Okay, so after much frustration I finally got TWRP on my phone, and got it successfully rooted, yay! But now, I have the .zip files for both CM10 and Gapps on my SD card, and the .zip for CM10 refuses to flash. Below I'm going to post what TWRP says when I try.
You can now makes incremental update for every build of cyanogen!
Cyandelta downloads only modified files and create a new rom with them by using your old rom file.
So, be sure to have a CM9/10 rom file in your possession first and Cyandelta will determine what kind of updates you want (nightlies, M2, etc.).
It's very pratical when you want to download an update over 3G or 4G, the update
I flashed .26 to.30 fine now when I put the TF700T US_10.4.4.16-20120927 OTA.zip file in SD card then go to recovery I get this.
Finding update package...
Opening bundle update package...
E: can't open /SD card/ASUS bundle.zip
( no such file in directory)
Installing update...
Finding update package...
n/a
I haven't tried it myself(it keeps giving me a non flashable update), but it should work.
- Go to applications, all, Google Services Framework, then Force stop and clear the data.
- Go to the system update and download the update. DO NOT install.
- Download an app like Root Browser, and browse to the Cache directory on your phone.
Okay so the official update is out for all my friends and I want it too, but I'm rooted. Any help?
I know that I can unroot and then install the update, but if I unroot, do I lose all my apps? What happens to all my root apps? Do those disappear?
The Amazon Appstore app runs like a slug on my Xoom (4.1.2). It barely scrolls, and seems to have trouble finding updates (I finally uninstalled the Kindle and Audible and MP3 apps and now get them from Google Play instead). Plus it is always telling me about 'new' apps even though I haven't gotten any, but without giving the name of the app.
Those of you that have the Google I/O edition of the Nexus 7 tablet are getting an update to Android 4.1.1. This is the update that hit AOSP servers the other day. According to Google, it “improves performance and responsiveness system wide.” You will also find Google Wallet now on your device after the update.
Sometimes you want to re-open a file you've just been working on and it would be handy not to have to dive into a "places" menu to dig it out. There's a file in your user directory called .recently-used.xbel which is updated by gtk apps in particular and holds the file paths and what application was used to open them, along with other data like mime-types.