holden j caufield
Diamond Member
- Dec 30, 1999
- 6,324
- 10
- 81
how can I permanently opt out of the ota update I keep getting?
Same boat with my Moto X. I'd rather disable OTA and just get 5.0 when I get a new phone. Got my phone running 110% at the moment and don't really wanna mess with it.100% stock on nexus 4, 4.4.4 running art runtime, all animations disabled. Getting great connections, now doing wifi calling through hangouts, great battery, stable no issues.
If it's not broken and in this case it's running great, why mess with it.
Everyone should do a factory reset, it alleviates lots of issues that people are having.Recently updated to 5.0 on my Nexus 4. I did a factory reset so I don't know how it would perform.
That said if you have 5.0 on an N4 and do a factory reset this update is sweet and performs extremely well.
Also if your bootloader is locked and you sideload the update it will format your device ( thus a factory reset) to unlock the bootloader and install 5.0. Then just lock the bootloader once done. Follow a step by step guide.
Helped someone update there Nexus 7 2013 since the OTA was taking forever (before finding out all about the kinks in the OS).
I want to update my Nexus 4.... Just debating if I can live without the Xposed stuff for the new features in 5.0 until Xposed catches up to the ART runtime (no ETA. Could take Months).... I think waiting for a 5.1 update for me might be best and to see rooted development evolve a bit too.
Then you did it wrong.
Sideloading the OTA can be done without unlocking the bootloader.
The bootloader must be unlocked to install a factory image, however.
You flashed the factory image, which does require unlocking the bootloader and wiping the device. The is a different procedure to side load the OTA update, which doesn't wipe the device.I was going by the instructions here: https://developers.google.com/android/nexus/images
When I have to use flash on Android I use a browser that is called Puffin that I recall. I only use this browser for this purpose (flash and adobe shockwave videos) and use chrome for everything else and thus Puffin has no personal information.
Puffin runs the video on their server and then sends the information to your tablet. Much more stable but slower to load than trying to run flash in a browser such as dolphin.
Puffin is free to try, but after so many times you have to buy the $3.99 version.
Nexus 4, still haven't gotten OTA yet. Am I doing something wrong?
Nexus 4, still haven't gotten OTA yet. Am I doing something wrong?
You flashed the factory image, which does require unlocking the bootloader and wiping the device. The is a different procedure to side load the OTA update, which doesn't wipe the device.
What device(s) do you have? I'm not a huge fan of material design - it's too bright and everything is too big. I love the holo design language far more. Another thing I hate are the new animations - I tend to either turn them off or set them to 0.5x speed. Having said that, Lollipop has brought a significant improvement in the battery life department for my Nexus 5. The performance improvements (while small) are noticeable.I have been trying to find a compelling reason to upgrade to Lollipop. To be frank, I have not found one. Reviews are hailing the "Biggest Overhaul since Gingerbread," but in every single review I have a hard time finding something truly useful and innovative.
Most changes in Lollipop are simply aesthetic ones. Security feature is underwhelming, and encryption existed in previous releases. So was multi-user support (albeit only on tablets) All Material designs are already deployed in Google apps, and if you are using a custom launcher you won't even see the new UIs outside "Settings."
That leaves two relatively solid features:
1. 64-bit and ART, performance enhancement
2. Project Volta
64-bit only applies to the Nexus 9, and ART can be enabled in Kitkat. I think it is still experimental in Kitkat, so I guess that is something to look forward to. Project Volta is probably the most anticipated feature by me, but initial reports are also underwhelming. But I hope it will improve.
All the reviews I have read heavily focuses on appearance changes and I do not care much for those. What makes it so great about Lollipop?
For once I'm actually curious to see the Touchwiz rendition of Android. Samsung has a vested interest in optimizing for AMOLEDs and I'd like to see Lollipop without blinding white cards all the time even if the metaphor itself isn't a bad one.
Recently updated to 5.0 on my Nexus 4. I did a factory reset so I don't know how it would perform without one.
That said if you have 5.0 on an N4 and do a factory reset this update is sweet and performs extremely well.