Custom Android ROM Developers Get OTA Update Capabilities Like Carriers
hypnosec writes "A new service dubbed OTA Update Center has been launched that enables Android ROM developers to provide over-the-air (OTA) updates of their ROMs in a centralized and easy fashion. Custom ROM developers had very little at their disposal when it came to providing updates and when any user with such a ROM did want to apply an update, he/she was required to reinstall the new ROM from scratch, which often involved deletion of the backup, installation of the new ROM, and restoration of data. This was a lengthy process and often a deterrent when it came to updating the ROM. Also, the developers were required to have their own infrastructure whereby they would be required to host their own servers and have the required bandwidth to serve scores of downloads. The OTA Update Center changes this and provides a free-to-use service that is easy and noob-friendly to use."
Goo.im does the same thing, it seems to work fine and have lots of standard roms in it.
they are having a problem with that time slot?
Same thing as ClockworkdMod Developer, http://developer.clockworkmod.com/ Register, upload your ROM, hosted and pushed via ROM Manager on devices..
I didn't know that updating your ROM at noon time was more difficult than any other time.
I would be highly interested if I could download incremental updates (patches?). Who wants to download 70-600mb of data for every nightly?
If one can do OTA updates, then it isn't ROM is it?
What are these people thinking? Are they intentionally misrepresenting their products? Or have the figured out how to do matter teleportation over standard carrier networks?
ROM - Read Only Memory. You can't push your phone's firmware back into the cloud, only read it from their cloud ergo, it's ROM.
That-Is-Amazing (TIA)
Oh This Again - (OTA)
Delete your backups before any major change that might go wrong - it's just too boring otherwise!
Proud member of the Ferengi Socialist Party.
ROM developers are among the worst at documenting how to install their ROMs. The guides - and I've read a bunch - all assume the user is a fellow developer. They read like notes an experienced man wrote to himself so he doesn't forget how to do something. Consider yourself lucky if the author uses capitalization and smooth sentences instead of "textspeak" and run-on sentences. You'll get gems like "Please make sure that gfree_verify returns secu_flag = 0 before following this steps!!!" without bothering to explain what gfree_verify or secu_flag mean, nor how to ensure that the value is 0. Then there are head-scratchers like "If you main software version is higher than the version of the PC10IMG you want to install (in this case 1.19.531.1) you have to change the main version number in the misc partition." Again, assuming the user is an expert just like the writer. Any over-the-air updates would be welcome. My favorite advice from ROM developer: "make sure you are to flash the proper stuff or you will have a brick"
Shutting down free speech with violence isn't fighting fascism. It IS fascism!
This might help: http://simply-android.wikia.com/wiki/Dictionary
Uh.. not really. It's more just a word left over from when ROM actually was ROM. It originally was a part of the Operating System that was held on a read-only chip. Even when devices' "ROM" started to become updatable, we still call it ROM, because we're silly like that.
which is totally what she said
The facility to find and flash roms should be easy as easy to access as the app market in my opinion. Google is letting manufacturers and carrier ruin the system with their slow updates and locked in crap. If someone makes a JB rom for my phone I shouldn't have to spent hours trying to find it, and then figuring out how to get it on my phone without bricking it in the process. The instructions that are out there are terrible at best for the most part and risky to even try.
I know people will say stuff about it being a free and open thing and something you are doing at your own risk. But the counter is that as it is it's hard (as in you need to do a lot of reading first) to do and it doesn't need to be. It would be a real boon to the entire Android ecosystem if more open ROMs were available easily and quickly for anyone. People could just find the best rated rom for their phone and flash it to keep it up to date and not be beholden to their stock rom that is a year out of date.
It isn't that hard to download the updated Jellybro ROM, Franco kernel and then update it by dirty flashing it in recovery on my Galaxy Nexus. All I have to do is flash 3 zip files (ROM, Kernel, Gapps) and I'm done.
[...] Seriously, do you really want to be pushed an update that is probably untested and just hope for the best? We're not talking AT&T or T-Mo here [...]
Well, we were just a sentence ago... Seriously, it was Samsung's official updates that drove me to CyanogenMod.
Rudolf Hess edited Mein Kampf. He was the very first grammar nazi.