Related
I have been wading through the talk about the 1.2 update to get a stock version of Froyo and I don't see any real advantage over the NookieFroyo I am running now (emmc). I saw a video from another thread that showed a 1.2 NC running and some apps didn't load and it doesn't really look like an Android Native. More like a slowly developing B&N OS. Am I missing something?
Obviously there's no point right now as it can't be nootered. So until the developers play with it, there really is no point.
Gin1212 said:
Obviously there's no point right now as it can't be nootered. So until the developers play with it, there really is no point.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Beyond that, there isn't much to the 1.2 update over the original with regards to functionality. The market that is now included is dismally scarce of apps; 137 total count as of this post and is actually B&N's own site, not the actual droid market. The overall functionality is still that of the simple ebook reader that the NC is created as in the first place. Rooting it is still the only real way of waking this tablet out of the B&N slumber that has been placed on it in its out-of-the-box form.
It will eventually be with it.
Sent from my NookColor using XDA Premium App
Gin1212 said:
Obviously there's no point right now as it can't be nootered. So until the developers play with it, there really is no point.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
That was my thought exactly. Even if it gets rooted, it doesn't look like it will have the cool "status bar" with the back and home natively working. Until something like that comes along for the B&N OS, I think I will stay NookieFroyo for now.
My question would be does the market work? I keep seeing the BN Apps but nothing to indicate if the Market is functional or included.
When my DroidX went from 2.1 to 2.2 I was expecting WOW with all the anticipation and hype, but the reality is that outside of flash support, there was nothing worth upgrading for. It's as exciting as upgrading Windows XP from service pack 1 to service pack 2 but less exciting than going to service pack 3.
So if you already have a rooted stock NC, upgrading to 2.2 won't really make much of a difference to you other than flash which in many cases means less flash based ads. But heck, we are hackers and what's the point of the NC if you can't hack it again and again when new releases come out. Otherwise it would be like buying a puzzle, solving it and not having an opportunity to start over with new pieces. Get though this one and I'm sure B&N will have the 2.2.1 upgrade in a few months and we can do this again, woohooo!
flash is about the only thing i see that makes the update worth it.
raze
oh yeah and the overhauled JIT complier should speed up things for our non rooted brethren. Stock software gives the only advantage of newspapers and magazines.
Ill rock the new stock. since the buying the nook for android reasons mostly I have found myself reading agian and have a few magazine subscriptions.
I'm glad for the new kernel, can't wait for dalingrin to play with it
NewZJ said:
I'm glad for the new kernel, can't wait for dalingrin to play with it
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Exactly =D.
It seems (to me anyway) that flash runs quite a bit better on 1.2 (vs the ROMs I've tried). I hope we can see the same results with some ROMs
I've had Unrooted Stock since day one. Instead I run CM7 from my 4gb Class 6 SD. It runs well and, thanks to it, I've had the best of both worlds.
I've played with the update a bit today and I'll have to agree that for Rooters until 1.2 is Rooted it's not worth it, but for the None Techie this Update is great as it enables New NookBook and KidsBook features and it gives them Apps and Flash. So it's up to you whether you update or not.
Either way this Update makes life easier for Devs as they'll have an Official Stable 2.2 kernal for the Nook to work from, and other helpful additions. Good Luck Guys
____________________________________________________
Sent from NookColor CM7 using Tapatalk
B&N will never make the nook like a normal tablet. They need to preserve the market space it occupies as an eReader with extras, not a tablet that can be an eReader.
If you are running stock, then its a decent upgrade. Otherwise, its just refinement for the system.
I updated since I just run CM7 off an 8gb card. What I have to say really annoyed me is the pricing of the apps. Take angry birds for example. In the Android Market its free. On the itunes appstore its either 99¢ or $1.99, I can't remember. But in the Nook Color appstore its $2.99. Other apps are similarly priced. I see BN upping the price on more apps that would normally be free or cheap.
Sent from my MB860 using XDA Premium App
I just bought a nook at lunch today, planning on rooting it tonight (I recently rooted my Samsung Epic happily, and when figuring out to do that I read about rooting nooks). So during the afternoon at the office, I got an email from ZDNet raving about the upgrade, how it turned the Nook into a Real Android Tablet. so I thought, well, maybe I should just do this instead of rooting it. So I downloaded the zip file, and once the Nook was charged I ran the upgrade, which went fine. But I see now that the upgrade is pretty much a waste of time, no comparison to the features of a rooted nook, and it is currently unrootable.
There are quite a few posts here about restoring a nook to stock, but I am not sure if they apply to 1.2. What is the best method of restoring my 1.2 to 1.1, then rooting?
If you have stock, simply force the reboot 8 times, and the Nook will return to stock 1.1 for you (rather than the 1.2).
JohnnyDanger said:
I updated since I just run CM7 off an 8gb card. What I have to say really annoyed me is the pricing of the apps. Take angry birds for example. In the Android Market its free. On the itunes appstore its either 99¢ or $1.99, I can't remember. But in the Nook Color appstore its $2.99. Other apps are similarly priced. I see BN upping the price on more apps that would normally be free or cheap.
Sent from my MB860 using XDA Premium App
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
B&N aren't allowing any Ad supported Apps in their store so Devs have to makeup with pricing. On top of that, the Angrybirds is the more expensive HD version. So, at least for Angrybirds, the pricing makes sense. Unfortunately, the lack of Ad support means that most likely there won't be that many free Apps on the Nook Store since Devs need to get money somehow.
____________________________________________________
Sent from NookColor CM7 using Tapatalk
I just installed 1.2 and downloaded angry birds. It will not install. Tried numerous times. GRRRRR!!!
bgalb said:
I just installed 1.2 and downloaded angry birds. It will not install. Tried numerous times. GRRRRR!!!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
The Fix is to remove your SD card then install. B&N should fix that because this Fix isn't obvious to most people.
____________________________________________________
Sent from NookColor CM7 using Tapatalk
Hi Devs,
I've just rooted my friends Kindle Fire and successfully installed the Android market. She forwarded an article from the internet that stated that someone had successfully ported the Nook Color Rom onto a Kindle Fire.
Is it possible? And if so where I can find the Modded Rom.
Thanks in advance for enlightenment.
Proud Gtab owner!
Link the article, I'm curious.
Check here for all development for the Kindle Fire, regardless.
And as a final note, why would you want to do this? Just get the Nook Color...
Lies. Only rom so far is a very alpha Cyanogenmod 7.
Printerscape said:
Link the article, I'm curious.
Check here for all development for the Kindle Fire, regardless.
And as a final note, why would you want to do this? Just get the Nook Color...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
The owner wanted the mod.
Thanks.
Printerscape said:
Link the article, I'm curious.
Check here for all development for the Kindle Fire, regardless.
And as a final note, why would you want to do this? Just get the Nook Color...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Here is the URL to the article on porting Nook to Fire. Would love to hear any views on this topic.
http://www.geek.com/articles/gadgets/kindle-fire-hacked-to-access-android-market-20111117/
2 weeks ago at DC Public, their IT folks managed to change a Nook Color into a Kindle Fire and are working to change a Kindle into a Nook ...
Nasut said:
Here is the URL to the article on porting Nook to Fire. Would love to hear any views on this topic.
http://www.geek.com/articles/gadgets/kindle-fire-hacked-to-access-android-market-20111117/
2 weeks ago at DC Public, their IT folks managed to change a Nook Color into a Kindle Fire and are working to change a Kindle into a Nook ...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Where in this article is there any mention of porting the Nook to the Fire? This is an old article that only relates to getting google market and other google apps running on it.
Considering that the main benefits to having a Nook over a Fire relate to hardware (more internal storage, slightly better display, etc), this seems like an odd request that's not worth the trouble, essentially moving from one walled garden to another.
Rad3,
First, thanks for confirming that I'm crazy for telling my co-worker that the idea is not of much benefit. Second, I think she just wants to take a cheap tablet and run it like a more expensive one. And Finally, I just cut and pasted the e-mail verbatum with her comment included.
I didn't see anywhere in the artical where it stated that the conversion was possible either but her statement which I included was what sparked my request for information.
Thanks again. If the question comes up again I can offer to flash CM7 but that's it.
Nasut said:
Rad3,
First, thanks for confirming that I'm crazy for telling my co-worker that the idea is not of much benefit. Second, I think she just wants to take a cheap tablet and run it like a more expensive one. And Finally, I just cut and pasted the e-mail verbatum with her comment included.
I didn't see anywhere in the artical where it stated that the conversion was possible either but her statement which I included was what sparked my request for information.
Thanks again. If the question comes up again I can offer to flash CM7 but that's it.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Understand - though again the differences between the 'cheap' tablet and the 'more expensive' one lie in either hardware or the inability to subsidize as much, making the Nook more expensive. Once you get past hardware, I'd trend to think that you get more with the Kindle Fire.
Oh well...
I have a brand new nook that is running 1.3, and I want to get it rooted (it's a Christmas gift for my son). With 1.4 out now, I'm wondering what my best approach is. Should I wait until I get the 1.4 update and then to the root?
If that is the case, is there a way to force the update to come quicker? If that's not the case and I go ahead and root now, will I eventually get 1.4 (and if so will I have to root again)?
Girevik said:
I have a brand new nook that is running 1.3, and I want to get it rooted (it's a Christmas gift for my son). With 1.4 out now, I'm wondering what my best approach is. Should I wait until I get the 1.4 update and then to the root?
If that is the case, is there a way to force the update to come quicker? If that's not the case and I go ahead and root now, will I eventually get 1.4 (and if so will I have to root again)?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I'm assuming it's a Nook Color since you mention 1.3. You can download the 1.4.1 update today directly from B&N. Root on 1.4.1 doesn't fully work yet. You can't install anything from the Android Market. I suspect that will change very soon, but there's no guarantee it'll be done by Christmas.
The B&N walled garden offered by 1.4.1 is very compelling. The reader is very nice now -- a huge improvement over 1.3 -- and the B&N integration is very nice. 1.4.1 is also required for some of the Conde Nast magazine subscriptions such as Wired. The presentation of these magazines on the B&N firmware is gorgeous, with lots of "post print" interactive features. Presumably other magazines and papers will begin incorporating these features.
The reason I mention this is that you lose these features if you wander off of the B&N firmware, at least today. That said, there are alternate firmwares that make the NC much more of a general purpose tablet. You can run the B&N Nook reader on these, though alternatives such as Aldiko are superior (IMO). You lose the B&N integration and, for now at least, rich content features of the B&N firmware. You gain in ease of access to other applications and features, as well as Amazon, Kobo and other book sources.
On the Nook Tablet I purchased for my wife for Christmas, the 1.4 software is fully rooted, so I've been able to get it set up nicely as a reader focused around the B&N apps, but still with access to others (with a bit of work). As of today (Dec. 14), I can't get to that same level with my Nook Color. Rooted 1.3 is also very clunky (again IMO), so I'm running Cyanogenmod 7.1 (CM) on it.
If your son is after an Android tablet, I'd suggest trying out CM. If he want's the e-reader experience and/or the B&N integration, then 1.4.1 is a winner. If he wants the best of both worlds, we're not quite there yet. I'd suggest running CM off of an SD card and leaving 1.4.1 unrooted for now. That way, he can sample both, and if he prefers the B&N experience, you can always root it later when the details are worked out.
bobstro said:
If your son is after an Android tablet, I'd suggest trying out CM. If he want's the e-reader experience and/or the B&N integration, then 1.4.1 is a winner. If he wants the best of both worlds, we're not quite there yet. I'd suggest running CM off of an SD card and leaving 1.4.1 unrooted for now. That way, he can sample both, and if he prefers the B&N experience, you can always root it later when the details are worked out.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
That's prettyf much exacty what I've settled on. I think for now, he'd mostly want the tablet, but I DO really like the read to me feature. I'll just have to teach him how to boot back and forth if he wants (he's pretty sharp for a mildly autistic 7 year old when it comes to tech). When and if I can just add the market and the apps he wants to stock nook software, I'll look at rooting it then.
Thanks for confirming what I had in mind. I was half afraid a root would be required even to boot off of an SD card.
One more question. Once I do go that route, what happens to apps that I install? Are they saved to the SD card and just dissapear when I boot to the nook? Or do they take up the nook internal memory?
When you dual boot, the two environments remain separate. Anything installed on one is not visible to the other, except maybe storage. I need to check, now that you ask. This is good, in that your BN setup remains pristine, but does require some duplication of effort if you jump back and forth often.
Once everything's installed, you can select which to boot by holding down the big 'n' key as you power on the device. No need to flip the SD slot door open and eject.
I'm hoping the 1.4.1 reader functionality comes to the BN Android Nook app. It's pretty slick, and I'd like to have those features regardless of what platform I'm using at any given moment.
I plan to flash 1.4.2 through CWM then root with MN. Is there any downside to flashing 1.4.2 vs. 1.4.1? With 1.4.2 will I lose market capabilities, non B&N app install capabilities?
Thanks.
Pretty sure V 1.4.2 is un-rootable at the moment. B&N is hard at work on putting boot lockers.
Although developers are capable of breaking that lock I think B&N's stuck up attitude is getting on people's nerves and I won't be surprised if developers just flat out say it was a great run and now bye bye. I mean why would you want to develop for a company that is so interested in making their own device limited.
The way I see it developers of Nook Color are pretty much helping B&N make their device great for free and of course doing a hak of a better job than their paid developers. No offence.
You can root 1.4.2 on a NC just fine with GMPOWER's latest ManualNooter. Be sure to follow the procedure for getting full app visibility in Market. Other than that, I haven't had any issues, at least not in the last 24 hours.
You do not need to flash 1.4.2 via CWM. I don't think you can successfully. Just copy the update file to the MyNookColor folder (the INTERNAL storage) mounted via USB and let it update itself via B&N's normal Get Version 1.4.2 Today procedure. Then you can apply MN. This works even if you've rooted 1.4.1 previously.
With the new tablets set to hit at the near-$250 mark, and the likes of the Samsung Galaxy Tab 7 Plus dropping to below $300 (depending on the day), I'm not overly worried about B&N trying to lock down their device. The NC is imminently rootable, and worst case, I can always overwrite the B&N firmware with CM. The new B&N Android app, currently in beta, may add the B&N functionality currently missing, in which case, I have no reason to stick with their firmware. The NC will serve until I get "the tablet I want".
AirplaneCrazy said:
Pretty sure V 1.4.2 is un-rootable at the moment. B&N is hard at work on putting boot lockers.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Since NT v1.4.2 was rooted 4 hours after release, I was "pretty sure" that the NC v1.4.2 would be rooted as or more easily. And as it turned out, and reported over in the developer forum before you posted, the existing manual nooter already works just fine, so we can say that NC v1.4.2 was rootable from the moment of release.
Although developers are capable of breaking that lock I think B&N's stuck up attitude is getting on people's nerves and I won't be surprised if developers just flat out say it was a great run and now bye bye. I mean why would you want to develop for a company that is so interested in making their own device limited.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
The two reasons that come to mind are (1) for the fun of solving the puzzle and (2) to expand on the capabilities of products sold at a loss by their retailer, since more open systems will normally not be available at a subsidized price.
The way I see it developers of Nook Color are pretty much helping B&N make their device great for free and of course doing a hak of a better job than their paid developers. No offence.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
The two groups are doing different jobs. The B&N developers are developing for a device to carry an ereader to buy ebooks with proprietary extensions to normal ePubs. Their success is measured in whether after-purchase media sales per Nook media tablet covers the loss taken on selling the devices and goes on to generate a profit on top.
Independent devs success is measured on how much joy they deliver to users, rather than how much joy they deliver to stockholders ~ its no surprise they deliver more joy to us, since that's a goal, rather than collateral damage.
In my opinion, B&N really is trying to put a hurdle on rooting the NT, to reduce the numbers sold at a loss to people like me who mostly use it to read Project Gutenburg ebooks, read indie non-DRM manga from Gen Manga, and watch anime at Crunchyroll and Crackle. Of course, as long as they sell the NT8G at a loss leader price, the effort is doomed to fail, but they seem to be at least putting on a show of trying.
But I don't think they've made any serious efforts to lock down the Nook Color ~ since the Kindle Fire at $200 spoiled their strategy of selling them at a small profit margin while providing an upsell opportunity for the NT, they look like they want to keep selling them at cost and hope for as large a share of unit keeping direct access to the B&N store as possible.
I bought the NC 16 gig straight from a Barnes & Noble and saw it was 1.4.2 (I think), I found a downgrade to 1.4 then rooted it. Shouldn't be that hard.
RazoE said:
I bought the NC 16 gig straight from a Barnes & Noble and saw it was 1.4.2 (I think), I found a downgrade to 1.4 then rooted it. Shouldn't be that hard.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
There is NO NC 16G on the market since it doesn't exist.
You might have thought of the NT
votinh said:
There is NO NC 16G on the market since it doesn't exist.
You might have thought of the NT
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Wow, thanks for that clarification. Could have seriously screwed things up if I went too indepth with customization. I have just basic root.
1.4.2 Not bootable from sd card
bobstro said:
You can root 1.4.2 on a NC just fine with GMPOWER's latest ManualNooter. Be sure to follow the procedure for getting full app visibility in Market. Other than that, I haven't had any issues, at least not in the last 24 hours.
I doubt you can. Booting from SD card seems not to be possible on a NC stock 1.4.2.
I think you guys rooted 1.4.1 and then - afterwards - updated to 1.4.2, right?
I did'nt get a way to boot from SD card on my new NC 1.4.2 so far. And I tried hard.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You can definitely root 1.42 using GMPOWER's method.
brushless1 said:
bobstro said:
You can root 1.4.2 on a NC just fine with GMPOWER's latest ManualNooter. Be sure to follow the procedure for getting full app visibility in Market. Other than that, I haven't had any issues, at least not in the last 24 hours.
I doubt you can. Booting from SD card seems not to be possible on a NC stock 1.4.2.
I think you guys rooted 1.4.1 and then - afterwards - updated to 1.4.2, right?
I did'nt get a way to boot from SD card on my new NC 1.4.2 so far. And I tried hard.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Are you sure it is a NOOKcolor and not NOOK Tablet? Check the model#
I've seen a lot of members mistake the new NT as the NC.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I am sorry. You're right. It's a Tablet and not a Color (BNTV250A, Mic, 8GB):
My dealer has terribly confused me: He sold me a Color and delivered a Tablet.
I'm thinking about bring it back.
brushless1 said:
I am sorry. You're right. It's a Tablet and not a Color (BNTV250A, Mic, 8GB):
My dealer has terribly confused me: He sold me a Color and delivered a Tablet.
I'm thinking about bring it back.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
How much did you pay for it?
If the same LOW price, I would keep the NT and call it a bargain.
Yes, we know, NT hackable thingy is not up for prime yet but it will be.
a. Rooting is completely doable and has been done. Not sure about the 1.4.2 though.
b. Installing custom ROMs? Last time (was at least 2 months ago), I've heard they are at the pre-alpha stage, don't know how far they go since. You might want to pop a few questions in the NT forum.
Is there any compelling change that should make me consider updating from 1.4.1 to 1.4.2 if I already have a comfortable 1.4.1 rooted environment with GO Launcher totally configured, the status bar hack installed, OTA updates disabled, Dalingrin's OC kernel installed, etc.?
These days I primarily use the Nook Color as an eReader (both B&N and Amazon) and for lightweight browser/email/Words With Friends usage, and I have a TouchPad with ICS for my tablet duties. As a result my tinkering on the NC has gone down CONSIDERABLY. If there's something really interesting in 1.4.2 I'll do it, but if it's just some small bug fixes, I'll stay put. I don't have many/any real issues with my current setup.
Thanks!
So I am wanting to purchase my first tablet. I so far am very impressed with the dev society for the KF. I haven't done alot of digging but the Roms look very impressive. Also haveing cwm and that other recovery is great. One big thing, after rooting can you do anything with the KF that you can with most other tablets? Does it do Flash? I assume that once you get google play on there that you can put on all of your bought apps and such. I am pretty excited but want to get a good tablet for the whole family. Thanks so much.
Sent from my DROID BIONIC
Dude u should wait for the nexus tablet or the Asus memo those are both 200 and 250 and have more to offer than the kindle. Either way u can't go wrong I love my kindle fire
Sent from my R800i using Tapatalk
Yes after rooting u could do whatever, so far flash is supported on stock, cm7 and 2.3 roms , and soon to be stable with cm9 and 4.0 roms. Google play is working perfectly too but some gameloft games don't work
Sent from my R800i using Tapatalk
You can't go wrong with a kindle fire. First and foremost it's an E-reader then a tablet in my opinion (which is not meant to take anything away from the device) . The Kindle reading app blows any other reading app out of the water. Add that onto all the hard work the devs have put in and you have a huge array of different add ons and directions you can go with your Fire. Plus amazon customer support I have found to be awesome. I had a problem with my unit charging, i called them on a saturday and I had my new kindle on monday. I'm guessing we might see a reduction in cost in the next few months as amazon is likely to announce their new line of e-reader/tablet.
Since each individual case is not the same. It is important to weigh the pros and cons yourself. If you are willing to ignore the cons then it's an easy choice.
Pros: Android (read: customizability), price, customer support, Amazon catalogue, XDA community support (a huge consideration for me), etc.
Cons: KF has no mic or camera or memory card slot and has only 512mb RAM.
So if you don't care about the cons or can live without them then, at this price point, it is a no-brainer.
Personally, I whole-heartedly recommend it!
Sent from my Amazon Kindle Fire using XDA
If you want a cheap tablet that you can make not so cheap, then yes. But you'll have to do a little work, and it's not for the faint at heart.
If you want a good tablet straight out of the box, you'd be better off going with something else. Stock Kindle Fire OS is buggy and kind of annoying. And it's nearly impossible to customize.
Sent from my Amazon Kindle Fire using xda premium
I agree with all the other posters above me.
The KF is VERY easily rooted, which opens up both great opportunities for modding and an unfortunate can of worms for idiots who jump in headfirst without understanding what they're doing.
At this point if you were interested I'd just buy it used. That and read up on the rooting process, what a bootloader/recovery is, AND HOW TO CONTROL THEM VIA ADB/FASTBOOT. You can see the # of "bricked" threads, which are purely from the lack of understanding the above.
I agree with all those who have already posted, I would just caution you that if your looking for a tablet that you can root and then flash and jump into a stable custom rom the Kindle Fire isn't there yet, it's almost there but not completely. Hashcode just pushed out his new 3.0 kernel and it is almost perfect but has some issues. If you're looking for a tablet that your willing to work with and possibly reflash daily then go for the Kindle Fire, it's a great tablet to learn with since it's being heavily developed right now, however if you want more stability i'd wait for the google tab or go with an older tablet.
isaiahhhhh said:
... and then flash and jump into a stable custom rom the Kindle Fire isn't there yet ...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I, as everybody else, am also eagerly waiting for ICS - but saying there are no stable ROMs is incorrect. I'm running CM7 since ages with zero issues on two KFs.
erikikaz said:
At this point if you were interested I'd just buy it used.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
forget used, get a refurb from Amazon for $170.
Kindle Fire was my first tablet and I love it!
Sent from my Kindle Fire using Tapatalk
shravbits said:
Kindle Fire was my first tablet and I love it!
Sent from my Kindle Fire using Tapatalk
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yup, and it's way more fun since ditching the Amazon software for ICS ROMs.
Get it! Cheap, and will only get cheaper! Plus, the hacktivity on xda is enormous!
Sent from my HTC_Amaze_4G using XDA
Picked mine up when they had the refurbs on sale for $139. Love it to death. Very easy to root and install Roms with thanks to XDA.
Sent from my Kindle Fire using xda premium
I like the Fire so much I just bought another one for a family member. About to flash ICS and hopefully never go back to stock.
Thankyou to everyone who posted. I do see the kindle fire as a good solid option and I love the dev community you guys have built here. I really think you guys have somthing special going on here. However I think I may be tempted by the Nook Tablet. After you root it and repartition the Hard Drive. You have way more space than the kf. The Nook also has an SD slot. The display is a little better as well. IT also has a gig of memory vs the KF 512. So I think ima go with it. I tell ya this though I sure would have enjoyed the society here. You guys seem to be top notch. THANKS FOR YALLS HELP
Hope y'all have a good one.
Sent from my DROID BIONIC using Tapatalk
If youplan on rooting go with the fire if not get the galaxy's tab. I on my kf right now by the way and it has built in flash that works great!
---------- Post added at 12:24 AM ---------- Previous post was at 12:16 AM ----------
Oh and I enjoy the dev work also thanks devs hey what ever happened to Geo httoz speaking of developers we are anoyamos we are piton what the heck is that and anoumos is slept worng great now I cant spell well cool anoumos crap I think ill just leave it there to!
---------- Post added at 12:25 AM ---------- Previous post was at 12:24 AM ----------
Oh and I enjoy the dev work also thanks devs hey what ever happened to Geo httoz speaking of developers we are anoyamos we are piton what the heck is that and anoumos is slept worng great now I cant spell well cool anoumos crap I think ill just leave it there to!
Nook Color better, IMO, than Kindle Fire.
I'd recommend the Nook Color over the Kindle Fire. The main difference, aside from the fact that it's a bit cheaper, is that it has an SDcard slot that not only provides up to 32GB of extra space, but allows you to boot from ROMs on the card without altering the Nook itself. This also makes it a lot harder to brick, or easier to unbrick, than the Fire. You can, of course, put ROMs on the internal memory, just as you can with the Fire. Look at the Nook Color forum on this site for more info.
The Nook Tablet is another matter. I don't know much about it, but I understand that B&N has made it a lot harder to hack than the Nook Color, You can check the forum for the Nook Tablet here on xda to see how much success devs have had so far with overcoming its protections.
nook color.is.nothing in front of kindle.fire.and nook tablet is same like kindle.fire but with sd card slot and cheap build quality i have used both and kindle is like solid metal and nook tablet is like cheap plastic
now kernel 3.0 is supporting otg and u can connect usb drives and hard drives with it
so go for kindle fire u will not regret
Sent From my Kindle Fire
Setupetails are Below
Cm7 Barebones+Raven's Kernel
Minimum:300 Higher 1200mhz
Go launcher Ex With MIUI Theme
Games:MC3,Fifa 2012,Real Racing 2,Stick Cricket,Gangster Rio....
Apps:Mx Video Player,JetVid,Titanium Backup,Opera Mobile,Dolphin HD,Adobe Reader
I love the KF (granted, it's my first tablet experience), I bought one new and another for my son off of Craigslist. Flashed them both and haven't looked back.