Installing the Performance setting tool - JASJAR, XDA Exec, MDA Pro ROM Development

Hi,
Many ROM's i've tried have the "performance setting tool".
My current rom which I want to keep as longest as possible, doesn't have this program.
Where do I find it, and how do I install it?
I'm particularily interested in the dynamic clocking function. Does dynamic clocking already work, even without the performance tool installed?
many thanks

open page 2 (still here),
inside: WM6 add-on cabs - For vanilla ROMs (Last update 14th Dec)
hope you fine what you need.

Related

What's the best Android ROM for Polaris?

I am sorry if a thread like this exists but I didn't managed to find it.
I tried different Roms but I can't remember from all which is the fastest.
I am mainly using my Polaris for:
- phone calls
- wifi browsing: Opera Mini/Skyfire
I want the fastest Android Rom that will suit my needs. From your experience what ROM would you recommend me ?
Thanks.
Try to use froyo 2.2 RLS 12, right now i use it on my phone, it is fast naught to do all the usual things without wait. I overclocked my CPU to work at 540MHz (this says Rogue Tools) but it is working at 520MHz really. The market it is working fine, bluetooth also, wifi can be solved to obtain ip, everything is ok. If you wanna more details, PM and i will try to guide you in romanian
BYTeXperience said:
Try to use froyo 2.2 RLS 12, right now i use it on my phone, it is fast naught to do all the usual things without wait. I overclocked my CPU to work at 540MHz (this says Rogue Tools) but it is working at 520MHz really. The market it is working fine, bluetooth also, wifi can be solved to obtain ip, everything is ok. If you wanna more details, PM and i will try to guide you in romanian
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
how can I flash froyo 2.2 RLS 12 to my Polaris?wifi is ok?
1. READ POST1 HERE - FOR THE INSTALL PROCESS INSTRUCTIONS and download the install-seq.sh .
2. READ POST1 HERE - DOWNLOAD THE Latest FroYo NBH or ZImage (POLAIMG.NBH) for your panel type, and the RLS12 All Languages Themed (androidinstall.tar).
3. READ POST1 HERE - FOR THE NBH Editor v3.5.2 YOU CAN DOWNLOAD AND USE THIS PROGRAM TO CHANGE THE PANEL TYPE FROM 1 TO 3 OR FROM 3 TO 1.
After you read all the 3 posts from the 3 thread and you download all the files you need you can proceed with the install using the steps described in the point 1.
For solve the WiFi obtain IP adress, after you install successfully the Android on your Polaris, restart it and press the volume button up when booting Android, you will see a menu with some options, select FIX PERMISSIONS menu and wait... after the fix WiFi will work just fine and it will obtain the IP from the network.
Hope this post will help you.
Indeed, I am using since yesterday RLS12. It is pretty ok, some freezes here and there but nothing really important. Sometimes in Market the phone restarts. I thought about overclocking the CPU but I was affraid not to broke it. Is it safe? Is there a performance improvement ? What about battery drain ?
In my case i don't have any problems with freezes or restarting in the Market, but when you change the camera settings application from photo to video then the program stops. About overclocking the CPU, i use it in this way (540MHz) from some time, all is ok, the phone is fast and the battery is not drain, in my case work from 3 days ago and i have use it my phone to calls, WiFi (browsing), Bluetooth (send/receive files).
this last several days i've spent time to try a lot of android build for my device polaris100. here is my opinion about the best adroid build i've tried :
1.Incubus26jc's Super Froyo (RLS13)
the best build for show off to your friend in reality my device's 128 mb ram can't run it as smooth as it should be. too many frezes it work but with limitation. you need to tweak it a bit to make it bearable : 1 launcher page, keep launcer on memory, kill all windows animation. try to move the installed program to your sd might increase the cache files. uninstall those you never use. minimal widget. you might want to overclock your procc at the risk of your beloved polaris.
2. Kallt_kaffe VaniljEclair RLS11 (CM5.0.8)
It has the bling bling as the froyo build but it works generally alot of better than the froyo one. it work fast out of the box. and if you do the tweak i mentioned above it work alot of more faster. but not as fast as it should be if compared to those official device that came out with eclair.
3. [ANDROID] Myn’s Warm Donut - [RLS 5 - 04/24/2010]
this is the oldest adroid of the two above. but it has the least hardware requirement, in other word it really work as it should be (compared to the device that officially came with it). it just some glitches here and there but it is bear able. I'm having alot of fun with this build.
there is alot of other build that i tried but IMHO those 3 above are the one worth to mention.
hope this help.
CHEERS!
Tjahjo07 said:
this last several days i've spent time to try a lot of android build for my device polaris100. here is my opinion about the best adroid build i've tried :
1.Incubus26jc's Super Froyo (RLS13)
the best build for show off to your friend in reality my device's 128 mb ram can't run it as smooth as it should be. too many frezes it work but with limitation. you need to tweak it a bit to make it bearable : 1 launcher page, keep launcer on memory, kill all windows animation. try to move the installed program to your sd might increase the cache files. uninstall those you never use. minimal widget. you might want to overclock your procc at the risk of your beloved polaris.
2. Kallt_kaffe VaniljEclair RLS11 (CM5.0.8)
It has the bling bling as the froyo build but it works generally alot of better than the froyo one. it work fast out of the box. and if you do the tweak i mentioned above it work alot of more faster. but not as fast as it should be if compared to those official device that came out with eclair.
3. [ANDROID] Myn’s Warm Donut - [RLS 5 - 04/24/2010]
this is the oldest adroid of the two above. but it has the least hardware requirement, in other word it really work as it should be (compared to the device that officially came with it). it just some glitches here and there but it is bear able. I'm having alot of fun with this build.
there is alot of other build that i tried but IMHO those 3 above are the one worth to mention.
hope this help.
CHEERS!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
can u tell me, what works and what didnt work, in these androids???
Most stable for Polaris
Hi,
I always testing any incoming releases.
I vote for Incubus Froyo (RLS13 yet). If you don't use lot of screens, widgets, than it is the most stable for daily use. These things are the most important for me and they are work:
- Incoming calls come fast
- Data plan works: Task, Calendar, Contact
- BT carkit works
- Battery: I use sometimes pcarvalho lastest winmo and it drains battery more, than Android.
I think the most freezes are about the low free memory. But I'm on it to get more memory. If I use app and data on SD, I got max 40MB of free memory.
Hey, I got the same impressions of the Incubus RLS13, very stable BUT suffers from a memory problem... well, can't expect too much from the Polaris RAM when compared to the new devices in the market.
However, can u guys tell me if the Launchers (PRO and ADW) should make the phone slower (choppy)? I decided to stay with the stock launcher, apparently works better (apps, screens in/out), but I checked that PRO and ADW don't use a lot of memory.
For example, Tjahjo07, when u say keep the launcher in memory and 1 screen only, which launcher are u referring to?
Cheers!
@grgomes
he means launcher pro.
Tks Phyt. Yeah, I did try the speed-up suggestions, my Pola100 is much faster now.
2 screens LP, keep in memory, people widget and weather only. Minimal freeze and FC so far.
I did however go back to Liquid's 16/07 nbh, the 26/07 from DZO was giving me a lot of charging and booting issues. Seems much more stable now.
Im waiting for a Pola version for the 24/08 nbh from DZO, read some good reviews from people using Vogue...
I flashed Incubus26jc's Super Froyo (RLS14), Kallt_kaffe VaniljEclair RLS11 (CM5.0.8), Myn’s Warm Donut - [RLS 5], but there is no-one can run in my Polaris smooth.
My suggestion is don't install Android in your Polaris for business. Otherwise, maybe you will loss order or job.
Good Luck Everybody!
VaniljEclair
Use the VaniljEclair an reduce the pages of ADW.Launcher to 1! It works really fast!!! Ive got Pola200. If i flash Incubus Froyo WLAN dows not work. Running the other ROM everything works fine!!! I had 1.6 myns warm donut before. It had benn run from SD Card. By flashing Eclair I got a 2.1 which works as fast as Donut from SD card. Try it! Its great!!!
F1 plz
i read this guide : sourceforge.net/apps/trac/androidhtc/wiki/HowToInstallWithAtoolsNand
step by step done, but after install hardSPL, when i'm pressed CameraButton and Reboot, see the tricolor page , and nothing happen. what can i do ?!
@moapz: oh my god .. take a breath, you have posted in all the topics. wait a minute. someone will answer you. i think you are not doing something well. i have did that tutorial some time ago and had no problem with it. it would be better for you to try to install in haret mode first.
Have a nice day.
i have a problem to, when is the bars on the phone what i have to do? i need a program to flash the nand polaris? please help
Trak-X said:
@moapz: oh my god .. take a breath, you have posted in all the topics. wait a minute. someone will answer you. i think you are not doing something well. i have did that tutorial some time ago and had no problem with it. it would be better for you to try to install in haret mode first.
Have a nice day.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
thanks TrakX.
i installed android NAND on my pola200 and worked. but after some days it goes crazy and according to this forum thresd i could remove old version and now i want to install another stable version, so i read wiki page but all links not worked! or say file not found. so i'm going back to read threads again to find what version is good. but another problem! ; many of this guides uses haret.exe to install android but i cant do this, because i don't have WM on my pola200 to run it. so can you help me for that? how to install new android ?

New TP2

Ive just recently purchased a TP2 from US Cellular and immediately unlocked and flashed the device. Ive been through about 10 or so roms and I like the max sense but i need something that uses less memory. I don't want to use titanium because its too basic for me. Anyone have any info as to which roms are faster than others? Also is every phone basically the same or will everyone have a different experience with the same roms? Thanks.
I would install OCT (overclocking program - you can find it here on xda forum) and if you use energy rom with max sense there is a possibility to turn off standard Start Menu - there are other like List Menu or Compact Start Menu. It would give you about 40 mb of free ram more.
WOW is all i can say. I cant believe how much changing the start menu to compact helped. I went from 25ish %(free ram) after boot to 52ish % after boot. Now i just have to figure out how to use oct its pretty basic i guess... thanks Raul
also is there a way to double check the settings took? i noticed a big improvement since i changed the start menu but it doesn't seem like anything is working faster with the overclock?
You could always download PPCkitchen and build your own rom. You can test different configurations to see what gets you the best free memory.
I did that with my old titan to get 6.5 but, my TP2 I am still running stock (well, Mr.X's stock) but, just re-downloaded PPCk and will be building my own rom...

Flashing custom roms

I'm more of an android guy but my dad uses a hd7 that he also will use to tether. The current way he is doing it is that he is on NoDo (pre-mango) and the dial up hack (his HD7 is chevron unlocked). I was interested in flashing a Mango rom that has wifi internet sharing so I searched and think I have the method down for the most part but just want to make sure.
1. Charge battery up to 50%+
2. Hold power down while rebooting and go into OSPL mode
3. Flash RSPL (the temporary one) (basically follow directions in this thread: http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1195647)
This is where I'm not quite sure if the steps are correct
4. Download the rom file and launch the .exe file (the phone is a TMO HD7)
Am I missing anything? I'm sorry if there is a how-to flash a rom but I didn't find a how-to that had a step by step.
Also, is there a major difference between the roms in the development section?
Thanks a lot!
You've got the basic idea, yes. I think for a full ROM you *might* need to use HSPL instead of just RSPL, but I'm not sure (and if you can do RSPL you can do HSPL too, easily). Custom ROMs typically come pre-packaged in a "RUU" program - that's ROM Update Utility. If you want one that's just available as a binary image, you can download the RUU separately.
The major differences between the ROMs will be things like:
What devices are supported (HD7 = Schubert).
What features are supported (not all Mango ROMs will have Internet Sharing via WiFi, for example).
What tweaks are included (most should come pre-unlocked, at least).
Anything that *doesn't* work (watch ut for this list).
What update mechanisms the ROM supports (custom CABs are common, for example).
Generally speaking, the DFT ROMs are pretty good, though many people use their ROMs as a base to build in additional capabilities.
GoodDayToDie said:
You've got the basic idea, yes. I think for a full ROM you *might* need to use HSPL instead of just RSPL, but I'm not sure (and if you can do RSPL you can do HSPL too, easily). Custom ROMs typically come pre-packaged in a "RUU" program - that's ROM Update Utility. If you want one that's just available as a binary image, you can download the RUU separately.
The major differences between the ROMs will be things like:
What devices are supported (HD7 = Schubert).
What features are supported (not all Mango ROMs will have Internet Sharing via WiFi, for example).
What tweaks are included (most should come pre-unlocked, at least).
Anything that *doesn't* work (watch ut for this list).
What update mechanisms the ROM supports (custom CABs are common, for example).
Generally speaking, the DFT ROMs are pretty good, though many people use their ROMs as a base to build in additional capabilities.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks for the reply, it really helps knowing you have a understanding of something before you actually attempt to do it lol.
I figured out the Schubert information just reading about it and the rest I figured out while browsing over the roms. I think I'm going to go with this one for my first flash.
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1271118
Thanks again for the help and hopefully all goes well.
DeepShining is popular as a high-capability ROM (lots of features), but be sure you read the Known Issues list. Things like possible problems with Connection Setup may be a problem if you use it for its legit purpose (fixing connection settings) very often, and the inability to use the CAB sender means future updates will probably have to be full ROM re-flashing.
If your dad has any app data on the phone that he'd like to preserve, such as game progress or things like that, let me know before you flash his phone. I've got an HTC data backup app that I'm ready to start a limited alpha test of. It's actually ahrd to find people who can test it on Mango though, due to the low number of people with interop-unlocked HTC phones, so a custom ROM that supports TouchXplorer (same DLL needed for my backup app) might make a good test. The app isn't even beta quality yet - I'm still adding things to it, and the codebase is a bit of a mess - but it works for the features it does have, most of the time.

Suggestations for ROM Developers

Hello Experts,
Even though, I don't knows "A" of "Android", but after playing around couple of ROMs with my rooted OnePlus One device, I have below wish/suggestions for ROM developers :
1.There should be two type of ROM installation i.e. custom and default installation. In custom installation user should have options (recommended by ROM team) to choose the rom compatible apps like browser,email clients,camera app, audio and video player app,file explorer,launcher,Gapps,theme etc.
2.Which app, mod/zip have been flashed/uninstalled after installing rom i.e. mod/app history.
3.Suppose I am going to install a new app/mod, rom should tell me that this new app/mod will affect in these areas of phone, if it not compatible with rom and still user is going to install, then there should be a place like "Uncompilable Installed Apps" with the details that why it is not compatible with this kernel,rom and/or device.
4.Forthcoming release will have these features and expected date of release.
5.ROM comparison option/app i.e. this ROM have/have not these features in compare to other market roms.
Obviously, ROM developers do their hard work without any monetary gain and my above "suggestions" are like they are paid for it, but whenever I gets some idea popped up, I writes in the forum, so that if I am suffering by "Bad Ideas Syndrome", then I will be stand corrected by your replies. I don't know how good or bad I have idea for ROM developers, but just sharing though.
Thanks and Regards
Girish Sharma
GirishSharma said:
Hello Experts,
Even though, I don't knows "A" of "Android", but after playing around couple of ROMs with my rooted OnePlus One device, I have below wish/suggestions for ROM developers :
1.There should be two type of ROM installation i.e. custom and default installation. In custom installation user should have options (recommended by ROM team) to choose the rom compatible apps like browser,email clients,camera app, audio and video player app,file explorer,launcher,Gapps,theme etc.
2.Which app, mod/zip have been flashed/uninstalled after installing rom i.e. mod/app history.
3.Suppose I am going to install a new app/mod, rom should tell me that this new app/mod will affect in these areas of phone, if it not compatible with rom and still user is going to install, then there should be a place like "Uncompilable Installed Apps" with the details that why it is not compatible with this kernel,rom and/or device.
4.Forthcoming release will have these features and expected date of release.
5.ROM comparison option/app i.e. this ROM have/have not these features in compare to other market roms.
Obviously, ROM developers do their hard work without any monetary gain and my above "suggestions" are like they are paid for it, but whenever I gets some idea popped up, I writes in the forum, so that if I am suffering by "Bad Ideas Syndrome", then I will be stand corrected by your replies. I don't know how good or bad I have idea for ROM developers, but just sharing though.
Thanks and Regards
Girish Sharma
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
i think these points youve taken has been addressed ..
1. its always been indicated on which is better, either clean or dirty flash
2. always posted based on the file being uploaded , included on changelogs most of the time.
3. this is usually on the user side.. thats why its been posted, and users tend to report if theres any problem or not on the said file being uploaded, usually reports has been posted with specific logs on why these apps did not work on the user side..
4. ETA is not always advisable.. developers are doing this for free.. unless its really something they earn money for..
5. rom comparison is always on the user side.. users are free to download any rom available and test all they want..
Hi Cebu,
Thanks for your participation in the thread. But, your point-wise replies do not match with what I have posted. Let me elaborate me.
1.Suppose you have cooked a rom, so I think there should be two types of installation (A) Standard/Default (B) Custom. If I opted (A) then there will be apps which you have provided by default, but if I opted Custom, then there should be options for selections of apps like I wish to have X Camera app, Y Browser, Z email client etc. like that.
2.Suppose today I ported XYZ rom, and after 2 days, I installed an app or flashed a mod. On the 3rd day I installed another app/mod. On the 4th day I uninstalled one app which I installed before 2 days... so there should be a place where I can see the app's installation and uninstallation log/activity.
3.There should be place where user can be aware that after installation of an app/mod/zip will have impact on these areas.
4.Agree that developers are doing the programming as and when they gets time, but forthcoming feature list and/or on which part they are working should be there.
5.Suppose I have X ROM, so in the rom itself, there should be a place where rom comparison can be viewed.
GirishSharma said:
Hi Cebu,
Thanks for your participation in the thread. But, your point-wise replies do not match with what I have posted. Let me elaborate me.
1.Suppose you have cooked a rom, so I think there should be two types of installation (A) Standard/Default (B) Custom. If I opted (A) then there will be apps which you have provided by default, but if I opted Custom, then there should be options for selections of apps like I wish to have X Camera app, Y Browser, Z email client etc. like that.
2.Suppose today I ported XYZ rom, and after 2 days, I installed an app or flashed a mod. On the 3rd day I installed another app/mod. On the 4th day I uninstalled one app which I installed before 2 days... so there should be a place where I can see the app's installation and uninstallation log/activity.
3.There should be place where user can be aware that after installation of an app/mod/zip will have impact on these areas.
4.Agree that developers are doing the programming as and when they gets time, but forthcoming feature list and/or on which part they are working should be there.
5.Suppose I have X ROM, so in the rom itself, there should be a place where rom comparison can be viewed.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Comparing roms is pointless. It is up to each.
Eta are never given.
There is no telling if an app or a mod will effect anything. That is up to you. You have to do proper research. Remember this is a developers forum.
Some roms use aroma installers but they can be buggy.
You have to remember that roms are not made for users. They are made for the devs and they decide to share it.

[GUIDE] Rooted, What Now? - The Essentials

Hey guys, Kyuubi10 back for another guide
Today I want to tackle the open ocean of options one has once they are finally rooted.
If you still don't know what rooting is, this guide probably isn't for you...But if you feel intrigued feel free to check this link out:
http://lifehacker.com/5789397/the-always-up-to-date-guide-to-rooting-any-android-phone
Many of you are unsure whether to root or not, since you don't yet understand the endless possibilities available to rooted devices. Most guides which I have found online only cover the options on the surface, I will try to go into deeper detail.
Meanwhile some of you have already rooted your phones on the promise of great things but find yourself stuck for ideas, and you start feeling that rooting is a bit useless. This is due to lack of information available for non-rooted folk, prior to actually rooting.
Note:
Just unlocking your bootloader, or flashing a custom recovery isn't rooting. But usually a custom recovery is required before rooting.
Hopefully you already know these, but if not here is a link to some terminology you may need to fully understand this guide:
http://www.talkandroid.com/guides/beginner/android-rom-and-rooting-dictionary-for-beginners/
So... You have successfully unlocked your bootloader, flashed a custom recovery and have rooted your device. What now? Where to start?
Finding Sources:
The first stop once you have rooted is to find sources of information about what is available to you and your device.
This is where the first complication arises, since each device is different, each device has a different rooting method, different mods, themes, ROMs and Kernels available to it. So there is NOT a universal way to root, nor software universally available to any rooted device. You have to find guides, and indexes of things made specifically for your own device.
If you have made it to this guide, you are on the right path. This website currently is the biggest hub for all things root, for any device. If you use the search option on the top right corner, you will have a really high chance of finding a thread dedicated to your own device. With all the information and software you may need, or want, specifically catered to your device.
This, along with all the available ROOT enabled apps within Google Play Store, will be the main source of ROOT software for you.
Why are you rooting?
Now you have a lot of options available to you. Where do you begin? This depends on what is your own personal reason for rooting.
The main four are: To improve battery, performance and to add themes and features which would be otherwise unavailable. (e.g. Double tap to wake.)
Improving battery AND improving performance may seem to be a contradiction, as improving performance may make battery suffer, while improving battery life may make performance suffer.
While focusing completely on one will definitely make the other suffer, if you focus on efficiency instead it's very much possible to improve both battery life AND performance TOGETHER!
There a multiple ways to improve efficiency of a device, and I will enter into more detail soon.
The other options are adding themes and features.
There may be themes which are only available to rooted devices, themes which would change values which you usually would not have access to while being unrooted. Such themes can be added as mods, or skins. Flashed from custom recovery or added by an app which writes directly to /system folder. Things which require root.
Mods on the other hand modify the visual design of existing things on the phone like widgets, such as clock widget. Theme mods are not usually reliant on ROOT, but they often need to be flashed through custom recovery, something which you will already have if you are rooted.
Features are a bit more complex than themes, but follows the same idea. They can be added through root apps, or flashed through custom recovery. Most features will require ROOT permissions, since most useful features perform actions which are not usually allowed without root. These include but are not limited to changing an apps way of functioning, or making a system change to give a ROM a feature it did not previously have.
All of these will be available to you through both XDA and/or Play Store. The limit is your imagination, all you need to do is think of something you want and use the available search boxes to find that which you want for you own device.
The most common way of adding all of it together are mod packs, frameworks, custom ROMs, custom Kernels etc...
But since there are such a wide variety of choices available, the ones you choose will be highly dependent on the original reason you have for rooting your device.
If you want to focus on performance and battery, you will choose a ROM with a lot of optimizations, and a custom Kernel instead of one with a lot of themes and features. While you will choose a ROM with few optimizations but loads of themes and features if you are looking more to the visual design experience, while ignoring the kernel, which doesn't affect visuals.
Once you know what your aim for rooting is feel free to begin flashing, installing and experimenting with a variety of software.
You may hear a lot about the risks of rooting, bricking your device, soft-brick or hard-brick, glitches from beta software etc....
But my advice is, don't worry about the risk....make a NANDROID BACKUP, and flash away.
If anything goes wrong, just go back in recovery and restore your last stable nandroid. This way you can flash without worrying about all the risks. And if something does go wrong, and you struggle to get into recovery, just leave an SOS post right here on XDA, on the thread for your device and the community will be more than happy to help you get back on your feet. This will always be a learning experience...don't let fright stop you from enjoying the rooted life!
The essentials:
Here are my recommendations for the most common and essential things which you should have/flash/install once you are rooted.
1) Begin by making a nandroid backup.
2) Find a custom ROM with the features you like. I personally recommend to focus on theming options when choosing a ROM, since you can use other methods to improve battery and performance.
3) Find a custom Kernel with great features to improve battery and performance. You should learn to adjust and fine-tune kernel settings to your liking, to find the ideal balance between battery and performance for your liking and your device.
3.a) This is my Comprehensive Guide to Kernels. It will have most of what you need in order to learn how to adjust kernel settings.​
4) Install BusyBox - What is BusyBox?
5) Flash Xposed Framework and Install the apk - This is only a framework, which facilitates and makes available multiple mods to both add features, themes and mods to improve performance and battery.
6) Flash Viper4Audio - The best audio mod available for Rooted devices. Recently for lollipop and marshmallow it seems that you need a Kernel with SELinux set to permissive.
7) Find and download an Adblock apk - Note: While it is awful to surf the net while being annoyed by intrusive ads, it is also not nice to stop content developers from from receiving the money they deserve through these ads, for content which the provide freely. Therefore please check the option to allow acceptable ads. So that non-intrusive ads are allowed to show up, so developers can continue providing their content freely.
From the Play Store:
8) Greenify - This will help both battery and performance by hibernating apps which keep awake even after manually force closing them. Thus allowing you to control how many apps are truly running at the same time and utilizing RAM. This app also has an Xposed module which adds boosted functionality.
9) Any ROOT file explorer - This will allow you to access ROOT directories of your device. This will be useful for multiple reasons, trust me
10) Tasker - If you are a fan of automation, this is your holy grail. With this you will be able to automate anything on your device.
11) Seeder - I am unable to explain what this app does. It's own description within the Play Store is perfect and very clear! Go check it out. It will improve performance when actively using the device.
12) SD Maid - This is a swiss army knife for Rooted devices. Those of you familiar with CCleaner, will know some of the things this app does. It cleans system and app caches, it cleans leftover files after uninstalling apps. It is also able to toggle autostart, delete system apps, freeze/disable apps and much much more!
Hope this has helped you get started on your Rooted adventure, and given you more aim of where you can go from here.
If you still haven't rooted your device, I hope this guide could help you seal your decision, and ease your fears. :silly:
If this was a helpful guide, I would be grateful if you could press the thanks button.:good::good: And feel free to comment with any questions or mentioning anything I may have forgotten, or your own opinions for the essentials things to do once you are rooted.

Categories

Resources