Guest jayziac Posted December 13, 2010 Report Posted December 13, 2010 Not sure about that, If android OS updates slow and I have no need for faster hardware, I can see myself keeping a phone for 2-3 years. I've heard some SSD drives on PCs failing within that period because of the heavy reading/writing to it as a cache.
Guest fischschneehase Posted December 13, 2010 Report Posted December 13, 2010 hm oke i wont keep my as long Xd but come on there is such a heave devoloping branche^^ in 1one a dualcore will be standard i think...
Guest Koki1337 Posted December 14, 2010 Report Posted December 14, 2010 The screenshot is of a different device. Also I heard it's just optimizing Quadrant benchmark tests, not real-world speed improvements, especially since it only improves disk I/O operations. And finally it shortens flash memory life. If that's your problem, then your RAM must have been dead. Having constant I/O doesn't screw your flash memory's life. It's made to perform and sustain that way.
Guest studjuice Posted December 14, 2010 Report Posted December 14, 2010 it's definitely possible, and definitely going to happen. I'm personally excited for this hack to become more finalized, and for clear tutorials to come about. $10 for an sd card every year is no price to pay for the phone to feel more spiffy
Guest jayziac Posted December 14, 2010 Report Posted December 14, 2010 If that's your problem, then your RAM must have been dead. Having constant I/O doesn't screw your flash memory's life. It's made to perform and sustain that way. There's a difference between RAM and flash ROM. The first requires power and has practically infinite life. the 2nd is Flash rom (used in SD cards and SSD drives) is non-volatile and saves its data without power. They have relatively limited life-span (specifically write cycles). I guess 2-4 GB sdcards are cheap nowadays anyway, but it's just the hassle of losing data, plus one has to be diligent about backing up stuff.
Guest dieghito Posted December 15, 2010 Report Posted December 15, 2010 but if the photo is a liquid quadrant test with the script, why he doesn't post the solution?
Guest thepasto Posted December 15, 2010 Report Posted December 15, 2010 (edited) but if the photo is a liquid quadrant test with the script, why he doesn't post the solution? because, as you see in the script, you need a ext4 partition, and other tools that are not available in the current configuration of the rom. Also from the tests I've done there are several problems with Dalvik-cache, then the phone is only good for doing benchmarks. ATM I have no time to work on this. If someone wants to try to port, the script is not difficult to understand. Edited December 15, 2010 by thepasto
Guest dieghito Posted December 15, 2010 Report Posted December 15, 2010 (edited) if I had the appropriate knowledge I head straight to work. so what have you remedied is a rom where calls do not work and nothing else. I turn now to the Italian forum I frequent and then report. I could understand the script, but the zip file contains a 4 which I do not know the minimum education even if it don't work anythings, can you explain me how I can make 1500+? Edited December 15, 2010 by dieghito
Guest vanisleguy1976 Posted December 16, 2010 Report Posted December 16, 2010 hm oke i wont keep my as long Xd but come on there is such a heave devoloping branche^^ in 1one a dualcore will be standard i think... I read somewhere that quad cores are coming out!
Guest danielj58 Posted December 16, 2010 Report Posted December 16, 2010 There's a difference between RAM and flash ROM. The first requires power and has practically infinite life. the 2nd is Flash rom (used in SD cards and SSD drives) is non-volatile and saves its data without power. They have relatively limited life-span (specifically write cycles). I guess 2-4 GB sdcards are cheap nowadays anyway, but it's just the hassle of losing data, plus one has to be diligent about backing up stuff. Most certainly true. Do the storage controllers on our phones not have some kind of "load balancing" algorithms though? I'm sure that's what I've read, and that it is implemented at a hardware level. Recalling the source is a different matter though...
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