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Root Help restoring calendar app

Okay, so I got me a Galaxy Y about a week ago, and bought a titanium backup Pro. I rooted my phone to uninstall google talk and social hub, But i accidentally removed the calendar. when i use titanium backup the restore doesnt progress. something like a box appears saying restoring app calendar 2.3.6 and a circle spinning on and on, i waited for about an hour, tried googling the problem.

so far i got solutions saying to change the App processing mode to auto,indirect. but still no result.

anyone please help, i know its not a big deal but it is for me. answers would be much appreciated.:):):)

by the way i did not flush it with roms or anything. just rooted it installed Titaniumbackup, chainfire, root uninstaller and adfree.
 
Many apps provide services for other parts of the OS and if you remove them, you can disable certain features or make your phone unusable. More importantly, system apps are not easily restorable like simply installing an .apk file. And once deleted, even a factory reset will not recover them. You will have to locate and flash a stock rom image to get them back. If you plan on rooting and deleting those apps, please check back here first before you do anything so we can make sure it's safe for you to delete those without any negative impact to your phone.
 
Many apps provide services for other parts of the OS and if you remove them, you can disable certain features or make your phone unusable. More importantly, system apps are not easily restorable like simply installing an .apk file. And once deleted, even a factory reset will not recover them. You will have to locate and flash a stock rom image to get them back. If you plan on rooting and deleting those apps, please check back here first before you do anything so we can make sure it's safe for you to delete those without any negative impact to your phone.

ok. so i solved my problem by flashing a stock gingerbread rom i found through the help of youtube. now i will root my galaxy y again and this time make sure to uninstall only the following:

talk
samsung apps
email
social hub
gmail

is it safe to do so?
will it have any negative effects.

i was just hoping that they could reduce ram usage
and also free up some load on the processor and internal memory.

thanks for the replies :)
 
ok. so i solved my problem by flashing a stock gingerbread rom i found through the help of youtube. now i will root my galaxy y again and this time make sure to uninstall only the following:

talk
samsung apps
email
social hub
gmail

is it safe to do so?
will it have any negative effects.

i was just hoping that they could reduce ram usage
and also free up some load on the processor and internal memory.

thanks for the replies :)

I would highly recommend instead of deleting the apps, you use Titanium Backup to freeze them that way you can unfreeze them with little or no impact. It will also give you a good idea which is safe to delete and which is not. Deleting Gmail, email and talk will most likely disable portions of your phone you don't want disabled. The Samsung apps I would venture are safe and I don't know about social hub. Remember, if you delete them, you will need to reflash to get them back.
 
I am in the same boat. My fault was I deleted the Clock (so no alarm) and internet... now I have no access to android market also as clicking the icon just results in nothing... complete disaster and have taken a friend's help to restore Stock Rom for India 2.3.6 DDLC2.... yeah it will be real nice to know which of these bloatware one can get rid off safely.... also how does one backup the stock ROM and the apps (like in windows image) this time before I try rooting again? Thanks.
 
.... also how does one backup the stock ROM and the apps (like in windows image) this time before I try rooting again? Thanks.


You've probably run across people recommending a nandroid backup. That is backing up an image of the OS tot he SD card for either restoring your phone back to a known point or for recovery in case a rom flash goes awry. There is a pretty decent explanation here.
 
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