Showing posts with label android on your phone. Show all posts
Showing posts with label android on your phone. Show all posts

Thursday, 8 March 2012

FREE ANDROID OPERATING SYSTEM FOR FREE ON YOU MOBILE

FREE ANDROID OPERATING SYSTEM FOR FREE ON YOU MOBILE

If you love Nokia hardware but wish for a better operating system, consider what some enthusiastic developers have done.
As part of a project called NITDroid, the developers have created a compatible version of the Android operating system for Nokia’s internet tablets. The result is a device that has the body of Nokia and the brains of Android.
“Nokia’s hardware is fantastic but their software is suboptimal, slow, buggy and not always the best user experience,” says Terrence Eden, a U.K.-based mobile consultant who installed Android 1.6 “Donut” on his Nokia N810. “Android is a much better software environment for Nokia hardware than what Nokia provides.”
Eden’s Nokia-Android hybrid works well except for access to Google Market and apps, he says.
Meanwhile developers have created a stable version of Android 2.2 Froyo for the Nokia N900, which ships with Nokia’s Maemo operating system. They have been able to get calls, data and Google apps going on the hacked device. The only missing feature is camera support.
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Nokia Phones Hacked to Run Android


If you love Nokia hardware but wish for a better operating system, consider what some enthusiastic developers have done.
As part of a project called NITDroid, the developers have created a compatible version of the Android operating system for Nokia’s internet tablets. The result is a device that has the body of Nokia and the brains of Android.
“Nokia’s hardware is fantastic but their software is suboptimal, slow, buggy and not always the best user experience,” says Terrence Eden, a U.K.-based mobile consultant who installed Android 1.6 “Donut” on his Nokia N810. “Android is a much better software environment for Nokia hardware than what Nokia provides.”
Eden’s Nokia-Android hybrid works well except for access to Google Market and apps, he says.
Meanwhile developers have created a stable version of Android 2.2 Froyo for the Nokia N900, which ships with Nokia’s Maemo operating system. They have been able to get calls, data and Google apps going on the hacked device. The only missing feature is camera support.
This is not the first time a phone has been hacked to run an entirely different kind of operating system. Eager to experience Android’s features, some intrepid smartphone users hacked their Windows Mobile phones to run Android.
With Android for Nokia phones, the NITdroid project has had varying degrees of success. So far, they have attempted to port Android for Nokia’s tablet range of devices — which means the Nokia N770, N800, N810 and N900.
“On the N810, everything is pretty much functional. It isn’t a phone so there’s no call functionality to deal with,” says Eden.
But with the N900, users have found themselves unable to use the Android-powered device to make calls on a 3G network or change the screen brightness.
Tweaking the Nokia phones to change its operating system to Android isn’t for everyone, says Eden.
“It’s not something anyone off the street can do,” he says. “It’s a bit like installing Linux on the PC that you bought off Best Buy.”

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