With the release of the new Kindle Fire HD 8.9” in November,
a lot of Kindle users are going to be upgrading. Amazon allows previously purchased content to
be stored in the cloud and transferred between devices, so users will be able
to transfer all of their books, apps, music and movies to their new device. There
are going to be a ton of used last gen Kindle Fire tablets going up for sale of
craigslist with hundreds of dollars in pre-loaded content. I’m considering upgrading myself, and the
lucky person who buys my old Kindle Fire is going to be enjoying a side-loaded version
of Grand Theft Auto 3, over 500 books, and a dozen free music albums.
For all of the criticism of the device by tech
writers, the first generation of the Kindle Fire was Amazon’s best ever selling
device and maintains a rating of 4/5 stars. It has a reputation for being
relatively free of defects or malfunctions. Most of the people I know who actually
own a Kindle Fire love it. When I stop
to think about, I’m finding myself hesitant to give mine up. A recent hack that allows users to run Android
4.1 Jelly Bean on my old Kindle Fire has me second guessing my decision to sell
it. The Jelly Bean OS is still in the beta-testing stage on the Fire, but
developers have worked out most of the major kinks. The International Business
Times reports, “Issues with HD codecs are found to affect users on YouTube and
Netflix. With Texas instruments reportedly updating the libion code for Jelly
Bean, it should help Hashcode in fixing this issue soon. Apart from the codecs
issue, the screen over-rotates while changing position, besides turning on UMS
in the ROM appears to be a major difficulty.” It sounds like a more stable
version of Jelly Bean for the Kindle could be released a few weeks after the
new Kindle Fire is shipped and just in time for Christmas.
For now, users must manually
install Jelly Bean onto the Kindle Fire in a relatively simple 4 step process.
Step 1: Download Android Jelly Bean 4.1.1 ROM for your Kindle
Fire. It's around 108MB and might be time consuming particularly on slower
connections.
Step 2: Download Jelly Bean Gapps that needs to be flashed
onto your device.
Step 3: Power off your
device and boot into recovery.
Step 4: Flash the
ROM/Gapps, which you downloaded in previous steps from ClockworkMod Recovery.
Ensure you do a complete wipe of the data and cache. You are done. Just restart
your device from CyanogenWorkMod (CWM) and your Kindle Fire should
automatically boot into Android Jelly Bean 4.1.1. If you find issues with Wi-Fi
after flashing, you just have to run the command: adb shell su fix-mac.sh and
you are all set.
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