Quote:
Originally Posted by Pajamaman
A brief point about koreader. I added the file to set the buttons to work. They do. But oddly, at first the top buttons did a next page, and the bottom buttons did a back page. After I rebooted, they reversed function. No big deal, but there you go.
fllc, with respect, I think maybe you could improve your approach to functions on the nook. You talk about slowness. I agree, but installing fdroid will use valuable resources. It is more light-weight to download apks and sideload them. You don't need f-droid at all. Button savior can be set to be transparent so you barely see the buttons when they activated. And when you're not using them, switch them off and all there is a tiny tab at the edge of the screen to turn them back on. The home button can be long held to show most recent apps used, and also used to go back to the launcher. It has a back button, and a menu button which is handy if you install older apps, which I do because they are more light-weight.
My nook seems to insist to open in the normal nook gui, no matter what I do. I just press the home button twice when I wake it up.
Thanks to the koreader admins for letting us discuss topics not always directly related to koreader here. I'll try to summarize and copy this thread to the nook developer section, and also paste it on xda.
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You seem to have similar inconsistent and unpredictable behavior in the Nook that I had before I got rid of all unnecessary apps! I had troubles with sleep, settings lost after reboot, battery drain, wrong launcher invoked after sleep, etc! Moreover, I observed some of these issues on my android phone where I downloaded and tested all apps that I was using on Nook. I even had a situation where a mere presence of one super-light-weight launcher would crash my primary launcher on button press.
So I reset to factory (root survived), and then installed my minimum of apps.
Now everything works as expected.
On the subject of f-droid: I set it so it does not do anything automatically. So the only resources it consumes is ~22 mb of space. It only runs when I need to update KOReader or ReLaunchX. (Given that the launcher was updated once in the last 20 months and KOReader can be picked up from GitHub at any time, I can just as easily get rid of it.)