Back to stock

A while ago, with the release of Android 4.2, I decided I wanted to try it out on my Galaxy Nexus. I was also extremely lazy at that point in time, and decided it was a really good idea just to dirty flash 4.2.1 over my 4.1 install. Everything was great, phone worked fine, but I found that performance was spotty. Some of the issues included connection speed dropping, making it unbearable to stream Rdio, interface lag, and poor battery life. Silly me put that to issues with 4.2, and my Galaxy Nexus being slightly outdated, but that all changed last week after a backup and clean flash.

Realizing that I had probably made a mistake dirty flashing the phone, I did my duty and backed up my text messages, then played around with fastboot. After downloading the stock 4.2.1 image from the Google developers page, and some platform tools for fastboot from eFrant’s back to stock instructions on the XDA forums, I was back to a fully clean stock experience. Well, I did have a bit of a hang up with driver installs, but all in all, I was back to where I should have been in about an hour. A few days later, I got the OTA for 4.2.2. All is well.


The best part about being back to stock is all the fun stuff that actually works now! The camera is quick again, the interface is nice and smooth, and along with that, Google Now actually works! I was amazed to see movie times posted the other night for my local theatre, and that there are weather notifications in my notification bar. Battery life is once again awesome. I did a whole 2+ hours of screen on time with the stock kernel, which I think should be considered a basic benchmark for any phone I own.

Speaking of kernels, Ezekeel is back from a long hiatus. He was off recovering from a broken leg, followed by a very hectic work schedule. You’ll probably remember me mentioning his work; the GladOS kernel, from back in my Galaxy Nexus review. I’ve been running GladOS on my Nexus for the past few days, and I’m actually a bit disappointed this time around. I don’t find it handles idle and low signal areas great, even though any screen on time is awesome. For instance, I had 35 minutes of screen on time this morning after waking up, and my battery only drained to about 90%. I also find there’s a little bit more lag with this compared to the stock kernel, however, I’m going to leave it for a few more days to see how things go.

I still do feel the Galaxy Nexus is aging. It’s been an awesome phone, and it’s treated me great. I’ve had the opportunity to discover a lot about Android and the phone community with it, and for that, I’ll probably always remember it. I do feel it’s getting close to the time to replace it. The Nexus 4 was released, and I can’t help but salivate over a phone with those specs, especially one that’s practically the same size. I won’t go into detail, as I think I’ll save those for an eventual review. Suffice it to say, my next device will definitely be a Nexus, and it’s probably going to be the Nexus 4.