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dimanche 30 août 2015

Saturday Contest: Winners and the Answers!

contest

Yesterday we decided to have some fun. We posted 2 riddles for you guys to try and solve, with Google Play Credit prizes for both the winner and the first runner-up. We had hundreds of entries, but only a few of you got the answers correct. The wait is now over, here are the answers and who got them first.

1 – A Man with a Boot, Searching for a Shirt.

The first answer we were looking for was the name of one of our Senior Recognized Developers, a man famous for many XDA apps including the popular Liveboot which replaces your boot animation with a live logcat. The first clue we gave out on Reddit and Twitter was a link to one of these logcats. According to his account details, he also has no idea where his shirt is.

The first answer was “Chainfire”, of course!

2 – The Wild sound of Freedom.

The second riddle was a bit harder if you had missed the recent release of a certain open source music app by developer XpLoDWilD. The clue we gave to this, as many of you guessed, was a small grayscaled portion of the welcome screen.

The second answer was “Encore”!

Congratulations if you got them both right, only 24 of you gave both correct answers. However, the member that gave the answer first and, therefore wins $25 of Google Play credit was: Moon2. The second person to answer correctly winning themselves $10 of Google Play credit was: adaytoremember. Bravo! We will PM your codes shortly.

The following users also answered correct but were, unfortunately, too late to win one of the codes:

  • purgepure
  • TJKV
  • sebastian05000
  • Quasar
  • Tony_St
  • YoshiShaPow
  • soumitpl48
  • paarthdesai
  • medicdj
  • gus1521
  • kawiesh
  • Morningstar
  • Ash110
  • Preggy
  • Marxie
  • lukes91
  • Spere
  • thunderskain
  • vinver-3160
  • JavierAlonso
  • siddlv
  • danielbulan97

Honourable mentions

We had many brilliant answers and some were far deeper than we had considered, some of our favorite answers for the first included:
“A man with a phone searching for a ROM”
“XDA TV’s Jordan Keyes”
someone who’s probably gonna be late for work !”

and for the second:
…you gonna hear me rooaaaar……….”
Freebird – Lynyrd Skynyrd” (It’s mentioned in the Encore app description)
Guns N’ Roses’s music, Welcome to the Jungle”

 

Did you work them out? Leave a comment below!



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Unofficial CyanogenMod 12.1 for the OnePlus Two

oneplus 2

CyanogenMod 12.1 for the OnePlus Two is now sufficiently stable to be used as a daily driver. Recognized Developer Grarak has updated the ROM and now the only functionalities yet to be implemented are the Fingerprint sensor, laser autofocus, the notification slider and enforcing selinux.



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Sunday Debate: How Will Lenovo Affect Motorola’s Future?

lenovo

Join us in a fun Sunday Debate on Lenovo and Motorola. Come with your opinions and feel free to read some of our thoughts, then pick your side or play devil’s advocate to get your voice heard and engage in friendly discussion. You can read our food-for-thought or jump straight into the fray below!

  • Do you trust Lenovo?
  • Do you think Lenovo will push Motorola forward?
  • What is your opinion on the new interventions and alleged merge?
  • What do you think will happen to Moto phones?

20150830170034590Google’s acquisition Motorola marked a great beginning for the smartphone elder. One only has to look back at the Moto G and its “a Google Company” branding to begin fathoming the influence the Search Giant had on Moto, and how the shift in course also marked a clear turning point for the industry at large. Since 2013, many great devices have come and gone under Motorola’s name, and in the end, it seems that most of them have been met favorably: the budget E line, the excellent G mid-rangers, the beloved X flagships, the niche Turbo and even a premium Nexus.

Then in January of 2014, shortly after the Moto G’s success, Google sold Motorola Mobility to Lenovo, a very well-known Chinese manufacturer of PCs, for $2.91 billion. This was a shock to many, as Google has bought Motorola in 2012 for $12.5 billion, and nobody expected Lenovo of all players to acquire the company. Analysts quickly began theorizing the reasons behind the sale and the purchase, many concluding that Google needed Motorola to exploit crucial patents and that Lenovo could use the company (and most importantly, its name) to enter the U.S. smartphone market.

Distrust and Performance

In the past few years, Motorola phones have been very well received. However, many fans are still worried about the future of the company for various reasons. One of them is that Motorola is an age-old mobile manufacturer, and much of that expertise and talent might be stunted by Lenovo. Other reasons include distrust for Lenovo for various controversies in the past.

20150830165622124There are a few things to consider: the U.S.-China Economic Security Review Commission called for a probe on a Lenovo deal due to concerns about possible spying. Lenovo is also known for having pre-installed software in consumer laptops from a company called Superfish, which could hijack web connections among other adware functions. The other issue we saw this year was Lenovo-Motorola’s GPL violations as there were numerous delays on their source releases. Considering Motorola was once a Google company, the concerns the infringement received were more than justified.

On a positive note, Motorola has had some great releases in the past year and since Lenovo’s purchase. The acquisition was finished by October of last year, so we can assume that some of the developments are partially due to Google’s influence. But the 2015 Moto G, for example, managed to give us all a surprise with its updated camera, speedy performance and great bang-per-buck. The Moto X Play is getting good reviews (despite it’s lack of gyroscope) and many are excited about the Moto X Pure/Style and all the greatness it offers for just $400. The new Moto 360 has been leaked numerous times and that also has many enthusiasts excited. Will this change?

Concerns

This month we’ve seen much news that have plenty of Motorola fans worried. First of all, Motorola was reportedly cutting 20% of their jobs and getting a new identity under Lenovo. The company was apparently not making enough money as Lenovo hoped, and now Lenovo wants to get a tighter hold of it. Now that Motorola is so big in emerging markets, Lenovo is injecting its people into the company and going forward with manufacturing in India. The latest reports, however, say that a bigger merge is taking place. While it originally seemed that Motorola kept functioning without much influence from Lenovo, the dynamic has changed and it is expected that Lenovo will intervene in many Motorola developments directly and indirectly. Finally, it’s also worth noting that Lenovo has their ZUK branch, which established relationships with Cyanogen and will have devices sporting Cyanogen OS.

Debating

On one hand, Motorola’s performance so far has been notable, and plenty of Android enthusiasts believe they are at a high-point. Lenovo’s resources might have been a deciding factor in many products consumers love, and injecting new blood into a company is not necessarily bad — in fact, it’s often beneficial. However, Lenovo has been under the microscope for various reasons in and out of mobile, and disrupting the structure of such an experienced mobile manufacturer may result in dissatisfying products for the sake of profit.

  • Do you trust Lenovo?
  • Do you think Lenovo will push Motorola forward?
  • What is your opinion on the new interventions and alleged merge?
  • What do you think will happen to Moto phones?



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Snapprefs Xposed Module Updated with Latest Snapchat Support

FsFw0Dp

Snapprefs Xposed Module has been updated with a stable release after quite some time. The newest non-beta update brings along complete support for Snapchat version 9.14.2.0, along with ability to hide Discover from UI, save images as PNGs and Overlays and other bug fixes and improvements.



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Arter97 Kernel for Note 5 Promises Better Memory Management

arter97

XDA Recognized Developer arter97‘s kernel for the Samsung Galaxy Note 5 promises better memory management than the preloaded stock Samsung kernel. The kernel also has full support for f2fs using PhilZ recovery only, so back up and flash away!



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Realistic Images of Blackberry “Venice” Slider Appear

dIB9EZW

The Blackberry Venice has made its appearance in all its unofficial glory. The images show the device from a lot of angles, and shows what appears to be a rather clean AOSP build. The website also claims that the Venice will come with a 18MP fast focus camera, making it a very interesting device so far!



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Xposed Module To Fix MobileRadioActive Bug

mobileradioactive

Lollipop is remembered as the Android version that introduced us to the world of Material Design, bringing on a rather significant change in how Android attempted presentation of UI. What Lollipop is also famous for is the numerous bugs it introduced to an OS that was very close to maturity, and ended up souring what was to be a pleasant UX change.

An Ugly Bug!

MobileRadioActive is amongst one of those bugs from Lollipop that has been affecting a lot of users, and is said to have been fixed in Android Marshmallow. In simple terms, the Android system would keep the mobile radio awake even after mobile data usage had been disabled, thereby causing the device to remain awake. XDA Senior Member Bazoocaze investigated the issue and gave us a lowdown on what was causing this bug:

After some investigation on the issue I found that the BatteryStats service was not receiving the radio power down notification. The investigation lead me to the NetworkManagementService.java, where I found that some code was discarding the radio power change notifications after the first radio power on.

The problem is that in NetworkManagementServer.java the notifyInterfaceClassActivity method is discarding the notifications of radio power change to the BatteryStats (via noteMobileRadioPowerState) if the fromRadio parameter is false after it’s being true some time before.

Even after a detailed analysis, it was unclear what is the real role of the fromRadio parameter. Changing it to true in the calling methods solved the issue in the testing unit (Sony Xperia ZL).

Reproducing this bug is rather simple. All the users have to do is enable mobile data, use it for a short while, and then disable it. After a some time, check for the “Mobile Data Active” time under the apps that were used, which should appear as significantly higher than your usage had been. As a confirmation, the “Cell Standby” option would also show high drain, sometimes even higher than your display’s power usage.

A Nice Fix!

h646hEUReddit user Chronophasia gives us a sample reproduction sample reproduction of this bug, wherein the browser was used for a few minutes only (left image).

Thankfully, XDA Senior Member Bazoocaze has found a fix for the issue. The fix originally comes as a modified CM12.1 build for the Sony Xperia ZL, but thanks to the patches submitted by the dev, it has also been adapted into a universal Xposed module by XDA Senior Member pyler. The fix module is still undergoing tests for further confirmation which is why it is not currently available in the Xposed repo. However, you can still grab the latest version from the forum thread. As an added bonus, a patch has also been submitted to the CyanogenMod for review and should make its way on to nightlies soon.

 

If you are amongst those suffering from this battery draining bug, give the Xposed module a spin and report back your results in the module thread!



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