CyanogenMod is a free, community built, aftermarket firmware distribution of Android 4.0 (Ice Cream Sandwich), which is designed to increase performance and reliability over stock Android for your device.
Code:
#include <std_disclaimer.h>
/*
* Your warranty is now void.
*
* We are not responsible for bricked devices, dead SD cards,
* thermonuclear war, or you getting fired because the alarm app failed. Please
* do some research if you have any concerns about features included in this ROM
* before flashing it! YOU are choosing to make these modifications, and if
* you point the finger at us for messing up your device, we will laugh at you.
*/
CyanogenMod is based on the Android Open Source Project with extra contributions from many people within the Android community. It can be used without any need to have any Google application installed. Linked below is a package that has come from another Android project that restore the Google parts. CyanogenMod does still include various hardware-specific code, which is also slowly being open-sourced anyway.
All the source code for CyanogenMod is available in the CyanogenMod Github repo. And if you would like to contribute to CyanogenMod, please visit out Gerrit Code Review. You can also view the Changelog for a full list of changes & features.
Instructions:
First time flashing CyanogenMod 9.0 your device, or coming from another ROM?
Root the device and install ClockworkMod Recovery. Instructions are available here.
Perform a NANDroid backup of your current ROM.
Format the system, data & cache partitions of your device.
Perform a factory reset.
Flash CyanogenMod.
Optional: Install the Google Apps addon package.
Upgrading from earlier version of CyanogenMod 9?
Perform a NANDroid backup of your current ROM.
Flash CyanogenMod (your Google Apps will be backed up & restored automatically).
Issues?
Experience issues? Please provide the following info to our bug tracker:
If the device was hard reboot, please provide the file "/proc/last_kmsg".
If the device was soft reboot or is "bootlooping", please run a logcat and provide the full output.
CyanogenMod is a free, community built, aftermarket firmware distribution of Android 4.0 (Ice Cream Sandwich), which is designed to increase performance and reliability over stock Android for your device.
Code:
#include <std_disclaimer.h>
/*
* Your warranty is now void.
*
* We are not responsible for bricked devices, dead SD cards,
* thermonuclear war, or you getting fired because the alarm app failed. Please
* do some research if you have any concerns about features included in this ROM
* before flashing it! YOU are choosing to make these modifications, and if
* you point the finger at us for messing up your device, we will laugh at you.
*/
CyanogenMod is based on the Android Open Source Project with extra contributions from many people within the Android community. It can be used without any need to have any Google application installed. Linked below is a package that has come from another Android project that restore the Google parts. CyanogenMod does still include various hardware-specific code, which is also slowly being open-sourced anyway.
All the source code for CyanogenMod is available in the CyanogenMod Github repo. And if you would like to contribute to CyanogenMod, please visit out Gerrit Code Review. You can also view the Changelog for a full list of changes & features.
Instructions:
First time flashing CyanogenMod 9.0 your device, or coming from another ROM?
Root the device and install ClockworkMod Recovery. Instructions are available here.
Perform a NANDroid backup of your current ROM.
Format the system, data & cache partitions of your device.
Perform a factory reset.
Flash CyanogenMod.
Optional: Install the Google Apps addon package.
Upgrading from earlier version of CyanogenMod 9?
Perform a NANDroid backup of your current ROM.
Flash CyanogenMod (your Google Apps will be backed up & restored automatically).
Issues?
Experience issues? Please provide the following info to our bug tracker:
If the device was hard reboot, please provide the file "/proc/last_kmsg".
If the device was soft reboot or is "bootlooping", please run a logcat and provide the full output.
My initial impressions, copy pasted from the other thread since I was informed the other thread would be closed:
Initial impressions after using this ROM for a few hours:
The good: Stability seems to be improved over the CM9 nightlies and RCs. I have not had any random force crashes or reboots so far.
The screen flickering issue from the nightlies and RCs has mostly been resolved. There is still sometimes a bit of blue-ish flickering when transitioning to the home screen, but it happens less often than in earlier releases.
Battery drain so far seems similar to V20C for me. That is to say, quite decent (I can easily get a day and a half on V20C with normal use, I don't expect any different on this ROM from what I have seen so far).
Overall, probably the best CM9 release so far (not unexpected since this is the "stable" release).
The bad: UI smoothness is not as good as the V20C official ICS release. This is especially noticeable when transitioning between homescreens. On V20C, the transition between homescreens feels smooth, whereas there is a clearly noticeable lag on the CM9 stable release.
Does anyone have problems with Instagram with this release? Instagram would freeze and cause me to pull battery during the filters part on all of the cm9 roms.
So I'm back to using the CM10 preview with no issues except for random soft reboots.
Maybe I'm doing something wrong w with CM9
I've had a couple of random reboots. Once as I exited the camera and I don't know what sparked the other.
Also, my dock disappeared and the phone was lagging quite a bit until I manually rebooted.
I came from RC1 which was the first and only rom I've ever flashed until this official rom. RC1 didn't do any of this. Are these real issues to worry about? I love the rom as it does virtually everything I want.
Sent from my LG-P930 using xda app-developers app
Phone: LG Nitro HD P930 ROM: ParanoidAndroid 2.51 Carrier: AT&T
By now, we’re all quite familiar with Tasker, the personal automation app that seems to be able to … more
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