[Q] Does this method work? - Nook Color Q&A, Help & Troubleshooting

I would like to know if the-ebook-reader.com/nook-color-cm7.html's method will boot off an SD card. And will it end up like youtube.com/watch?v=8OEli8s0UMk&feature=player_embedded this? I'm new to this stuff, and would love an explanation. Thanks in advance.

Short answer: yes.
Maybe I'm reading your question wrong, but what makes you think any of the info in those links is fake?
Or are you just asking whether he is running CM7 off the SD card (which he clearly states in the link that he is so that you can leave the internal as "stock")?

Long answer: The Nook will start to boot up and immediately checks for an SD card. If one is present and IF it has been prepared correctly, it will then boot off the card instead of its internal ROM.
Otherwise, it just uses the SD (if present) to store files for user programs (media, apps, etc.)
This guy is walking you thru preparing the SD card to boot into CM7.
If you want to use the Nook the way God (Barnes & Noble) intended, just take out the SD card and boot that way (or put in a "regular" SD card for more book and media storage).

so....It WILL turn out like the video? I just wanna make sure it will look/function like the video >.>

Yes. He stated off with his own wallpaper, but he shows the CM7 wallpaper halfway thru. You can choose whatever you want it's Android after all.

Thanks so much

Related

[Q] [CM7] "Problem Loading Widget" (NOT on SDCard)

Well, i'm a noob to this forum, and to doing ANY rooting/flashing. There, thats out in the open XD
Heres the specs:
CM7 7.0.3 Stable
Nook Color (Blue Dot)
ADW Launcher
Onto the issue! I have searched ENDLESSLY for a solution to this, but have come up short. Nearly everytime I power off/on or reboot the Nook, all my widgets show "Problem Loading Widget". The ONLY way to get them running again is deleting and replacing them again on the screen.
Let me explain some things I have done and hopefully we can figure this out. I am assuming, that it may be due to me performing this - http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1034939. Basically what that does is take the unused eMMC from the NC and tag it as the SDCard. The reason for doing that is because I don't have any ACTUAL decent sized SD cards and figured why not use the 5GB thats avail and unused on the Nook, and "simulate" it as being a 5GB SD card for apps and whatever else.
Nearly every post I have read says it has to do with having the apps for the widgets on the SD Card. Well, they're not, they're on internal memory. AND, if I do move them to my "simulated" SD Card, they don't even come up in the widget list, so that clears that option.
Also, since I had a Blue Dot Nook, I performed this - http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1094371 and partitioned to the old style NC.
I have tried and tried to find out where the apps, if stored "internally", actually are. I cannot for the life of me find them, other than the default Google Apps in /system/app, as well as the ones I have downloaded on the "simulated" SD card under /mnt/asec & /mnt/sdcard/android.secure.
Also, when I plug the NC into my PC, I see whatever is on my "simulated" 5GB SD card (which is really the eMMC of the device). Is it possible to view the root of the device at all to see ALL the files/folders on it?
If someone can solve this, I will be eternally grateful, in a totally non gay way atleast. THANKS!
Hey there....
I'm new to the NookColor and rooting/flashing Android devices, too (though, I did run Linux on my Palm Tungsten T3, back in the day). I probably only partially understand your woes, but it seems to me that your problem stems from the faking microSD thing. Maybe it's not so much that Android wants to put something in the SD, as much as it's confused, when it probes for orthodoxy. I understand the want to use the internal memory, instead of buying a mSD, honestly.
Again, I'm totally new to this, but reading your post and many other posts in the last 48 hours, I think I might have a valid solution: start over. If I were you, I'd do the following, which, incidentally, is very much what I'm in the process of doing, too. I'm starting from "blue dot" scratch with two mSD's (2GB & 8GB) in-hand, though. By the way, and if it's any help to you, I bought my Class 4 SanDisk 8GB mSD at Office Depot yesterday for around $15 (on sale?).
1. Buy a microSD card.
2. Image the card with ClockworkMod.
3. Install TitaniumBackup Free.
4. Backup all of your apps/stuff to the microSD card with TitaniumBackup.
5. Save an image of your current setup with ClockworkMod (booting from mSD, backing up to mSD)
6. Repartition to the old (pre-"blue-dot") scheme, again, using the first mrm3.net link below as a guide.
7. Install the latest CM7 Nightly for "encore"...
8. Save an image of your current setup with ClockworkMod (booting from mSD, backing up to mSD)
9. Install TitaniumBackup Free.
10. Restore all of your apps to the microSD card with TitaniumBackup.
(Of course, I'm assuming a lot of things... I guess I'm just thinking aloud... Maybe some of this is of some use to you. Good luck!)
-v
p.s.... I had a few links I was going to share, but I'm not allowed to share external links until after my 8th post (and I understand why that's a rule)... lol..
There seems to be plenty of threads about these things around here. I just don't have them right now..
Thank you vulariter! It'd be great if when you finish getting everything set up, letting me know how it works out for you. I know people have been having some pretty weird things happening with the blue dot Nooks. Appreciate the info.
I"m happy to report that my internal CM7 Nightly install went well. I chose to go with a 2 GB apps / 4 GB media internal partitioning scheme. I like breathing room, on both sides..lol.. I also like doing things the difficult way, sometimes.. (just being honest)...
Minus the unnecessary convolution of my rooting the stock OS, 50+ complex character WPA2 key, static IP WIFI network, and email address fiasco, here's basically what I did. Again, I'd love to share the external links, but I don't think it will let me do so.
Oh, and always check MD5 sums on the files you download, wherever possible. Corruption in these files will surely eat your Nook alive, at least a little. lol.. Yes, be very scared of that.
Also, don't forget to backup your ClockworkMod backups to a better medium than the microSD card. I used 7zip to archive them on my laptop's internal drive. A cloud backup of them would probably be better (e.g. Dropbox). Just remember, you're putting potentially personal info out there, wherever you put these backups.
Thanks to all the people who figured this stuff out (see the links / websites below, to give them credit).
Bought a NookColor at my local B&N. (I later read about the "blue dot" thing and realized mine had the "blue dot" on the back of the box.)
SIDE NOTE: My understanding is that the "blue dot" signifies only a few important things. 1. a 5 GB apps / 1 GB media partitioning scheme... 2. U-Boot 1.2, with the "Read Forever" logo..... 3. Maybe an unlocking of a few more cylinders (about 250 MB)??? I've only read a little on this..... 4. Maybe a different chip revision or two, inside.
Bought a SanDisk Class 4 (class 6 would have been better) 8GB microSD card.
Located my microSD to SD adapter, which is a priceless item to me.
Located my USB many-in-one card reader, because my Lenovo R61's internal SD reader is unstable.
Located my 2GB class ? microSD card, which I once used in my old LG env2.
Connected my USB card reader to my laptop.
Inserted the 2GB mSD into my USB card reader.
Copied all of my old music, etc, on my 2GB microSD to a directory on my laptop for posterity.
Downloaded the latest version of Win32DiskImager. (Link 1)
Downloaded the latest version of ClockworkMod 2GB SD image. (Link 1)
Imaged my 2GB mSD with the ClockworkMod image.
Created "clockworkmod" and "clockworkmod\backup" directories, inside of the 2 GB mSD (whose disk label is now "boot").
Downloaded the "Custom: 2GB for Apps and 4GB for Media" partitioning file from mrm3.net and placed it in the root directory of my 2 GB mSD.
Downloaded the "Mandatory Data Format File" from mrm3.net and placed it in the root directory of my 2 GB mSD.
Downloaded the latest CM7 "encore" Nightly from cyanogenmod.com and placed it in the root directory of my 2 GB mSD.
Downloaded the latest "encore" Gapps from mrm3.net and placed it in the root directory of my 2 GB mSD.
Confirmed my Gmail and Youtube accounts were linked. This is also the same address which I'm using for my B&N account.
SIDE NOTE: I had to change my B&N account's non-Gmail email address to align my email addresses. I think this may have caused a problem with my obtained-at-Nook-purchase B&N Membership Card, because it no longer works... (I've contacted them about it...and their answer is unsatisfactory. Beware!)
Unboxed my NookColor and began charging it, via the wall plug.
Booted my stock NookColor, signed into my WIFI network and registered my device to my Gmail email address.
Played around with the stock OS and Nook apps, because I'll probably never ever see them again.. The Crossword game was awesome! I didn't allow myself to become attached to their reading apps, to be honest..lol.. (I would have probably been attached, had I not been proactive in my "hacking".)
Powered off my NookColor.
Inserted the 2 GB mSD into my NookColor.
Booted my NookColor into ClockworkMod.
Saved a backup of the stock system to the "backup" directory I created earlier.
Followed the instructions at mrm3.net to repartition my NookColor (rebooting, as directed).
Removed the 2 GB mSD card.
Rebooted again, allowing the Nook to recover from the repartitioning. I did not reregister the device in this step. I just waited for the woman's face to appear and shut it down.
Inserted the 2 GB mSD card.
Booted my NookColor into ClockworkMod.
Saved a backup of the NEWLY PARTITIONED stock system to the "backup" directory I created earlier.
I followed the mrm3.net CM7 Nook Nightlies instructions, but I'll paraphrase here. (Definitely seek this article out, and don't take my word for it.)
Still in ClockworkMod, I reformatted the "data", "system",and "cache"partitions.
Used "install from zip" to install "cm_encore_full-xx.zip"
Used "install from zip" to install "Nook_Color_Google_Apps.zip"
This may be a good time to obtain another backup, if you're paranoid. I did not and wasn't...
Removed the 2 GB mSD card.
Rebooted again, allowing CM7 to do its thing.
Signed into my WIFI network, using the menus.
Signed into the Google Market, selecting all of the Gapps, when prompted. (I figure I can uninstall them, if I find them totally useless.) (e.g. Facebook
app, since I quit it..lol)
Inserted my 8 GB mSD card in the NookColor for the first time and formatted it, from within CM7. I could have made a Win32DiskImage image of the 2 GB ClockworkMod mSD, wiped it out and formatted it for general use, but I like having my own data (media files / apps) separate from my "live recovery environment(s)." Point being, I could have gotten by with just a single mSD card, as tiny as 2 GB and the cheapest class, but I splurged, because I want to keep some music and things on tap, wherever I go.
Rejoiced in the open source goodness.
This would another good time to obtain another backup. I should go do that right now..
Please keep in mind that I might be taking some things for granted. My mind has been altered by being a *NIX System Administrator...
Good luck and let me know if you have any questions.
-v
Great stuff V! So this is what I have decided to do. I will keep my current system until the next stable version of CM is released. Once that happens, i'll go ahead and repartition, reformat, and of course reinstall following all of the proper procedures that i'm too lazy to write out here.
The only other issue I was having with my Nook is that it wasnt recognizing when an SD card was plugged in. I thought it may have been CM7, so I flashed back to the stock OS, and it still wouldnt recognize it plugged in. However, if I have the SD card plugged in, and reboot, it shows the SD card mounted fine. I need to do a check to make sure I can read/write to it, but i'm assuming it will be no problem if it sees it fine. If I were to remove the card, it would not say that the card is unplugged, so theres no instant feedback; it requires a reboot every time to notice if the card is plugged in or not. For me, all I need is it to be recognized and be accessible, as its not like I am going to be taking it out all the time, it will be in there pretty much for good.

[Q] Boot SD Card Question

I am new to Nook Color.
I am wanting to Run CM7 from an SD card and found a website that offers one prebuilt. I dont mind learning at all and would like to make one myself.
The question is, the premade one has some sort of a countdown built in where
I can choose to let it auto countdown and it will boot to CM.
If I want to boot to the Stock Nook Software, I can press a button during the countdown and do that without having to removed the SD Card.
Where would i Find the instructions on this?
This is built in to your standard SD card install I believe. Once you made the card I'm pretty sure you can hold down the N button to get a boot selection screen.
---------------------------------
Sent from my LG Optimus V using Tapatalk
if you do a search in the dev forum here, verygreen's agnostic SD install has a boot that gives you the option to either boot the default (priority without being modified is SD), or go into boot choice menu, where you can choose to boot from the Nook itself (EMMC) or into recovery mode.
The instructions he provides are very clear, if you run into any problems feel free to ask us.
I say this because I *really, really hate* morally corrupt vendors that sell SD card installs of _open source, freely developed_ ROMS without any reference or compensation to the people who put in their free time to make them for us.
I can't tell you how many times I've met people at B&N who say, "Well I know a guy who will sell me an SD card for $50, is that a good price?" Makes me breathe fire every time.
/soapbox off
Dragonfyr said:
I am new to Nook Color.
I am wanting to Run CM7 from an SD card and found a website that offers one prebuilt. I dont mind learning at all and would like to make one myself.
The question is, the premade one has some sort of a countdown built in where
I can choose to let it auto countdown and it will boot to CM.
If I want to boot to the Stock Nook Software, I can press a button during the countdown and do that without having to removed the SD Card.
Where would i Find the instructions on this?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
The pre-made card offers a choice when you first boot up, either CM7 or the stock ROM. You do not have to remove the card.
If you install CM7 or MiUi on an SD card, power up holding the N button, you have a choice of that ROM or stock Nook.. You do not have to remove your SD card..
OP,
I would suggest you doing it on your own, it isn't that hard, if I can do, you can do also, plus you will have vastly help from others if hitting problem.
What you need is a Sandisk 8G or 16G class 4.
We'll guide you through.
About the "dual-boot" option, I don't do it but I strongly believe our patruns is an expert about this. If it isn't patruns, I'll dig into the post and find out who is the one.
patruns said:
The pre-made card offers a choice when you first boot up, either CM7 or the stock ROM. You do not have to remove the card.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yes, That is what i am after. However i refuse to pay $50+ for a prebuilt card
I read up on the thread mentioned,
Thanks for the Replys
I made my card and got CM 7.1 loaded.
I am still looking for a countdown boot menu that automatically comes up wanting to boot to either the SD card or Internal Memory
Dragonfyr said:
I made my card and got CM 7.1 loaded.
I am still looking for a countdown boot menu that automatically comes up wanting to boot to either the SD card or Internal Memory
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Dude, just hold N if you want to boot into stock Nook.
---------------------------------
Sent from my LG Optimus V using Tapatalk
AH ok somehow I thought it was N plus Power.
Thanks a Lot

Help Rooting My new nook color 1.4.1

Hello XDA fourms, i have just today bought a nook color. I have been researching rooting it so i can read my manga and comics on it. I have decided to root it through a micro sd 4gb card so that if i want to use my nook regularly i can. now the problem is i can not understand half the things people say to do to achieve rooting my Nook color. can any one help me or redirect me to an easy place to teach me how to do this?
That's exactly how I started out. You can find instructions on the "[ROM][CM7] [v1.3] Size-agnostic SD Card image and CM7 installer for SD Cards." thread in the "Nook Color Android Development" forum. I'm no Android expert, being more a console Linux & C/Forth kind of guy, but it worked for me.
Since I spent most of my time in stock and only had a few apps I actually used on the card, I ended up rooting the stock nook with a manual nooter to install those apps in the Nook Color stock home page ... but using the SD card install for a month was quite useful in working out whether I wanted to root the stock B&N firmware or install a CM7 firmware instead.
ok so i tried to make an sd card out of my 4 gb but it didnt work so i decided to reformate it and now it only has 117 mb! wth? im so confused...
Tom32090 said:
ok so i tried to make an sd card out of my 4 gb but it didnt work so i decided to reformate it and now it only has 117 mb! wth? im so confused...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
when you write the image to the SD card the partition is 117mbs. windows can only see that partition (there is actually 4 on the card after the image is written) that's why when you hit reformat it reformatted it to 117mbs. boot your nook up into stock form with the SD card in it, then go into your settings and hit "unmount SD card" then hit "reformat". That'll get you back to 4gbs.
ok great! ill try that thank you very much! but now how do i get it rooted?
If you "want to root it through a micro sd 4gb card so that if i want to use my nook regularly i can" ... you aren't really rooting the device, you are just making an SD card that will boot up its own system and leave the stock system in the built-in flash alone. Then if the card is pulled out (or replaced with a non-bootable SD card), the bootloader skips the SD card and boots from the internal flash.
If you are using a Windows box, as nook711 explained, the regular Windows format will not change existing SD partitions, so it will just format one relatively small partition on the SD card. To reformat back to a single clean SD partition on the Windows side, google for Panasonic SDFormatter.
As far as how to get that card to work as an SD-boot card ~ its hard to say, since you didn't say what went wrong the first time you tried it: which imager program did you use? did you power the Nook down all the way before rebooting it? Did it hang, or did it fail to boot and start up as a stock Nook Color?
Unless of course I misread you: if you want to root it using a SD card in a way that allows it to also be used as a regular Nook ~ that is, the third party apps show up in what looks like a regular B&N Home page ~ that is a manual noot you want to do. The instructions for doing a manual noot are in the "[NC][1.2][1.3] ManualNooter 4.6.16" thread. However, those are instructions for a 1.2 or 1.3 version. Instead of using the manualnooter file described in the opening post, skip ahead to page 175, and look for GMPOWER's post #1745. The "LINK" downloads a manualnooter file that seems to work for a stock Nook Color 1.4.1 ~ at least, that's the one I've used and now I have what looks like a stock Nook Color, except with Crackle, Crunchyroll, YouTube, OpenIntents and DolphinMini apps showing up on the B&N home pages.
BruceMcF said:
If you "want to root it through a micro sd 4gb card so that if i want to use my nook regularly i can" ... you aren't really rooting the device, you are just making an SD card that will boot up its own system and leave the stock system in the built-in flash alone. Then if the card is pulled out (or replaced with a non-bootable SD card), the bootloader skips the SD card and boots from the internal flash
If you are using a Windows box, as nook711 explained, the regular Windows format will not change existing SD partitions, so it will just format one relatively small partition on the SD card. To reformat back to a single clean SD partition on the Windows side, google for Panasonic SDFormatter.
As far as how to get that card to work as an SD-boot card ~ its hard to say, since you didn't say what went wrong the first time you tried it.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
so what happen on my first try was i used winimage to write the genertic sd card file on to it. i than put update-cm-7.1.0-encore-signed.zip on the card. my nook was off and i turned it on. it did not boot from the sd card. i have not tried holding the n button to see if that worked yet. i do have the sd card formatted and i have already formatted the card back to 4 gb. Next i was going to do the same steps but try and hold the n button
update:so i tried the N button but it didnt boot the sd card... i just dont know what im doing wrong!?
if it did not boot from the sdcard then I would suspect that the image did not write to the sdcard correctly. the nook will automatically look at the sdcard boot first.
did you unzip the image file before writing it to the card?
did you write the image as admin in the winimage?
After writing the image to the sdcard remove it from your computer and then plug it back in the computer, if it wrote correctly it should now say "boot"
"my nook was off and i turned it on. it did not boot from the sd card"
It only boots if it is turned on from a powerdown. If it just went to sleep to save the battery, and a quick tap of the power button can wake it up, its not powered down, its only sleeping.
When its awake, hold the power button, wait for the "do you want to turn it off completely" dialog, keep holding the power button, and it will turn off. That is a complete power down. Then put in the bootable SD-card, and hold the power button until it turns on ~ it ought to boot off the card instead of off the Nook internal flash.
Like any Android device, it will take a while to go from the boot screen to the home screen on the first power-up, but you'll see the skaterboy droid in a couple of minutes and know that its grinding through the process of setting up the CM7 system.
And regarding the CM7 update file ~ looking in my PC file system, that's the same CM7 update file I used.
nook711 said:
After writing the image to the sdcard remove it from your computer and then plug it back in the computer, if it wrote correctly it should now say "boot"
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
it does say "boot" but it still does not work
BruceMcF said:
"my nook was off and i turned it on. it did not boot from the sd card"
It only boots if it is turned on from a powerdown. If it just went to sleep to save the battery, and a quick tap of the power button can wake it up, its not powered down, its only sleeping.
When its awake, hold the power button, wait for the "do you want to turn it off completely" dialog, keep holding the power button, and it will turn off. That is a complete power down. Then put in the bootable SD-card, and hold the power button until it turns on ~ it ought to boot off the card instead of off the Nook internal flash.
Like any Android device, it will take a while to go from the boot screen to the home screen on the first power-up, but you'll see the skaterboy droid in a couple of minutes and know that its grinding through the process of setting up the CM7 system.
And regarding the CM7 update file ~ looking in my PC file system, that's the same CM7 update file I used.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yes i did shut it off and than turned it on but is still does not work?
i have also been looking at video on youtube. but every single one tells me something different. so far the one i found that seems to be the closest to what im trying to do is this one http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P4nenR-mNo0 but even so i feel like the more i watch the more confused i get
There are only three things that come to my mind:
(1) What is the make and class of the microSD card? That's not from personal experience, but it shows up in multiple HowTo guides, both here and on other sites. I used a Kingston Class 4 8gb microSD card, but the preference seems to be for SanDisk Class 4.
(2) A generic image is likely to work best if its written onto a "like new" fully formatted SD card ~ I have seen a few YouTube clips of various rooting efforts where formatting it with the Panasonic SDFormatter Windows executable succeeded after the prior effort had failed.
Edit: the YouTube clip you posted is the first one where I saw advice to use the Panasonic SDFormatter. However, other than that, I mostly followed the xda How-To.
I'd note that even though the the CrashTechDummies YouTube clip is from April, 2011, they are using a HowTo guide for a image that is older than the "size-agnostic" image in the "Size-agnostic" How To guide, so they have to do several things by hand that are handled automatically by the "Size-agnostic" image.
(3) What is your hardware for writing SD images? USB-port card writers sometimes need to be safe-unmounted with the USB unmount tool before popped out. I've run into that before in a different context.
If its not one of those, then I got nothing, sorry. The part between copying the CM7 file onto the generic image and seeing the CM7 droid skaterboy "just worked" for me.
BruceMcF said:
There are only three things that come to my mind:
(1) What is the make and class of the microSD card? That's not from personal experience, but it shows up in multiple HowTo guides, both here and on other sites. I used a Kingston Class 4 8gb microSD card, but the preference seems to be for SanDisk Class 4.
(2) A generic image is likely to work best if its written onto a "like new" fully formatted SD card ~ I have seen a few YouTube clips of various rooting efforts where formatting it with the Panasonic SDFormatter Windows executable succeeded after the prior effort had failed.
(3) What is your hardware for writing SD images? USB-port card writers sometimes need to be safe-unmounted with the USB unmount tool before popped out. I've run into that before in a different context.
If its not one of those, then I got nothing, sorry. The part between copying the CM7 file onto the generic image and seeing the CM7 droid skaterboy "just worked" for me.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
ok i reformatted it with Panasonic reformat and i am using a 4 gbsandisk micro sd and it has a 2 with a circle around it
Tom32090 said:
i have also been looking at video on youtube. but every single one tells me something different. so far the one i found that seems to be the closest to what im trying to do is this one http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P4nenR-mNo0 but even so i feel like the more i watch the more confused i get
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
there's lots of ways to get to the end result, don't get confused we will help you through the process.
Now that being said:
This was my process
* reformat your SD card again using the stock nook
* download "windisk32 image writer" (easier I think then winimage)
* download "verygreens, genenric 1.3image.zip"
* unzip the image.zip to your desktop (using 7zip)
* open windisk32, click the blue folder and find the image file on your desktop for generic 1.3
* select your corresponding drive to your sdcard hit write
*when finished remove sdcard and reinsert it into computer
* download (cm7.1 or cm7.2)
* open up " my computer" on windows
* drag "cm7.1 or 7.2" to the corresponding drive for sdcard (should say boot)
* when finished right click hit eject when safe to do so remove sdcard
* insert sdcard into fully powered down nook
* turn nook on (after a few it should go to a little Linux penguin) and install scripts should be running
* when it's done it'll power off
* wait a few minutes and turn the nook on, should boot into cm7 but first you should see the android riding a skateboard.
*while that's working download the gapps file
after you set up cm7 for the first time, shut it down.
* remove sdcard and reinsert it into your computer
* open up "my computer" and drag the gapps file to the sdcard drive
* when finished hit eject and reinsert the card into the nook and while holding the "n" power up the nook (should see the little Linux penguin again)
* when its finished it should power down againbthen just turn it on and set up Google
hope this helps
** again this is just what works for me and I have successfully done several different nook for friends, family and myself.
uh is there any way you could supply some links ? i mean i think i have alot of these things but iv been gathering it from doing reaserch so i justwant to make sure i have the right files
Tom32090 said:
uh is there any way you could supply some links ? i mean i think i have alot of these things but iv been gathering it from doing reaserch so i justwant to make sure i have the right files
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
verygreens image:
forum.xda-developers.com/showpost.php?p=12240928&postcount=1
windisk32:
www.askvg.com/win32-disk-imager-write-any-bootable-image-to-usb-drive-in-windows/
7zip:
download.cnet.com/7-Zip/3000-2250_4-10045185.html
nook711 said:
there's lots of ways to get to the end result, don't get confused we will help you through the process.
Now that being said:
This was my process
x reformat your SD card again using the stock nook
x download "windisk32 image writer" (easier I think then winimage)
xdownload "verygreens, genenric 1.3image.zip"
xunzip the image.zip to your desktop (using 7zip)
xopen windisk32, click the blue folder and find the image file on your desktop for generic 1.3
xselect your corresponding drive to your sdcard hit write
xwhen finished remove sdcard and reinsert it into computer
x download (cm7.1 or cm7.2)
x open up " my computer" on windows
xdrag "cm7.1 or 7.2" to the corresponding drive for sdcard (should say boot)
xwhen finished right click hit eject when safe to do so remove sdcard
xinsert sdcard into fully powered down nook
xturn nook on (after a few it should go to a little Linux penguin) and install scripts should be running
x when it's done it'll power off
* wait a few minutes and turn the nook on, should boot into cm7 but first you should see the android riding a skateboard.
*while that's working download the gapps file
after you set up cm7 for the first time, shut it down.
* remove sdcard and reinsert it into your computer
* open up "my computer" and drag the gapps file to the sdcard drive
* when finished hit eject and reinsert the card into the nook and while holding the "n" power up the nook (should see the little Linux penguin again)
* when its finished it should power down againbthen just turn it on and set up Google
hope this helps
** again this is just what works for me and I have successfully done several different nook for friends, family and myself.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Ok so i have gotten up to the part where it shutdown and i have no restarted it yet. I downloaded the gapps and now i have another question. if i want to open up the memory on the sd card that isnt being used willl it mess anything up? the video talks about using MiniTool Partition Wizard Home Edition 5.2 and i just dont want to mess up anything iv already down
Tom32090 said:
Ok so i have gotten up to the part where it shutdown and i have no restarted it yet. I downloaded the gapps and now i have another question. if i want to open up the memory on the sd card that isnt being used willl it mess anything up? the video talks about using MiniTool Partition Wizard Home Edition 5.2 and i just dont want to mess up anything iv already down
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
the unseen portion of the sdcard in windows will be seen in your nook
nook711 said:
the unseen portion of the sdcard in windows will be seen in your nook
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
ok so if i want to put thing on the card how would i do it? would my computer pick up the unused memory?
Tom32090 said:
ok so if i want to put thing on the card how would i do it? would my computer pick up the unused memory?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
you can use the nook as a mass USB storage device. while on the nook plug the cord into your nook and then the USB side into your computer. the computer should pick it up as USB mass storage and show 2 drives, 1 for nook color and the other for sdcard. once connected you can put whatever you want on it.

[Q] Small dualboot question

I've been running wp7 on my hd2 for awhile now and recently wanted to dualboot it to android.. looking at the guides I'm not quite sure about this, will using the partition managers format my data currently held on wp7?
I don't want to lose my texts or contacts and I don't want to have to call ms again for another activation code since I seem to have lost the notepad doc I saved it in xD
I may be wrong but I think it will remove what is on your card already. You can always buy a second SD card and use it to run Android from, just dont boot to WPY with that SD card in the device or it will format it for use with WP7.
how big is your card? you should at least be using a 16gig card if you want to DB, but 8gig is still fine BUT all your files/ data will be erased since you need to reset the phone. Alternatively just like what T-Macgnolia said, get a 2nd card & place the SD ROM there & boot from magldr.
this is what i followed - again yesterday - for my friends HD2's dual Boot system.
remember that the partition for Windows should be a little larger than that of the Andy.
http://www.jayceooi.com/2011/02/10/...hone-7-and-android-on-htc-hd2-with-1-sd-card/
as long as you do things right all will be OK but wrongly done You WONT boot into WP7 again as the partition will be corrupted.
What I do is Get another SD card & make an exact mirror/ copy of the one i use for WP7 so if one fails I still have a backup. Before proceeding though make sure that Both Cards do boot into WP7. check out the link below, it might help.

Booting From Encrypted SD card

Is it possible to boot the HTC HD2 into android (no particular version, at least ICS) using an encrypted SD card, I want to use the phone for going on activist rally's and filming police etc, I'd like no trace to be left on the hardware of the device, only the SD card which can be easily swallowed, tossed or destroyed, the SD card would be a class 10 and I would like to have to enter a password to decrypt the card before it booted.
Theoretically anything is possible, but is this possible with currently available tools or would this be something I would have to create from scratch, I do not want to re-invent the wheel
Thoughts?
I am not going to argue politics here btw, I'm purely looking for technical responses.
davidcampbell said:
Is it possible to boot the HTC HD2 into android (no particular version, at least ICS) using an encrypted SD card, I want to use the phone for going on activist rally's and filming police etc, I'd like no trace to be left on the hardware of the device, only the SD card which can be easily swallowed, tossed or destroyed, the SD card would be a class 10 and I would like to have to enter a password to decrypt the card before it booted.
Theoretically anything is possible, but is this possible with currently available tools or would this be something I would have to create from scratch, I do not want to re-invent the wheel
Thoughts?
I am not going to argue politics here btw, I'm purely looking for technical responses.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I don't think it would be possible to make android boot FROM the SD card while it's encrypted. Mainly because I think you'd have to have to decrypt the sd card before allowing the device to access the system files. (But I could be wrong, I'm only assuming here). (Maybe there's a way to do modifications to the "wheel" so that the card is decrypted just for system initiation. Or maybe decrypt only one part of the SD-card that contains the system and encrypt other partitions?) You need someone with knowledge to answer all of this ... And that's not me unfortunately.
On the other hand, you can install the system on NAND. Pick a small ROM so you don't have to use a2sd or any kind of script that is SD-card reliant. Then I think it would be possible to use an encrypted SD card. (Although I think Android still uses the sdcard for apps' data storage ...)
Sorry, I couldn't be of much help

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