Unfortunately, the development of crdroid as a whole has been discontinued by Cristiano Matos as well. He said he needed a break from all this.
Maybe its time to took st other Roms.
I would have continued this ROM if it wasn't for main Dev only discontinuing it
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I see... In that case, a quick search pulled up Resurrection Remix and CyanogenModX roms as pretty popular alternatives for the Note II currently. I'm not entirely about their individual pros/cons but their threads suggest that both of them got Data/GPS fixed. Guess I'll find out about their differences a bit later.
^^ I am using the Jan 23 version (check attached screenshots) and I can confirm that GPS and data are working. I have been using crDroid for the last 2 weeks or so and its mostly stable. Sometimes after rebooting the phone, network isnt detected but enabling / disabling Airplane mode does the trick. CM12 themes work well. No other issues. I like this ROM very much. Was using DN4 previously but since flashing crDroid, havent felt like going back to it.
Dont go for the latest versions. Continue using the version which works well for you. No reason to update just because an update is available.
While I'm inclined to agree with you, the reason I switched to AOSP roms is due to wanting to have the latest Android on my phone. Sure DN4 and Phoenix can get you pretty close what with all their themes emulating Note 4 and the S5 but I was prepared to bypass many stock functionality (eg. quick glance, a whole host of s-pen related features & multi-window, although I've heard of solutions to the latter two) to have gain access to the most recent version of Google's work: for better or worse. Of course, for the most part, it is only for the better, otherwise I'd be pretty stupid guy to stick with my stubborn decision. Every now and then, there are pitfalls (the data/GPS issue for example) but, for me, the rest of the functionality made it worth while.
Similarly, I've read great things about 5.1, especially when compared with version 5.0: beating it on multiple levels. Which is why, although the January version of crDroid may be all well and good, I'd rather give the latest 5.1 a shot instead.