Quote:
Originally Posted by Merlin09
First. Thanks a lot for taking the time for me. As a newbie with Kindle hacking, though I messed with nearly every other device I own, it's sometimes quite confusing.
I will try to explain more clearly. When I changed my kindle screen, I was stuck with incorrect battery error - 22.
I read I was to flash a "new" firmware with fastboot, so I did. It worked, but I had a kernel error, because I flashed the wrong version (pw1 when I have a Pw2)
So I tried a second time, with the right firmware, but while it was writing the firmware, the kindle rebooted on its own. After that, when I tried to get Uboot, I had the console with uboot>, but when I write a command (like bist), the console outputs some errors, the most significant being mmcblk0 error, unable to read.
That's why I try to restart from the beginning, even if I don't get how it happened.
I will give Kubrick a try, I read about it, but though it was only applicable to Kindle up to 5th generation.
I'm a long time Linux user, so I do own a 32bits Linux.
I'll let you know how it went.
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That is true about Kubrick.
It's scripted 'wizard' only handles the models you mention.
But that is not necessarily true for the tools that it includes.
Some of them WILL work with newer devices.
And you had mention building fastboot - there is always a chance that you built the wrong one or have a build error.
Kubrick has a copy that is proven to work.
And you asked where to get another tool -
my answer was that Kubrick is the most likely place to find that binary.
Note:
There is a function key escape from the wizard, so you can use all the tools from the command line.