but the battery life was very bad. I had real problems getting through the day with it. The solution came from one of the greatest apps I know in the market: Titanium Backup, with it I could freeze and uninstall system apps. Freezing an app is a less definitive solution to uninstalling. It stops the app from working without actually removing it from your system folder, so if you have a problem after freezing an app you can just defrost it...
So I started freezing the bloatware that was installed on my phone. After I froze a hole lot of apps I've never used and some lame games my battery nearly doubled!! Now was time to address the X10 problems...
The Xperia was laggy and also had a bad battery life, but this time the biggest blame was on the Timescape interface, if sucks battery like there's no tomorrow!! So I froze a hole lot of it, the Timescape app, the Mediascape, and other pointless apps. But the one thing I froze that made the biggest difference to me was the face recognition for the camera, I never used and it worked non stop on the background eating away my battery. The full list of apps to remove after you get root access can be found here. Now that I have a much better battery life with my phones there's no way to improve it....or is there?? That's when I found out about custom ROMs...
PS: You can only freeze apps with the pro version of Titanium Backup. It's not the cheapest app on the market but you'll not regret getting it for a second!
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