Android_LIFE
Android Enthusiast
I'm not sure what that is. Another conversion type program?
Yes.
Techspansion
Company is no longer around,
You can find it online through torrents etc
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
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I'm not sure what that is. Another conversion type program?

If, after this, anyone still feels the need to bitch and moan at other members for their opinions then they should have a bag packed in readiness for a short vacation to Banlandia.
Any questions on the above, contact a staff member via PM.
I highly doubt that. I can give a Nook to my family members and the websites and they still would not be able to root it. Alot of people are not technically inclined (as I have a side business building and maintaining PC's). I also Root Android Phones and Overclock GPU's (for gamers). There is enough of a market out there that people are willing to pay for these services because they you know CAN'T do it themselves. I don't think I am that smart, I just know that there are not alot of technically savy people out there.
BTW - Getting people to understand and use ADB (or a command line prompt for that matter) is NOT 5th grade material. Sounds to me like YOU think you are smarter than everyone else.

No they are notThere's no legal way to distribute Google Apps & Marketplace with a ROM and as such XDA does not allow it (this is why deeper-blue does not include these two with his Honeycomb V4). You have to find the .apk's and install yourself (this involves using ADB to Push the .apk's).
This is where the majority of people get stuck. You first have to make sure that ADB recognizes your Nook Color via USB (which means that your PC HAS to have the correct drivers). Then you have to know how to use a Command Prompt and change the Dir to where the ADB.exe is located (this should also be the folder where the .apk's are located as well). According to some here this is all common knowledge and the majority of 5th graders know how to do this![]()

Really? My G Tablet custom ROM's came with the market, and full fledged Google Apps...
Someone better tell all the people over at XDA...![]()
Mulder is right. Android/Honeycomb needs an easy route to install Movies/Videos onto these HC devices as the iDevices have iTunes. Adding Movies to iDevices is very easy and takes minimal effort. I add a Movie to iTunes, connect iDevice, sync and watch, pretty simple. Hopefully Google gets some sort of Syncing method going that's as easy.
The device like the XOOM needs to appeal to the newbie (my partner) and power users like myself.
That Sunday, I get a call from my job that the mail server is getting hacked from Russia. I go and buy a 3G SIM card. I cut it to fit the iPad's micro sim. Plug it in. I then VPN through a CISCO vpn and SSH into our servers and then look at the logs and block an entire network block from Russia on the firewall and deleted all the mail queue from spammers using iSSH and an X11 application on the iPad. I did this during the morning breakfast buffet at local restaurant. If that isn't magical, I don't know what is.

Ummmmmmm, you DON'T have Honeycomb on your G-Tab. You have Gingerbread. You CANNOT install Honeycomb (Android V3.0) on a Nook Color with Marketplace or Google Apps installed within the ROM. Yes, some GINGERBREAD ROM'S have Marketplace and Google Apps baked into the ROM, on the other hand, HONEYCOMB does not and thus you have to use ADB to Push over Vending.apk and GoogleServicesFramework.apk. There is a difference between Gingerbread (Android V2.4) and Honeycomb (Android V3.0). Hope you understand the differences now. As of right now there is only 1 version of Honeycomb floating around (deeper-blue V4 for the Nook Color) AND to use Marketplace and Google Apps YOU HAVE TO USE ADB.

As of RIGHT NOW (this particular point and time) the Honeycomb that is running on the Nook Color DOES NOT have Marketplace and Google Apps baked into the ROM. You HAVE to use ADB to install both on a Nook Color running Honeycomb. Right now the only two devices currently on the market that can run Honeycomb are the Xoom (Natively) and the Nook Color (via Root). The Nook Color version of Honeycomb is NOT AOSP. It is coming thou.
The Nook Color Honeycomb is just a port of the Honeycomb SDK: Honeycomb for Nook Color released for download (update: video) -- Engadget
So, not the AOSP, but the SDK. Which, of course, does not have the market in it (Or google apps). They are trivial to bake into the ROM, however, and really do not require an ADB push.
Hell, I might rebake the ROM tonight and post it...
Wait, I'm confused. When I hook up my iDevice to my machine, it goes and downloads and installs iTunes for me? Hmm, never noticed that.I understand the complaint that it doesn't come with the phone, but, seriously, what's the point of an *OPEN* OS if you *NEED* to have everything handed to you on a platter? I personally like the minimalist approach in that I can then go get what *I* need, not what some arbitrary corporation tells me I must have. Personal preference. If you wanna be spoon fed, iDevices are what you should be using. If you want choice and aren't afraid to get your hands even a little dirty, then Android is where it's happening. It really comes down to being that simple.
Very true, and an excellent comment. In the end, it boils down to consumer choice. For a phone, and probably a tablet, I like the open nature of Android and the ability it affords me to customize it however I want. However, there are many people who don't want to bother with this sort of thing. We live in a great society where great competing products exist, and consumers have ample choice. This is a good thing, as it pushes all companies to continually adapt and refine their product. In the end, we all win.

