A Tip For Nandroid Backups - Hero CDMA General

Okay so this tip comes from personal experience,k before I figured out how to fic the problem that this one created for me.
So, I did a backup before I flashed a mod someone did earlier. Well, the mod did nto work, and it broke some stuff on the phone, so I wanted to do a restore. That was an absolute no-go. I got this error message:
(image link)
So, I got a little worried that I had lots bigger problems. Long story short, I was missing the md5 file that nand creates when it makes a backup.
TIP: When doing a NANDROID backup, verify it's completeness by pressing your "back" key on your phone once the backup is complete. Scroll to USB-MS and select it. This *should* make a box pop up on your computer, meaning that you have access to your SD contents now.
In the SD card, navigate to nandroid/(Hero Serial Number)/XXX-XXXXXXXX-XXXX/ and make sure there is a nandroid.md5 file in there, as well as 3 other files, boot, data, and system.
If any of these are missing, press "Back" hard key to close USB-MS, and do another backup. Delete the current one if you do not have enough room.
The xxx-xxxxxxxx-xxxx above will be a folder, mine's named: BDS-20100523-0334, which is BDS-(year)(mo)(day)-(time). year 4 digits, month 2, day 2, and time 4 digits. If you have multiple ones, choose the most recent one, which would be the nandroid you just made.

Nice tip thanks, I do have a question though.
I thought the whole point of having a recovery in the Hero was to flash roms regardless of what breaks, even nandroid? I mean if your nandroid breaks you can just go into recovery enable usb drive and copy another rom over?

Yeah you should be able to flash any Rom regardless of whether you made a backup or not. I am just saying, its a helpful top to make sure your backup completed properly in case you ever want to go back to your old Rom, in your case, or if you're flashing an update that says will work with any Rom, or your just testing the update, and that update breaks. Same goes with current Rom modifications that you may want to try out.
Long story short, if you know you night need to nandroid backup or want to restore if you're just testing something, be sure to follow the tip above. One more step to save you problems.
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Sent from your mom!

Related

Nandroid Backup Amon RA - v1.6.2G TIP

Sorry if this is the wrong section to post this, but i just had about 3hrs of "Did i really Jack this Up"... Not sure if this will go for everybody but its what i found out, a "Tip" i would call it.
If you have used the Nandroid backup (for safety) of cuz your like me and hate redownloading everything and customizing your home screens again, and you've ran into this error when trying to "Restore" from Recovery.
"Error: run 'nandroid-mobile.sh restore' via adb"
I did this and followed some steps online to do so, and then the boot screen would just keep reloading and never get thru...
Foundout, after you save your rom, and connect via usb to pc, and go into your "nandroid" folder, then choose the HT***** folder it will have your Back up, minez started with B******, i changed that name (i.e. manup - Eclair 2.1) so that i can easily choose which rom i wanted to run. well if there is any spaces in the "Name" of your Back-Up, you will get the "Error" listed above, i renamed the folder from; manup - Eclair 2.1 to manup-Eclair2.1 and then booted into recovery via device, and the Nandroid Restore worked perfectly fine, i tested this theory with two other roms i had in my nandroid back up and my theory was correct... so all in all, if you change the folder that has your "Back'd UP" info in it, dont put spaces in the new folder name.
my bad if i confused anyone it's lat. lol
Well, I guess I'll add on to this for fun! If you have low batteries, it'll say the same thing!
good to know, more info given the better
KAwAtA said:
Well, I guess I'll add on to this for fun! If you have low batteries, it'll say the same thing!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
sanman1185 said:
good to know, more info given the better
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Or if your sdcard is corrupted.

Nandroid and Restores

Hi Guys,
I recently bought my Nexus one this past weekend. I'm coming from a Windows Mobile fan(boy) perspective of many years. Not the hugest linux fan, but at least the base level of Android control is a menu and not "dev cmd etc" command line stuff
I like the Nexus one so far. I tried CompanionLink/gSyncit/Nitrodesk Touchdown/Android-sync(Alpha)/Remember The Milk etc, and they all don't sync Outlook very well..so I'm happy to keep my Winmo phone for its use for that, which is excellent and easier to type imho for that kind of stuff within a windows environment. Kind of like a Palm pilot.
As for Apple. I'm proud to say I've never touched one for years, until yesterday. I *had* to get my father a slidey smartphone as a gift, because they're awesome to see and navigate. Since he's not a big data guy I couldn't justify a nexus one, so a used iphone 3G fit the bill.
Hope i don't have to touch it too much tho!
Anyways, I thought I'd give you guys some history on where I'm coming from as an introduction and seeing as I havent posted on here in a few years.
So..regarding my questions:
*Nandroid backups Question
- A nandroid-ext backup will not occur, and will display the ADB Error if you don't actually have an extended partition on your SD Card, correct?
I was trying to do an Nandroid+ext backup, because noobishly i thought it just meant it would backup everything. It didn't work, and neither did the "plug it in the charger tricks" etc, or check if you have enough sd space. So I figured it was because i didnt actually have an extended SD partition. Stock 4gig micro SD btw.
A NAND backup worked after that.
- How do I check if my SD card has an extended partition btw?
*Sdcard/Nandroid folder Question
Are nandroid backups saved here in a chronological order?
Meaning
/first directory asfldkjsdafjs/
/second directory aslkdfjljds/
First is my stock rom backup?
Second is my Cyanogen backup?
Say I do a third backup (it appears third right)? Will it be my Cyanogen backup *plus* all my added stuff I've done since then? Like widgets, contacts, email account setups?
*ROM Recovery
- So as a noob I'd like to play around a bit. But I'd also like to populate my phone with backgrounds (sd card), contacts, ringtones (sd card), Apps (sd and main mem) etc.
Say I want to move from my current rom (cyanogen 6) to say MUIMUI (sp?) in a week. When I goto Bootloader recovery and select the Muigungui.zip, will it still keep the phone "mine" on restore?
Thanks a lot for your help guys! I hope to join the Nexus One discussions now too after this my first post!
Your Nandroid backups are named by date and time of your backup.
Every backup you make, backups ALL user-accessible partitions on the phone. That includes pretty much EVERYTHING, both system (ROM) and data (everything else). All the rest of your questions have answers logically derived from this statement, please use the required logic.
Your SD card doesn't have anything unless you made it - which is obviously not the case, or previous owner made it - which is also obviously not the case, since you had stock ROM.
Thank you Jack.
I understand better now.
On looking at my sd folder structure, I see:
sdcard/HT096P800012/BCDES-date-4 numbers
Does the HT096P800012 subfolder stay the same, or does nandroid add more HT subfolders in time. (just a curiousity question)
In the 4 numbers part, if I did two backups on 201001103, does the higher number indicate the most latest backup by the logic you describe?
also, some backup folders have nandroid.md5 as a file and some don't. What is that?
Nerdy questions I know. I do thank you for your help?
(PS: If I update my radio with a new one, that doesn't affect my phone proper right?)
The upper folder stays the same - it's the name of your device.
4 numbers are hours and minutes
nandroid.md5 is MD5 sum of the backup, for verification. Not needed for restoring, AFAIK.
Radio doesn't affect your phone in any bad way, as long as it's compatible with your OS (radios for Eclair were different from radios for Froyo), and as long as you're flashing it correctly, without removing the power from the phone when it's in process of flashing.
Thank you so much!

[Q] Need HELP with CWM backup/recovery! (MD5 checksum)

There are so many TUTs out there explaining how to install a ROM with CWM, and even though this is easy and works well, the actual benefit of using CWM is backing up and restoring a ROM with all personal apps/settings/tweaks.
I had a perfectly set up m-deejay Revolution 2.3 installed with CWM. Then I wanted to try something else and said "sure, why not. I can just make a backup of this and later restore it..."
...well, I guess not.
When I boot into CWM, select the restoring option, and choose the backup file that actually is shown to be on my SD it starts the process just to tell me after a few seconds that some MD5 checksum is wrong. That's it. Nothing else happens or can be done.
It would be extremely important if someone could help me restore this rom. (In it I managed to get cisco openvpn working, which I am not able to repeat in a new and clean rom. I would love to take a look at the setup!)
Here's what I use:
- Radio 2.15.50
- 2.08 HSPL
- MAGLDR 1.12
- CWM 1.2
- a folder "clockwordmod" with the backup inside (I guess/hope)
Help me and I will still be telling my grandchildren about your heroic deed!
Thanks to everyone taking their time to think about it in advance!
-cartonneexpress
Did you re-name the folder where the update is located?
If yes, then undo the change and try again.........make an other backup to check the format.
In my case it is "year" "month" "date" "time"
for instance: 2011-04-27.11.15.........i'm not sure how accurate the time needs to be, but try as close as you can, it worked for me
EDIT
...............ups, didn't check the date before posting......but still, should worke for others......

[GUIDE]HipKat’s Ultimate Guide To Everything Evo 4G.

The first thing I should say here, is thank you to every Dev, every tester and every member that helped me along the way, from the guys in IRC #Ubuntu that helped me set up adb on my Linux drive to the guys on #htc-evo that walked me through rooting an hour after I first took this phone out of the box to all the other members of XDA and SDX that have been so instrumental in helping me learn all of this. Especially the people that have run into issues and the people that have offered up solutions. If other people didn't make mistakes, I never would have know half of what I do.
ULTIMATE GUIDE TO EVERYTING EVO 4G
In the year that I’ve been on this forum, I’ve come to learn a lot more than I could have ever imagined. I’ve tried to pass that knowledge on, in various threads, and tried to help as many people as I can. I know there are a lot of guides out there, but I decided to write what I’ll call “HipKat’s Ultimate Guide To Everything Evo 4G.” For ease, I’ve added links to as many things I can at the bottom of this.
The most important thing I can tell you is to fully read as much as you can before you attempt anything. The developers are really good at listing how to apply their mods, Flash their ROMS and listing what does and what doesn’t work.
FROM THE BEGINNING
So you have your Evo, freshly rooted, and you want to know where to go next. Well, here are some important things you need to do first. I’m assuming that you’ve already installed the HTC-EVO drivers via HTC Sync.
In the rooting process, you most likely ended up with Clockwork Mod Recovery. The first thing you’ll want to do is update that to a better recovery. Clockward Mod, or CWM is not a good recovery for the Evo. More on Recoveries below.
Download the file from the link provided below. You’ll have to rename the file so it reads PC36IMG.zip
Be sure that you are not adding a second .zip to the file name (PC36IMG.zip.zip).
Place the file on the root of your SD Card, meaning not in any folders, but on the card itself. Power down the phone and then reboot by holding Volume Down and Power at the same time, until the bootloader, or Hboot, comes up. After a few seconds, Hboot will scan your phone, find the PC36IMG.zip and ask you if you want to update. Select yes with the Volume Button, and when it’s finished, it will ask if you want to reboot. Select no, and then select Recovery. If it loads correctly, you can Reboot System.
Once your phone is fully booted, go to Market. Hit Menu>My Apps and see if anything on your phone can be updated.
As long as you’re in the Market, download some apps that you will need in certain instances, as I’ll explain later.
Astro File Manager, Titanium Backup, MSL Reader, Terminal Emulator & GPS Status & Toolbox.
*Note: You have an expensive device in your hands. Don’t afraid to buy some of the more important apps, and Titanium Backup is one I suggest paying for. I’ll be listing some of the more important Apps you’ll want, and some are not free. If you pay for Titanium Backup, make sure you keep the text file with the license number on your SD Card/Root
Once you’re done there, back out to your home screen, hit Menu>Settings, scroll down to Updates and quickly update your PRL and Your Profile. I do this before every ROM that I flash.
Open MSL Reader and get your MSL and write it down, then put it somewhere that you can always refer to it. You’ll need it for various things, like resetting your GPS Data.
Open Titanium Backup and hit Menu>Batch> Backup All user Apps and Data. Only select the apps that you may have downloaded. Never any System, Google or HTC Apps. It’s pretty simple to tell. They’ll be the ones in White Text.
The ONLY other apps I backup are my Alarms and my Voice Mail. You’ll need this if you use an AOSP ROM to restore your Voice Mail Data, which I’ll go into further below.
After those have completed, and since you have a Stock ROM without the extended Reboot Options, power down. Then repeat the steps to get to the Hboot, but this time, after the scan, since the PC36IMG.zip is still on your SD Card, select no, and then go to Recovery.
*Note: I usually keep my USB Cord connected to my Computer during any of this. You’ll see why below.
TWRP
The best one to use on the evo is 2.2.2.0. This is a true touch recovery unlike the ra style. It does wipe everything correctly and has a decent user interface. Lets start with the down side of 2.2.2.0 which is it takes forever to boot up, there is no option to wipe the boot partition (but that has never been an issue for me), and there is no autoreboot option. Now to the goodies. You have the option to flash upto 10 zips at once, there is a file manager program which will allows you to move, rename, copy, delete files from all directories including the root. You are able to name your backups and for people like me who flash and nand and restore on a daily basis who can forget what backups are what. Yes you can rename in ra but only after you boot back into the os. Also twrp creates a md5 for each partition. While in the backup screen you can see the size of the data in each partition. So that way you are not trying to backup useless partitions like .android or sdext when you have nothing on them. Also there is a terminal emulation option for the advanced users. While restoring or backing up it will show you how long each operation takes.
Now 2.3+ twrp. While there are a few new options in this one it is not worth the trouble to use it. Almost all the code has been rewrote to c++ but also it is based on aosp jellybean. What that means for the end user is headache after headache. Most of your zips will not flash without being reworked. You have to change the update binary and rewrite the update script.
Thanks to jlmancuso for that write up
Smelkus' Amon Ra Style Recovery
I have to give it up to Smelkus for this recovery. It's incredible, really. This makes wiping very easy. Before flashing a New ROM, wipe Caches, Factory Reset and Multi Wipe, and you're all set! It's just that easy. Plus it will work with existing Nandroids made with Amon Ra 2.3.3. This is the Recovery to use! Use the descriptions below for Amon Ra to see what everything does on Smelkus Recovery.
Smelkus Amon Ra-Supersonic-4.3
Welcome to Amon Ra
Now that you’re in Recovery, you’ll see there are a lot of options. While you may use most of them during your time with the Evo, I’m going to key on just a few.
USB-MS Toggle – This will connect your phone to your computer so you can edit/delete/modify files on your SD Card.
Backup/Restore – This is where you’ll create and restore your Nandriods. I’ll go into further depth about Nandroids below.
Flash Zip From SD Card – Obviously, this is where you flash your ROMs and Mods.
Wipe – The most important thing you can do in Amon Ra, and I will detail how to properly wipe your phone below.
Partition SD Card – With the size of the newer ROMS coming out, you will want to do this. It’s easy and will save you a ton of room on your internal memory.
Scroll down to Backup/Restore. You’re going to create your first and most important Nandroid Backup. Click here, and then click on the Backup function. I believe that if you’re making a backup, then you want it to be an exact image of your current setup. Select everything, except Cache. No need to save temp files. Then, click on Perform Backup. You’ll see a series of Dots scroll across the screen. Since we’re assuming that you are freshly rooted on a stock setup, this shouldn’t take too long, but know that with custom ROMs that you have completely setup, it could take a while. I’ve had some take almost 15 minutes.
Once it’s complete, click on Return, and then go to USB-MS Toggle. Click on it one time and wait for the pop up on your computer so you can see the files on your SD Card. Once it pops up, click on Open Folder To View Files so we can make some mods to your SD Card Files.
Scroll down to Nandroids and expand the folder. You’ll see a folder named something like HT121HL07014. Expand that folder and inside is your Nandroid Backup that you just made of your Stock/Rooted Setup. The reason I said this is your most important Nandroid is because it gives you a base to return to.
1). In case you ever have problems, this will give you a base to return to.
2). You’ll need a Sense ROM to Nandroid back to so you can update your Profile & PRL. Something you cannot do with AOSP ROMs or on the updated 3.5 ROMS.
3). If you ever need to take your phone into Sprint, and you don’t want them to see that you’re rooted, you can flash back to this Nandroid first, so all the techs will see is a Stock phone. There is no need to ever unroot, ever.
Make sure you make a Nandroid of your current setup before you restore a Nandroid.
The name of the folder that contains the images made in your Nandroid will be named something like BDEARS-20110319-0037. The numbers refer to the date and time that you made the Nandroid. In this example of my Stock/Rooted ROM, I can see I made this on March 19, 2011 and 12:37AM. To avoid confusion, you CAN rename this, however, you must preserve the original name and there can be no spaces in the name. I renamed mine to BDEARS-20110319-0037-stock. Now, I know which Nandroid is my Stock/Rooted setup.
I also do a separate Nandroid of just the Wimax and store it on my computer, in case I ever lose my RSA Keys.
On your SD Card, you may find it easier to store everything you use to modify your phone in custom Folders. On mine, I created a folder called XDA. Inside that folder, I created sub folders named Apps, Drivers, Icons, Kernels, ROMS, Root, Themes & Utilities, so I can organize everything I may use to flash, modify and update my phone. You should rename the PC356IMG.zip file on the root of your SD Card by adding Amon Ra to the end of the name (PC36IMG-Amon-Ra.zip), and moving it into the XDA\Root folder, so you’ll always have it on your SD card.
This would be a good time to download the custom ROM you want to use along with Dark Tremors Apps to SD Card (DT A2SD) and put them in the folders you created. I keep DT A2SD in the Utilities Folder. I would also suggest you download the V6 Supercharger Script and ViperMOD for AOSP Kernels (Also kept in Utilities). I would also search for the RUU for your particular phone, in case you ever need to do a complete reset back to “Out-Of-The-Box”. There are 2 types; PC36IMG.zip that you run in the bootloader (which I prefer) or an .exe that you run on your computer.
Partition Your SD Card
I think this is the first, most important thing you can do after backing up your original setup and before moving on to custom ROMs. And it’s very simple.
Create a folder on your Computer Desktop and Call it Evo Backup or something similar. Copy everything on your SD Card into this folder. When you partition, it will erase everything on your SD Card, so you must back it all up.
When it’s finished, click on USB-MS Toggle to disconnect from your computer. Scroll down to Partition SD Card and click on it.
Since the Evo doesn’t currently support SWAP, you can use 0 for the Swap Partition. If you have an 8 Gig or larger SD Card, you can use 2048 for the EXT Partition, although 1024 should be fine. The EXT Partition is where all of your Apps will be stored on your SD Card. If you’re going to move your Dalvik-Cache to the SD Card, you may want to use 2048.
While this is going on you may want to look for a ROM that the Dev has said contains Titanium Backup, or if you ADB and you know what you’re doing, you can pull the app prior to all of this, and add it to the XDA\Apps folder, if you created one, in your backup. The actual name of the app is com.keramidas.TitaniumBackup
Once the process is complete, select Upgrade EXT 2 to EXT 3. Do not use EXT 4 On Sense ROMS. DEFINITELY use EXT4 on newer AOSP ROMS. Your SD Card is now partitioned and you’re ready to restore your backup and flash your custom ROM so back out, go to USB-MS Toggle, select it and copy everything from the EVO Backup folder on your computer, back to your SD Card.
Flashing A Custom ROM
The first things you need to know are the little variations between Sense ROMS and AOSP ROMS.
Sense is the bundled software package that HTC provides on your phone out of the box. AOSP Stands for Android Open Source Project and there are plenty of differences. For starters. Some things you need to do in Sense, you cannot do in AOSP, like updating Profile and PRL, as I said above. Also, some AOSP ROMS have problems with GPS and while there are drivers you can flash to fix that, they may not always work, so you’ll have to go back to your Sense Nandroid and use what’s commonly called the Sense GPSCLRX Fix. I’ll explain that process in a bit.
AOSP will provide a cleaner ROM with a lot of options and mods built into it. While it may be plainer looking, there are a lot of theming capabilities that you can use to change the way it looks. Custom Kernels for AOSP can have SBC capabilities, which enhances the charging method for your battery and usually AOSP ROMS get better battery life than Sense ROMS do, because of the kernel options and the lack of “bloat” that you’ll find in a Sense ROM.
Sense ROMS are sleek with a lot of “Eye Candy” and really cool widgets. The ROMS themselves may be heavily themed and the 3rd party themes are usually gorgeous. A Good Sense ROM will not normally have anything that doesn’t work, ie. GPS, 4G, etc.
I prefer MIUI, an AOSP ROM with excellent stability, very few bugs and outstanding built in Theming options. It also comes with its own backup manager, which works well for saving everything, including desktop layout and current theme, and a Downloader that will download the weekly Releases automatically.
But, if you’re like many of us, you’ll end up trying everything on the menu until you find something that works for you.
Many ROMS come with the Stock HTC Kernel in them, so may want to research custom kernels and download a few, add them to your SD Card and try each out until you find something that works for you.
*Note: make sure that you only use AOSP Kernels with AOSP ROMS and Sense Kernels with Sense ROMS. Also, and I have seen this happen, make sure you are using a Custom ROM that’s built for the EVO 4G.
If you are flashing an AOSP Rom, like MIUI, you may want to clear your GPS Data first. If you’re using MIUI, I highly recommend it.
Sense GPS Fix For AOSP ROMs
You must be in a Sense ROM for this
Open Maps; get a lock on your position.
Open GPS Status & Tool Box, get a lock on your Sats and then hit Menu>Tools>Manage A-GPS State>Reset.
Open Dialer and dial ##GPSCLRX#
In the popup that asks for your password, enter your MSL, then reboot.
When the phone is rebooted, Open Maps, get a lock; Open GPS Status, hit Menu>Tools>Manage A-GPS State>Download. Once you are locked onto your Sats, power down, the Reboot to Recovery.
You CAN mod your ROM before you flash it. I keep all my ringtones, notification sounds and alarms on my SD Card.
Before I put the ROM on my SD Card, I make a copy of it, I open it with WinRAR, go to System>Media>Audio Folder and I delete all the sounds in the Alarms, Notifications and Ringtones folders. No sense having them load into internal memory if I already have them on the SD Card, and when you setup your sounds, they will still appear in the menus. I also add Titanium Backup to the System\App folder because I know I’m going to need it soon after I get booted up.
On the newer Sense ROMS, Voice Mail is not always included, so I have added a link to the bottom where you can download it and add it to the ROM before you flash it. See below on how to restore Data to your Voice Mail so it works.
I use the backup from Astro File Manager to pull the Apk for Titanium Backup and add it to the ROM I’m flashing.
In Recovery, back out until you get to the main menu, then go to Wipe and select it. While many people will argue this point, it’s my experience that process I’ll outline here is critical in successfully flashing a new ROM and cutting down on a lot of problems that people come across. It may seem like overkill, but it will not hurt to be thorough, so I can’t stress enough that you do it this way.
*Note: Do not use ROM Manager to flash ROMS or Recovery. It can lead to problems. The only thing I ever use ROM Manager for is to fix permissions.
Ok, in the wipe menu, the first option is Factory Reset/User Data. Select that and when it’s done, go down the list and select and wipe each option, except SD Card: and Battery Stats (Unless you are fully charged). I wipe Cache and Dalvik-Cache twice then I hit Factory Reset/User Data once again. Now the important part: Turn your phone off for about 3 minutes. This gives the phone time to discharge any voltage and clear remaining cache files.
While you may see a lot of people use superwipe scripts, they really are not necessary when you have Amon Ra. You just did manually what those scripts do, and you can know you did it right.
When you’re finished, back out, and go to Flash Zip from SD Card, select it, go to the folder where you have the ROM you want to flash and select it. Some ROMS take longer to flash than others, but once it’s done, go back to Flash Zip from SD Card and then go to the folder where you put DT A2SD and flash that. I know most ROMS have A2SD baked in, but this will ensure that everything works and that you have the full range of A2SD commands and Options. Once it’s finished, select Reboot System.
Because you also flashed A2SD, your phone will reboot 2 or 3 times. This is normal. Also, since you wiped your caches, they need to be rebuilt so it will take longer for the phone to boot up. I would guess that if you notice a boot loop or the soft key lights haven’t come on in 15 minutes, then you’re stuck and you’ll have to pull the battery and repeat the process. I can say though, in the hundred+ ROMS I’ve flashed, I have never boot looped using that wipe process.
Once the phone is booted, don’t touch it. Let it sit until the screen turns off. This gives everything a chance to settle in and start up. Turn the screen on and go through the preliminary setup process. Once your Desktop loads Reboot to recovery, if you’re going to flash GAPPS (AOSP ROMS) or a custom Kernel, or do a normal Reboot, and again, once booted, let the phone sit until the screen shuts off. Turn it on, and setup all the basics; Display, Accounts, Sound, etc.
If you are using an AOSP ROM, you’ll need to flash the GAPPS file with VVM, which you can do when you reboot for the first time. Multiple reboots in the beginning of a new ROM help the ROM and Kernel settle in.
Whenever you flash a zip file, other than a complete ROM, make sure to wipe Cache and Dalvik-Cache.
Now Reboot to Recovery and make a Nandroid. This is your Basic Setup of your Custom ROM. In case you have problems due to mods you make, you can always come back to this point and start over. Don’t forget to rename it so you can tell which Nandroid it is.
I keep 4 Nandroids on my phone; Stock/Rooted. Last known Good Setup. Current ROM Base Setup and Current ROM Complete Setup.
Custom Kernels
Make sure that any kernel you flash is built for your ROM. AOSP for AOSP Roms, Sense for Sense ROMs.
A word about SBC. While there has been a lot of talk about the safety of SBC Kernels, I have yet to see anything that substantiates it. I have used the same battery since I got my phone, a year ago, using SBC Kernels and have had no problems or shortened battery life. I highly recommend using SBC when possible
Custom CPU Governors
Once you have a custom kernel installed, you can set the Governor to another setting other than the default.
Here is a great guide on understanding CPU Governors.
CPU Governors Explained
Restoring Visual Voice Mail
Once you’re finished, reboot to system and either download Titanium Backup or if you added it to the ROM, open Titanium Backup and restore your apps with Data. Do not restore Voice Mail. If you are on a Sense ROM, it will already be good. If you are on AOSP and you flashed the GAPPS file, go back to Restore in Titanium Backup, and restore just the Data for Voice Mail. Not the App. Data only. Reboot and then go to Voice Mail, hit Menu and compose a voice mail and send it to yourself. If you receive it, your Visual Voice Mail is working. If not, search the forums at XDA for possible fixes, but this method has always worked for me.
At this point, you phone is basically setup and tweaked, but there are some other things you can use.
Below is a list of Apps and Practices I use to keep my phone working smoothly. Some of these Apps are paid Apps.
QuickPic – The very best Gallery there is. Allows you hide and password protect folders
Wimax RSA Keys – Allows you to ensure you haven’t lost your RSA Keys.
AdFree – Eliminates those annoying Ads on certain Apps.
Astro File Manager – Backs up and restores all your user apps.
Battery Monitor Widget – Shows you how your Battery is being used in detail
Busybox Installer – Installs the version of Busy Box you’ll need.
Kernel Manager – The Easiest Way to download Kernels. I still flash them in Recovery
MyBackupPro – Works like Titanium Backup and a good fall back if TB ever gives you problems.
ROM Manager – For fixing Permissions, only. The last step in my Process of flashing a new ROM.
Startup Manager – This is like msconfig in Windows. Lets you delete certain apps from loading at Start Up
System Tuner – Contains a lot of Tweaks, including setting the Governor for your Kernel
ROM Toolbox - AWESOME program that does everything from settings to Fonts to advanced settings and tweaks.
Once I have everything setup, I run Startup Manager to clean out my Start menu and then Rom Manager to fix Permissions.
Then I reboot to Recovery and make my final Nandroid of my Complete Setup
Battery Life
Battery life is a major concern with the Evo. There are some things you can do to extend Battery life.
Do not use Task Killers, as these actually work against the built in Memory Manager that comes with Android.
1) Turn of Data, unless you need it, and rely on WiFi whenever possible.
2) If you have your screen on a lot, turn the brightness down.
3) Calibrate your battery. There are several methods, but this is the best.
Want to thank oneoftherabble for this awesome guide on battery charging and calibration.
As soon as I can find his profile, I'll link it to this post.
You CANNOT calibrate a battery properly in an hour. Or in two hours. And you certainly CANNOT calibrate a battery properly in 30 seconds by wiping your battery stats file. It isn't going to happen. No how, no way. Flame on if you want... but I know the ACTUAL truth about it. It won't be correct.
Second.... No matter how well you calibrate your battery, after you flash a new Rom or kernel or ROM/kernel package, your calibration is no longer valid. Period. End of discussion. It ain't happening. Every ROM/kernel package is going to handle the information fed to it from the VR/Charging circuit differently.
Third.... This procedure requires that you have PATIENCE to do it right. If you don't have that patience, then don't waste your time. But.... STOP whining about how your supposed battery life is bad! What you are seeing on your battery meter is garbage and not worth looking at.
Now.... here are the steps to getting that meter and battery calibrated as a working unit... as close as we can get anyway when you figure out the actual accuracy of our meter system.
1.) You want to put your battery on the charger and let it charge. At this point, it won't matter if the phone is on or not. We just want to get it so the phone indicates a "full charge".
2.) When the LED turns GREEN then you need to POWER DOWN the phone. Let the phone sit for a couple of seconds.
3.) Unplug the phone from the charger and WAIT until the charging LED goes out. ( If you notice.. this takes about 2 to 3 seconds. That is how long it takes the phone to discharge energy to the point that the LED goes out. That is only at 3V! Now, think about how much longer it takes for it to get all the way to ZERO!?! NOW do you see why I say POWER DOWN when you FLASH?? )
4.) Plug the charger back in. It does NOT matter if it is the wall charger or USB or a car charger. The ONLY difference is going to be a little bit of speed when using the wall charger. ( More on this if you want the information )
5.) Wait until the LED turns GREEN. Now, unplug the charger. Wait for the LED to turn off.
6.) Plug the charger back in and wait until the LED turns GREEN. Unplug the charger. Wait for the LED to turn off.
7.) We are going to REPEAT 3 through 6 until it takes LESS THAN 10 seconds for the charge LED to change from orange to green.
8.) OK... it is going green really quick now. Unplug the charger and turn on your phone. THIS is where the patience part comes in. You want to run your phone WITHOUT CHARGING IT until it shuts itself off because of a low battery. Personally, I do this by turning up the screen FULL brightness, turning off the SLEEP mode, starting up MX Video Player and playing movies until I get down around 15% or so and then letting the phone discharge down until it shuts itself off.
( INFORMATION HERE!! You CANNOT "completely discharge" a Li-ion/polymer battery to "Zero" while it is in your phone. The circuits in the phone will not allow that to happen. It will shut down when the voltage gets to a point that it cannot support the phone. In our case we get down to about an actual 30% of rated battery capacity when out phones shut down. So don't worry and hurting your battery. Well, you COULD kill it. Run the phone until it shuts off and then LEAVE the phone like that for about 10 to 12 months. The internal resistance in the battery will drag it down to about Zero in that time. )
9.) Now then.... Plug in your charger and make sure that your phone is TURNED OFF. I would suggest that you pull your battery and put it back into the phone. That makes sure that the phone will be OFF when plugged in.
10.) WAIT until the LED turns GREEN. Now THAT took a LONG time didn't it??
11.) With the charger plugged in... Start your phone INTO RECOVERY! Clear ALL CACHES and THE BATTERY STATS NOW!
12.) POWER DOWN THE PHONE. I REPEAT... POWER DOWN THE PHONE Now... let your phone SIT doing NOTHING for ONE MINUTE! This step is REALLY important. Your phone CANNOT start to re-write the battery stats file properly when it reboots from Recovery. It is still LOOKING for the OLD battery stats and WILL NOT start to re-write it until it has tried and failed several times to find the old one.
13.) Start your phone up like normal with the charger UNPLUGGED. Let the phone boot and run it like you normally would until the phone shuts itself down for low battery. DO NOT RECHARGE WHILE YOU ARE DOING THIS STEP!! And, do NOT run it like a mad fool like you did to discharge it the first time. OPERATE IT LIKE YOU NORMALLY DO. ( oh yeah... please, please, please... ignore what your "meter" is telling you right now. It is really not feeling well. )
14.) When the phone dies from low battery, plug in the charger WITH THE PHONE OFF and let it FULLY CHARGE while POWERED DOWN!
15.) When the phone is fully charged... start it up!! Congratulations! You have been patient enough to actually calibrate your battery, ROM, kernel and battery "meter" to as close to accurate as they can be!!
( round of applause here ) YOU DID IT!!!
If you have any questions or you have any ideas on other information that you would like to see on your phone, batteries and such.... based on actual facts and research, then PLEASE drop me (oneoftherabble) a PM and I'll get to work on it!
GAPPS
If you flash an AOSP ROM, you have to also flash GAPPS, which contains all the Google apps.
You do this is in Recovery, after wiping Cache and Dalvik Cache. This file contains the most updated Visual Voice Mail and is confirmed to be working.
GB GAPPS w-VVM 20111212
Jellybean GAPPS
Removing Bloatware
Now that you got this far, you probably want to get rid of the bloat that comes with the Evo.
Pretty simple, actually. Since you got and paid for Titanium Back up, open it up, click on Menu>Batch and scroll down to the bottom.
Under "Un-Install" click on uninstall All User & System Apps, click Deselect All, then choose the apps you want to remove.
*Note: BE CAREFUL!
Only delete the Apps you know are safe. And really, these are pretty obvious.
These are definitely safe, but if you aren't sure, don't remove it.
Code:
amazonmp3.apk
com.htc.MusicWidget.apk
com.htc.MusicWidget.odex
com.htc.NewsReaderWidget.apk
com.htc.NewsReaderWidget.odex
com.htc.StockWidget.apk
com.htc.StockWidget.odex
com.htc.TwitterWidget.apk
com.htc.TwitterWidget.odex
Flickr.apk
Flickr.odex
htcbookmarkwidget.apk
htcbookmarkwidget.odex
htccontactwidgets.apk
htccontactwidgets.odex
HtcFootprints.apk
HtcFootprints.odex
HtcFootprintsWidget.apk
HtcFootprintsWidget.odex
HtcMusic.apk
HtcMusic.odex
HtcNaviPanel.apk
HtcNaviPanel.odex
HtcPhotoWidget.apk
HtcPhotoWidget.odex
HtcRingtoneTrimmer.apk
HtcRingtoneTrimmer.odex
htcsearchwidgets.apk
htcsearchwidgets.odex
HtcSoundRecorder.apk
HtcSoundRecorder.odex
HtcTwitter.apk
HtcTwitter.odex
MagicSmokeWallpapers.apk
MagicSmokeWallpapers.ode
Mode10Wallpapers.apk
Mode10Wallpapers.odex
Sprint_App_Updater.apk
Sprint_NASCAR.apk
Sprint_Navigation.apk
Sprint_NFL.apk
Sprint_Promotion.apk
Sprint_Qik.apk
Sprint_TV.apk
Sprint_VVM.apk
SprintTVWidget.apk
Stock.apk
Stock.odex
VisualizationWallpapers.
VisualizationWallpapers.
WidgetDownloadManager.apk
WidgetDownloadManager.odex
You can also use ADB. If you use ADB, here's the commands
Code:
adb shell
mount /dev/block/mtdblock4 /system
cd /system/app
rm amazonmp3.apk
rm com.htc.MusicWidget.apk
rm com.htc.MusicWidget.odex
rm com.htc.NewsReaderWidget.apk
rm com.htc.NewsReaderWidget.odex
rm com.htc.StockWidget.apk
rm com.htc.StockWidget.odex
rm com.htc.TwitterWidget.apk
rm com.htc.TwitterWidget.odex
rm Flickr.apk
rm Flickr.odex
rm htcbookmarkwidget.apk
rm htcbookmarkwidget.odex
rm htccontactwidgets.apk
rm htccontactwidgets.odex
rm HtcFootprints.apk
rm HtcFootprints.odex
rm HtcFootprintsWidget.apk
rm HtcFootprintsWidget.odex
rm HtcMusic.apk
rm HtcMusic.odex
rm HtcNaviPanel.apk
rm HtcNaviPanel.odex
rm HtcPhotoWidget.apk
rm HtcPhotoWidget.odex
rm HtcRingtoneTrimmer.apk
rm HtcRingtoneTrimmer.odex
rm HtcSoundRecorder.apk
rm HtcSoundRecorder.odex
rm HtcTwitter.apk
rm HtcTwitter.odex
rm MagicSmokeWallpapers.apk
rm MagicSmokeWallpapers.ode
rm Sprint_App_Updater.apk
rm Sprint_NASCAR.apk
rm Sprint_Navigation.apk
rm Sprint_NFL.apk
rm Sprint_Promotion.apk
rm Sprint_Qik.apk
rm Sprint_TV.apk
rm Sprint_VVM.apk
rm SprintTVWidget.apk
rm Stock.apk
rm Stock.odex
rm VisualizationWallpapers.apk
rm VisualizationWallpapers.odex
V6SUPER CHARGER & CAR-O-DOPE TWEAKS
People have said V6 is better for Sense ROMs and Car-O-Dope for AOSP ROMs.
Car-O-Dope
Note: The Menus in ROM Toolbox have changed so look carefully before you start applying these settings. They are all there, just in different orders
This is a really easy tweak in that you don't have to flash anything or run any scripts.
You'll need to download ROM Toolbox and System Tuner.
In ROM Toolbox, click on Performance and then on Memory Manager
Use these Settings:
Foreground Application: 6Mb
Visible Application: 12Mb
Secondary Server: 55Mb
Hidden Application: 70Mb
Content Provider: 85Mb
Empty Application: 100Mb
Click Apply On Boot
Go back, and hit Kernel Tweaks/Sysctl Tweaks, then use these settings:
Min Free Kbytes: 4096
Dirty Ratio: 70
Dirty Background Ratio: 50
VFS Cache Pressure: 10
Make sure Apply On Boot is checked.
Then, open System Tuner
Click Tweaks, the SD Card
Set Cache to 4096 and IO Scheduler to deadline
Click Boot Settings, select Re-apply SD tweak and select init.d script.
Reboot
V6 Super Charger/3G Turbo Charger
Download Busybox Installer from the Market, open it and install Busy Box1.18.2. This is the recommended version for V6 SuperCharger.
Download the V6 Supercharger from the link below and unzip it on your SD card. I have the files on the root of mine. I have all three files in one zip, when you go to that link. V6 Supercharger. 3G TurboCharger and the kickass Kernalizer. The link to XDA is the original thread posted by zeppelinrox, which will explain everything you need to know.
On your SD card, remove the .txt extension from all 3 files.
From the Market, download Script Manager. Open it and browse to the SD Card, then click on V6_SuperCharger_for_Android-update9_beta_6.3.sh Click on Help then check Run As Root and OK. Then click on Run
The first choice you make is how fast the text scrolls. Use 0, and then enter. Next you’ll choose which option. I think most people use Option 9, so hit 9, and then enter. When it’s done, enter 27, to Exit. Do not Reboot yet. When it’s done, back out to the SD Card, scroll up and hit the .. twice, then click on Data.
Scroll down to 99SuperCharger.sh and click on it. Click on Help and highlight Run as Root and Run at Root, OK, and then RUN. When it’s done, back out and browse back to the SD Card. Click on KickAssKernalizer_Tweaks_Installer, Click on Help, then Run as Root. OK and Run. I select No when it asks about the I/O Tweaks, although I’m not sure if that’s the best choice or not. But seeing anything that says it can cause boot loops makes me want to avoid it. Once it’s finished, back out again, go back to Data, then click on 99KickAssKernel, and use the same settings as before.
Go back to the SD Card, Click on 3G Turbocharger_Installer and chose fastest.
Back out, and Reboot.
**Note:
Read the threads for Supercharger for updated files. I have gotten away from V6 Supercharger, and use CoD Tweaks, exclusively, however, I do still use 3G, which has been updated. I have the best success with Experimental 1 setting
ViperMod For AOSP Kernels
This is a very simple to use Mod for AOSP Kernels.
Download the file, and flash it in Recovery, then reboot.
Once Booted, go to Terminal Manager and type:
SU
Vipermod
Once the script runs, I chose 2, to lower voltages and then chose 3, to lower by 75mv
You can play with the settings to see what works best for you
A2SD
From the Market, download ASDGUI. Open it and select Zipalign. Close the app and Open Terminal Emulator.
Type:
SU
A2SD check.
Once it’s done, Type:
SU
A2SD CacheSD
This will move the Dalvik-Cache to the EXT 3 Partition on your SD Card, opening up a LOT of room on your internal memory. Mine was over 200MB.
Once it’s finished, the phone will reboot and because of the new Dalvik-Cache, it will take longer to boot up.
Newest DT A2SD
Updating Radios
Radio Updates are released on occasion and having the newest radios is never a bad idea. Some people use different combinations to help improve battery life, reception, etc. you can read the thread below for possible radio combos.
When you update your radios, you should know that it is possible to brick your phone, if not done correctly. Some radios are in PC36IMG.zip form and this is what I prefer, but most in the thread listed are zip files that you flash in recovery.
Follow these steps exactly.
*Note: Make sure your battery has a good charge. I’d say over 50% is safe. Losing power during a radio flash will turn your Evo into a paper weight.
Boot to Recovery and go to the folder where you have stored your zip file for updating radios.
Flash the zip file as you would any other. The phone will extract the files, then reboot to a black screen with a green arrow. This could sit here for a few minutes. Do not worry if it seems to take a while.
Then the phone will reboot to recovery and say it’s clearing cache.
When the Recovery Menu pops up, you can reboot.
Newest Radios
Team Revolution MIUI Install Guide
Step 1. This is a MIUI ROM, which means GPS could be an issue, so the first thing I do is make a nandroid of my current Setup, then I restore my stock/rooted ROM.
Step 2. I update Profle and PRL, then I do the Sense GPS Fix.
You must be in a Sense ROM for this
Open Maps; get a lock on your position.
Open GPS Status & Tool Box, get a lock on your Sats and then hit Menu>Tools>Manage A-GPS State>Reset.
Open Dialer and dial ##GPSCLRX#
In the popup that asks for your password, enter your MSL, (You'll need MSL Reader from the market) then reboot.
When the phone is rebooted, Open Maps, get a lock; Open GPS Status, hit Menu>Tools>Manage A-GPS State>Download. Once you are locked onto your Sats, power down, then Reboot to Recovery.
Of course, I only use Amon Ra and in Recovery, I wipe everything, completely; Factory Reset., then each option underneat that, except SD Card:
Then I run Factory Reset again, then Cache and Dalvik Cache and Data again, jsut to make sure it's all clear.
Go to Flash, and Flash the Rom. Once it's done, go right back to flash and flash DT A2SD, the nI boot to System and once booted, I let it sit for a good 10 minutes, so everythign get's booted up and settled in.
At this point, I open LBE manager (Superuser) and set all my permissions to on and accept all.
I open Maps, get a lock, open GPS Status, and I already know I'll get a lock on my sats. Then I hit menu and update GPS Data.
Next is Connectbot, and I move my Dalvik Cache to my SD Card. Here's the commands
su
a2sd check
a2sd cachesd
The phone will reboot and again, I just let it sit for about 10 minutes.
Once I wake it up, I set my preferences, display, sounds, accounts, etc. MIUI ICS hasd a TON of new settings and one is the Status Bar Options. Hit Customize Statas Bar Notification and make sure Hide Notification is turned off. This will allow notifications to show up.
Once I'm done, I reboot to recovery, wipe Cache and Dalvik and Flash my Kernel.
The BEST kernel to use right now is Mason v0.14 SBC No FSO. I also Flash Vipermod.
That's it. If you use a different kernel and you have problems, this is the first place to look.
Upon reboot, I let the phone settle, then I open Titanium backup and restore my apps/Data. Now, I have had a lot of problems in the past with TB Freezing up when U try to restore all 117 apps I have in one session, so I do it in 3 now. I alphabetize the apps and then go A-H, I-P, Q-Z
Once finished, I open Rom Toolbox and go to Autostart Manager and make sure all the apps I DON'T need to be runnign at boot are toggled off. Then I set Car O Dope Tweaks. I'm one of the believers that Car O Dope is for AOSP, V6 is for Sense. I have yet to give Smurfs tweaks a run, but I plan to, soon.
I reboot and run Vipermod -50 in Connectbot, and then setup my desktop folders, etc. Then I g othrough any apps I need to set preferences for, Make sure VVM is working and that is basically it. Took some extra time, but I shake my head at the problems people are having that are almost alwasy attributed to shortcutting the process.
Almost all of the links and files anyone needs are on the guide in my signature
Visual Voice Mail for ICS
Follow this link. I'm on the MIUI ICS by Swiper and this worked perfectly!!!
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1547780
1. Download attached Sprint VVM apk, Install like any other downloaded APK
2. Using Root explorer, go to 'data/app' folder and find the newly installed sprint vvm
3. Select the VVM app and MOVE it to your 'system/app' folder. (permissions should already match because it was installed, but make sure it matches all other apps in system/app folder) 4. Boot into Recovery, Clear 'Cache'/ 'Dalvik Cache', then 'FIX PERMISSIONS', next 'Reboot system'
5. Once booted up, open the Sprint VVM app and click on compose.
The recipient will be '[email protected]'
Record about 15-20 secs just incase, then send the message.
You should receive a notification saying that your phone is provisioned.
6. Tap to compose another message and this time send one to yourself, wait about 5 mins and and you should receive a new vvmail notification.
The best part is, I never got to step 5. It provisioned on boot-up and I got notified of 3 Voice Mails I KNEW I had in there waiting for me.
I've included the app at attached to the OP
Bugs & Fixes.
• USB Connect - The two ways to fix this are with the app, USB Mass Storage in the market or the FTP Function is File Explorer.
• Camera only takes 3MP pics - D/L Camera ICS from the market and you'll get up to 8MP with Video Recording
• Theme Manager - There are very few themes for MIUI ICS. I understand that a new Theme Manager should be coming soon, according to the rumors.
• Music Player/Theme Sounds not seeing music folder - D/L Rescan Media form the market. Problem solved.
• Slow 3G/Data Speeds and Market Downloads. For me, after about a day, this fixed itself
Known Issues
No WIMAX
No HWA, yet
No Front Facing Camera
Useful Links
Amon Ra
TWRP Recovery
Smelkus Amon Ra-Supersonic-4.3
Dark Tremors A2SD
Newest DT A2SD
V6 Supercharger Original Thread
V6 Supercharger Newest releases
ViperMOD For AOSP Kernels
Download ViperMod
Partition SD Card
Download V6 SuperCharger/3G TurboCharger
Update Radios
GB GAPPS w-VVM 20110828
JB GAPPS
Car-O-Dope
Setup MIUI ICS For Optimal Performance
Newest Radios
With as much as you rant to people on doing ___, surprised I haven't seen you do this sooner. Well thought out.
What a read lol
Read all of it
Sent from my PC36100 using XDA App
teh roxxorz said:
With as much as you rant to people on doing ___, surprised I haven't seen you do this sooner. Well thought out.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks. It took me the last 4 hours to get it all in there!
HipKat said:
Thanks. It took me the last 4 hours to get it all in there!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I think you missed the 3G fix, with setting the proxy host and ports to 0 / 0.0.0 on a sense rom. lol
teh roxxorz said:
I think you missed the 3G fix, with setting the proxy host and ports to 0 / 0.0.0 on a sense rom. lol
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Ah, thanks! I'll add that and anything else people come up with
HipKat said:
Ah, thanks! I'll add that and anything else people come up with
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
No prob brah. If you talk about the recoveries, might as well give a snippet of the 4 available recoveries.
I'm gonna do that and other mods, etc in the 2nd post
HipKat said:
I'm gonna do that and other mods, etc in the 2nd post
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I accept your proposed idea.
I see. Good job.
Sent from my PC36100 using XDA App
Very useful I think for everyone and its awesome how you took the time out of your life to put this guide together. Good for noobs and experience people just in case they forgot something lol. If I may suggest, you can add some guides to themeing, bit more on kernels, and differences on sense versions. Maybe pointing people in the direction of android kitchens and stuff. But this guide is on its way to success for others! Great job HipKat.
Nice!
Great job! Wish a guide like this was around in the beginning of my noob days. My only suggestion would be to add a highlighted "SEARCH BEFORE YOU POST" section, maybe throw in that "Google is your friend", ya know show people how to use google for finding things on xda with examples, like - "dsxida kitchen xda".
This guide needs stickied..
Thanks button slapped!
Now...
Now this is a guide. I vote for a sticky!
Well done.
Thanks guys. I'm gonna add a bunch more stuff for after you get all set up, like what was suggested in the 2nd post.I've been meaning to do this for a long time, but I'm the worst procrastinator there is
hmm
HipKat said:
Thanks guys. I'm gonna add a bunch more stuff for after you get all set up, like what was suggested in the 2nd post.I've been meaning to do this for a long time, but I'm the worst procrastinator there is
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Sorry bro, but I got you beat on the procrastination... I'm still running XP on my 64 bit machine, I've had Windows Ultimate and Ubuntu sitting here on top of the desk for 3 months now..
Post it note..sticky... Awesome addition, bookmarked for future reference. Thanks HipKat
jamieg71 said:
Sorry bro, but I got you beat on the procrastination... I'm still running XP on my 64 bit machine, I've had Windows Ultimate and Ubuntu sitting here on top of the desk for 3 months now..
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Well you two procrastinators unite tomorrow and end it.
jamieg71 said:
Sorry bro, but I got you beat on the procrastination... I'm still running XP on my 64 bit machine, I've had Windows Ultimate and Ubuntu sitting here on top of the desk for 3 months now..
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Lol. .I have the newest Ubuntu sitting here for a month and still haven't installed it! lol
Still reading through this, but wish I'd had this when I first rooted my phone! Thanks for the work!
Sent from my PC36100 using XDA App

Nook Color Tools--a warning!

I should know better, but how many times have you said that to yourself?
Whilst investigating the Nook Color Tools app (which I had never bothered with before) in order to get an alternate keyboard working, I managed to reset my NST
I have a backup from January of this year, but a lot has happened since then. Anyway, at least I have something to fall back on. The incident occurred when I was looking at the multiple "Settings" entries under "All Settings". One of those is a killer.
I'm sure there are safer ways to switch the keyboard out but I didn't look for them, so shame on me.
Me too! Did this yesterday but I had just rooted so I simply inserted the SD card and re-rooted it. I did have to sign in to B&N again though. All user settings and customizations were lost.
I clicked the second "Settings" menu item and it reset. The first "Settings" item was fine.
Off topic:
Yes. It's important to boot into NookManager and backup regularly when messing around. Also REMEMBER TO COPY THE BACKUPS TO YOUR PC or they will be overwritten by the new backups. (Connect the Nook via USB while booted into NookManager. Then you'll see the extra drive letter, on the PC, where the backup is stored.)
You might be able to rename the backups on the SD card so they're not overwritten but I believe you'd still have to connect to the PC to rename them first before restoring. Am I correct or do the renamed files show up in a list? (I'll try it later and report back.)
gggirlgeek said:
You might be able to rename the backups on the SD card so they're not overwritten but I believe you'd still have to connect to the PC to rename them first before restoring. Am I correct or do the renamed files show up in a list? (I'll try it later and report back.)
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You may be able to rename files on the backup partition but NookManager doesn't have the innards to display a list of files for backups so you'd probably just end up making it mad. When I off-load a backup to my PC I put it in a folder whose name includes the date and add a little readme.txt file to the folder describing what I've done to that point. Then I just drag whatever backup I want back to the card after I've started up NookManager.
On the subject of NookColorTools... That app really has nothing to offer except the keyboard swap and much mischief can be wreaked with it. I've located a little app that just swaps keyboards. I didn't check to see if the keyboards have to be in /system/app to be recognized, but that's where I put mine. You can turn off all the status bar stuff in the app (unless you are constantly changing keyboards?!). Attached below.

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