Idk, its been plugged into both and the charging light never comes on.
OMFG I have exactly the same issue . That's funny but quite unsecure.
Anyone wishing to restore there MAC Address back to factory.
I had documented my original MAC addresses.
In terminal emulator/or adb shell (wifi turned off)
su
mount -o remount rw /system
calibrator set nvs_mac /system/etc/firmware/ti-connectivity/wl1271-nvs.bin XX:XX:XX:XX:XX:XX
You should backup original wl1271-nvs.bin before using this method.
if you have problem can restore file and reboot.
If someone could verify this for me I will edit/delete post if neccessary.
Thanks
Idk, its been plugged into both and the charging light never comes on.
With my fire powered all the way down (power button 20 sec press) the charging light was not on while plugged into AC power but it fully charged.
There seems to be some success with this, so if you are having battery drain issues turn off your touch sounds and unlock sounds. Audiodriver_1 seems to be constantly starting while the phone is sleeping which is consuming power. Turning these sounds off seems to fix the problem for now
Sent from my LG-VM670 using Tapatalk
how do I get my original Mac address?
Sent from my Amazon Kindle Fire using xda premium
sorry you miss understood, I'm unsure how to find my original mac address, do I have to flash a stock rom to be able to see it?
Sent from my Amazon Kindle Fire using xda premium
You can change it as long as you know your original MAC Address.
http://xdaforums.com/showpost.php?p=25130845&postcount=458
calibrator get nvs_mac /system/etc/firmware/ti-connectivity/wl1271-nvs.bin
calibrator get nvs_mac /system/etc/firmware/ti-connectivity/wl1271-nvs.bin.bk
Usage: calibrator [options] command
Options:
--debug enable netlink debugging
--version show version (0.71)
Commands:
...
set nvs_mac <nvs file> [<mac addr>]
I'm not sure that's necessarily completely true. I don't think you need to know the original MAC address.
I blindly issued the command in the above post WITH THE XX:XX:XX:XX:XX:XX left as 'X's. Obviously erroneous input to the set command, but what the heck, it was worth a shot since I didn't know my original MAC address. What did I have to lose by trying, I already had the .bk file.
If I now do a(note, that's a get not a set) I get a different MAC address than if I do aCode:calibrator get nvs_mac /system/etc/firmware/ti-connectivity/wl1271-nvs.bin
(the backup file I made.)Code:calibrator get nvs_mac /system/etc/firmware/ti-connectivity/wl1271-nvs.bin.bk
It would appear to me, that if you don't assign a proper address (or per the help even leave out the MAC address completely), it might read the original MAC address from the network card. Or maybe it's just making one up - though I hope not. The help for the calibrator command indicates that the MAC address is an optional argument if I'm reading it correctly:
Code:Usage: calibrator [options] command Options: --debug enable netlink debugging --version show version (0.71) Commands: ... set nvs_mac <nvs file> [<mac addr>]