![]() ![]() Note that there is one step missing in the linked instructions: After you reflash/wipe the system, you often have to go into system settings and re-enable USB debugging to proceed any further.Īll that is pretty straightforward and won’t break your phone at all if you follow the instructions exactly. If the phone won’t boot, try wiping your personal data (Alt+W) in the reflash screen. (6) to go back to where you were, reflash JF’s RC30 (you may or may not have to reflash the engineering bootloader before that). (5) download the Android source, apply my patch, build it, and flash it over the top of RC30 using fastboot to flash system.img and boot.img (4) reflash to a hacked RC30 (JesusFreke’s version) - rooted (3) reflash your bootloader, and reinstall system keys so that you can in future flash anything you want (1) reflash your phone to RC29, which is rootable ![]() If you follow the directions I link to (and then the instructions that those pages link to), then you should be able to do the following pretty easily - the instructions are very clear: It sounds like you’re at about the same level as me, so I’m sure you’ll be fine. Someone asked me how to get this running. On 12 January 2009 at 4:13 pm | Reply lukehutch Shameless plug: if you like or use this multi-touch work for Android, please donate to support continued development of awesome features for Android! (The original post about multi-touch on the G1 is here.) Get multi-touch functionality on your G1 phone today! I previously posted a demo of multitouch working on the G1, but the code was not ready for prime-time. UPDATE: Zoom-Zoom-Zoom - Get full working multi-touch zooming on your T-Mobile G1 Phone today! See my reaction here to the “newly confirmed” conspiracy theory that Google stripped multi-touch out of the G1 so that their relationship with Apple doesn’t go sour. ![]() UPDATE: Multi-Touch and more tinfoil hats Just posted my theory that there is much more going on in the Google/Verizon deal than the release of a couple of cellphones. I strongly suspect HTC included my multi-touch code in the HTC Hero for pinch-scaling in the browser (and added it to the photo viewer) while they wait for official multi-touch support, though they never contacted me to say they were going to use it… Now for my own tinfoil hat… I just checked the Synaptics driver in the source code released today for the HTC Hero, and it appears that this kernel is *not* multitouch-enabled, unless they somehow included another Synaptics touch driver that I missed… so if you rebuild this kernel, you won’t get the multi-touch hack. Older stuff: Hero kernel released no multi-touch support total cost of ownership, TCO), is likely to end up amounting to quite a bit more than buying the phone outright and going to an off-contract plan. New blog post on the day of the release of the N1: beware that the cost of the Nexus One phone with T-Mobile, amortized over two years (i.e. If you’re implementing MT apps, trust me, you don’t want to do it without this Java class □ What T-Mobile doesn’t want you to know, or the hidden cost of getting the Nexus One on contract My multi-touch controller code has been ported to Eclair, enabling much simpler implementation of multi-touch apps on top of the new Eclair multi-touch api. ![]()
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