[Q] Is it possible to double a N2A card for Nook Tablet? - Barnes & Noble Nook Tablet

My cousin and I want to get Nook Tablets 16GB to mess around with, but we don't have the time anymore to (sorry, *I* don't have the time anymore, she can't figure out technology whatsoever) to figure out if we're always doing things right via the forums at this point and stay updated.
I still want to support the community as I've utilized a lot of information (namely for my old HTC TP2) here. I was thinking about buying an N2A card for the both of us, but wanted to make sure that I can copy the files from one card to another SD card so that we can use them in our respective tablets. And I rest easier knowing that I was able to make a small contribution to the community.
Is this possible? We'd both like to access the Google Play market.

Use the link in my sig. It literally takes 5 minutes after you make the cards, and you can get screaming deals on cheap cards (you can probably find 2 2gig cards for about $10) and then you'll both have full access to the market and still have access to the stock interface if you so choose (note that you will not be able to use apps downloaded from the Play store on the stock interface if you're on firmware 1.4.3, only on an aftermarket launcher).

rebelx said:
My cousin and I want to get Nook Tablets 16GB to mess around with, but we don't have the time anymore to (sorry, *I* don't have the time anymore, she can't figure out technology whatsoever) to figure out if we're always doing things right via the forums at this point and stay updated.
I still want to support the community as I've utilized a lot of information (namely for my old HTC TP2) here. I was thinking about buying an N2A card for the both of us, but wanted to make sure that I can copy the files from one card to another SD card so that we can use them in our respective tablets. And I rest easier knowing that I was able to make a small contribution to the community.
Is this possible? We'd both like to access the Google Play market.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
If you are really wanting to go the N2A route (I personally would not), use Win32diskimager to READ the image (for backup purposes). Safely eject card. Insert new card and WRITE image. Safely eject card. Backup done!

Or do the $20 download only and buy your cards yourself. In any case, let us know what you do!

rebelx said:
My cousin and I want to get Nook Tablets 16GB to mess around with, but we don't have the time anymore to (sorry, *I* don't have the time anymore, she can't figure out technology whatsoever) to figure out if we're always doing things right via the forums at this point and stay updated.
I still want to support the community as I've utilized a lot of information (namely for my old HTC TP2) here. I was thinking about buying an N2A card for the both of us, but wanted to make sure that I can copy the files from one card to another SD card so that we can use them in our respective tablets. And I rest easier knowing that I was able to make a small contribution to the community.
Is this possible? We'd both like to access the Google Play market.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You can use the method/tools posted here and here to build an SD card version of blogpost author's CM10 ROM, or the current version of some other CM10 ROM varieties such as "CM10 "Jelly Bean" 0.08.x", "CM10 PURE AOSP 4.1.2 JBV06.1-Hashcode", and "SGT7+CM10+Cherry Picks" which are posted and discussed on XDA Barnes & Noble Nook Tablet Dev. Forum.

digixmax said:
You can use the method/tools posted here and here to build an SD card version of blogpost author's CM10 ROM, or the current version of some other CM10 ROM varieties such as "CM10 "Jelly Bean" 0.08.x", "CM10 PURE AOSP 4.1.2 JBV06.1-Hashcode", and "SGT7+CM10+Cherry Picks" which are posted and discussed on XDA Barnes & Noble Nook Tablet Dev. Forum.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It took me a few hours of trial and error but I sat down with my 4gb sandisk card and the second link up there and am now typing on my NT running CM10 off the SD card. There are a few glitches in the guide above, but I can walk you through them if you like.

Building a CM10 SD card for NT
FWIW, here the process I follow to build a CM10 SD card for my 16GB Nook Tablet:
1. Get the pair of files cm-10-yyyymmdd-UNOFFICIAL-acclaim.zip and cm-10-yyyymmdd-UNOFFICIAL-acclaim_sd_hd.zip from http://iamafanof.wordpress.com/2012/11/03/cm10-0-jelly-bean-for-nook-tablet-uploading/
2. Create 4 partitions using MiniTool Partition Wizard Home Edition per the instructions at http://iamafanof.wordpress.com/2012/11/11/how-to-guide-bootable-cm7cm9cm10-sdcard-for-nook-tablet/: boot, system, data, and sdcard. Make sure that you set the partition ID type for the boot partition to 0x0C FAT32 LBA and set its Active flag, otherwise the SDcard will not be bootable. Once this is done, the boot partition should appear as a (read/write accessible) drive under Windows. (Note that you can adjust the suggested sizes of the partitions upward to fill up the entire SDcard; FWIW the sizes I use on my 8GB card for the 4 partitions are, respectively: 0.5GB/0.5GB/2GB/[remainder of SDcard]).
3. Copy to the boot partition of the SD card the following files from cm-10-yyyymmdd-UNOFFICIAL-acclaim_sd_hd.zip: boot.img (in folder p2), flashing_boot.img, MLO, recovery.img, u-boot.bin.
4. Replace updater-script in folder META-INF\com\google\android of cm-10-yyyymmdd-UNOFFICIAL-acclaim.zip with the updater-script from in folder p2 of cm-10-yyyymmdd-UNOFFICIAL-acclaim_sd_hd.zip.
5. Replace vold.fstab in folder system/etc of cm-10-yyyymmdd-UNOFFICIAL-acclaim.zip with the vold.fstab from folder CM10_Jelly_Bean\1_os of SD_Boot.zip (obtained http://iamafanof.wordpress.com/2012/11/11/how-to-guide-bootable-cm7cm9cm10-sdcard-for-nook-tablet/).
6. Replace updater-script in folder META-INF\com\google\android of gapps-jb-20121011-signed.zip (obtained from http://goo.im/gapps/gapps-jb-20121011-signed.zip) with the updater-script in folder CM10_Jelly_Bean\p2\gapps of SD_Boot.zip.
7. Copy to the boot partition of the SD card cm-10-yyyymmdd-UNOFFICIAL-acclaim.zip and gapps-jb-20121011-signed.zip that get modified with the replacement updater-scripts and vold.fstab files in the above steps (which cause the CM10 ROM and JellyBean Google Apps to be installed on the SDcard rather than on your NT itself).
You should now have a bootable SD card with 7 files on it, ready for the phase of “installing ROM and gapps” described at http://iamafanof.wordpress.com/2012/11/11/how-to-guide-bootable-cm7cm9cm10-sdcard-for-nook-tablet/.
A few additional points worth noting:
If your NT is like mine, you will have to plug in the powered USB cable to the NT in its power-off state -- in order for the NT to boot from the SDcard.
Generally the lower rating (and also cheaper) class 4 SD cards are more suitable for running a ROM than the higher classes 6 and 10 cards (since the latter are optimized for large & sequential block read/write at the expense of random read/write). So if you happen to use a class 10 or 6 card and your apps frequently crash or freeze, consider switching to a lower class SD card.

Related

SD Root 8gb AND 16gb: Consolidation Thread Using SD Boot by Albert Wertz

A copy of this thread is in general discussion here for the new people to comment, and a copy will be placed in development. Links to come.
Disclaimer: Rooting your internal memory card is a violation of the warranty agreement between you and Barnes and Noble. That being said, what Barnes and Noble doesn't know, wont hurt them. If you can return it to stock, they dont care. The tricky part is, this is all on YOU. You are not being persuaded to modify your device. You do this at your own risk. Under no circumstances is anyone required to help you fix a tablet that you bricked.
Modifications to the boot files to make it possible for these hacks to work on the 8gb Nook Tablet were made by Meghd00t at this thread
Notes: If you have an 8gb NT, Do not use the recovery flasher app to flash CWM and replace stock recovery, just work off of the cwm on the bootable SD card. There is currently not an easy way to revert back to stock recovery for the 8gb NT.
Video Demonstration http://youtu.be/0HC9XL_9aXk
Thread for SD Root (Works on 8gb and 16gb Nook Tablets, Software version Does not matter because this bypasses it to boot to SD)
Thread for R3 card (Works on 8gb and 16gb Nook Tablets, Software version Does not matter because this bypasses it to boot to SD) *** Only flash 16gb ROMs to the 16gb NT and only flash 8gb roms to the 8gb NT***
Thread for Recovery Roms (ONLY FLASH THE RECOVERY ROM THAT IS MEANT FOR YOUR TABLET!!! PAY ATTENTION TO THE 8gb(NT250A) or 16gb(NT250) markings!!!
Reserved
ahaha you're fast...
PS: waiting for the video/s want to see how you bricked your device for a moment
~ Veronica
Card Type ?
Hello
First off of course is to thank the folks who make these options available to us !!! I can stress enough how much I appreciate this material.
The question: Locally atm I can get some 8 GB microsd cards in the class 4 (cheaper) or 10 variants. For making the root card, and also for making the R3 card is a class 4 card fine ? Or is a class 10 a far better option ?
I've done considerable reading and some vid watching so far and am gathering my materials to begin work on my NT
Very exciting stuff !
WarZ4XDA said:
Hello
First off of course is to thank the folks who make these options available to us !!! I can stress enough how much I appreciate this material.
The question: Locally atm I can get some 8 GB microsd cards in the class 4 (cheaper) or 10 variants. For making the root card, and also for making the R3 card is a class 4 card fine ? Or is a class 10 a far better option ?
I've done considerable reading and some vid watching so far and am gathering my materials to begin work on my NT
Very exciting stuff !
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I recommend a Class 4 SanDisk card. SanDisk seems to be a brand that is pretty reliable in the NT.
As for the classes, a Class 4 should suit you just fine. All that a class number tells the consumer is the sequential read/write speeds (copying and moving files for example.)
The SD card attribute that we NT users should be looking at is the 4IN random read/write speeds. The faster this is, the smoother a ROM running from that SD card should be.
If you're more interested, you can test the speeds of your SD cards by using a PC program called CrystalDiskMark.
B&N Repartition ?
Hiya - another Q :
Considering running in to B&N real quick and doing their repartition before I get started. If I read correctly I should still be able to use the created microsd card to root etc. In particular was planning to do the R3 card at the moment.
Is that a worthwhile move ? Does the root open up all that protected storage anyways making the B&N repartition a moot point ? If I wasnt rooting I'd do this anyways. Does the repartition change what rooting options are available to me from others ? For example I see a number of options where they state that it works only for the 16 GB version and not the 8 GB version. If I do this repartition is my nook now considered in the 8 GB class when considering root options ? Or will it be considered in the 16 GB class always even with the B&N reparition ?
TY for all replies !
WarZ4XDA said:
Hiya - another Q :
Considering running in to B&N real quick and doing their repartition before I get started. If I read correctly I should still be able to use the created microsd card to root etc. In particular was planning to do the R3 card at the moment.
Is that a worthwhile move ? Does the root open up all that protected storage anyways making the B&N repartition a moot point ? If I wasnt rooting I'd do this anyways. Does the repartition change what rooting options are available to me from others ? For example I see a number of options where they state that it works only for the 16 GB version and not the 8 GB version. If I do this repartition is my nook now considered in the 8 GB class when considering root options ? Or will it be considered in the 16 GB class always even with the B&N reparition ?
TY for all replies !
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Okay, so a couple of things to say here.
Your 16GB NT will always have the 16GB rooting/custom ROM options, changing the partitions will not reduce your options (unless you manage to mess up the partitions somehow).
Whether you do a manually repartition and choose how much storage you want allocated OR you take your NT into Barnes and Noble, you will still be able to run the R3 card.
Barnes and Noble's repartition only frees up half of the internal data space which turns out to be a little less than 8GB I believe. A simple root will NOT open up any more storage space than before unless you repartition.
If you'd like to do the manual repartition, I can go find the link for you. If you're not comfortable doing that, you'd best head over to the local B&N and have them do it for you.
Error While Making Backup
UPDATE:
I did get it to backup. I vaguely remembered reading somewhere about swapping to a different card for backup for size. So I tried another card and the backup completed. So looks like I was just running into a wall of not enough room on the card. For the life of me I just couldnt find that post or info again after that, lol. Yes I am a noob and thanks for bearing with me.
I've also successfully loaded / changed to a bunch of ROM's so far as well. Checked out CM7b, the default 999 on card, and then finally went back and did a basic root on my v143 backed up rom. I've stopped at the rooted v143 for tonight because of time and to ease myself into the changes.
So I'm mostly set so far
2 Questions:
1) The video states that NT Hidden Settings needs to be updated in order to gain the OTA blocker. However when I visit google play it doesnt show "update" as an option. And I dont see the OTA entries in settings that the video says I should see. I saw in another thread that someone noted this as well, but didnt see a reply.
2) On the video I see the version as CWM-based Recovery v5.5.0.4
In the R3 I created from the files current as of yesterday I see it as v5.0.2.8
Does that mean the version on my R3 is older than the one used in the video ? Or am I just misinterpreting the version numbers.
---------------------------------
Original Posting below:
Was near B&N today and as per the previous post decided to just let them do partition and reinstall to save myself that step. And to have the option to backup my nook to stock with the already set repartition in case I want to go back in the future. They did the repartition and reset. She went through the update to v1.4.3 before I realized she was at it. However I read that this works with 1.4.3 anyways so didnt fret too much. So upon leaving and back at home the nook was all repartition and 'hunky dorey'
Used an 8 GB Scan Disk class 10 MicroSD card (was on sale and almost as much as a 4).
Followed the instructions and apparently successfully made the R3 Card.
Booted up into CWM fine without needing the power cord.
Menu'ed to 'backup and restore', then to 'backup', device goes through a lot of the process before eventually giving the error:
Error while making a backup image of /data!
Update : Figured it out - see above
TY
Starting Point
I have searched through the threads on this and in Development. Does the starting point for using this ROM need to be stock B&N or can I start from CM7 and flash this and have it replace the current ROM? One method is shorter than the other but if it doesn't get me to where I want to end up there is no point. Thanks (be semi gentle if I missed a previous reference that answers my question)
RhinoNelson said:
I have searched through the threads on this and in Development. Does the starting point for using this ROM need to be stock B&N or can I start from CM7 and flash this and have it replace the current ROM? One method is shorter than the other but if it doesn't get me to where I want to end up there is no point. Thanks (be semi gentle if I missed a previous reference that answers my question)
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
What exactly do you want to do?
I am currently running CM7 and want to switch to Alberts v4.7 ROM. I vacilate - primarily because of Netflix and other videos I download and watch - between the two options. I used his v4.6 prior to CM7 and didn't keep a backup so the process is more involved now.
RhinoNelson said:
I am currently running CM7 and want to switch to Alberts v4.7 ROM. I vacilate - primarily because of Netflix and other videos I download and watch - between the two options. I used his v4.6 prior to CM7 and didn't keep a backup so the process is more involved now.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
As long as both ROMs can use the same kernel, you can flash over your current ROM to switch to the new one. Just be sure to use the proper ClockWork Mod flashing instructions.
WarZ4XDA said:
UPDATE:
2 Questions:
1) The video states that NT Hidden Settings needs to be updated in order to gain the OTA blocker. However when I visit google play it doesnt show "update" as an option. And I dont see the OTA entries in settings that the video says I should see. I saw in another thread that someone noted this as well, but didnt see a reply.
2) On the video I see the version as CWM-based Recovery v5.5.0.4
In the R3 I created from the files current as of yesterday I see it as v5.0.2.8
Does that mean the version on my R3 is older than the one used in the video ? Or am I just misinterpreting the version numbers.
---------------------------------
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Can anybody answer these 2 questions - please - or point us to the answer.
jerbedn said:
Can anybody answer these 2 questions - please - or point us to the answer.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
1. I think OTA blocking was added to the app later on.
2. It could be that you're using an earlier version of CWM. I've used the first version ever released on my NT16 and haven't had any trouble.
R3 Files
Hey can i get the link for the R3 files?
t2jcracked said:
Hey can i get the link for the R3 files?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
sent it in private message to you
Sir
Is there a way to gain access to the files, need to build my own sd cards as I have lost everything.

[Q] Very old and confused noob needs basic help

Hello, I would like to use some android apps on my nook 15 GB running 1.4.2 without rooting permenently. I need to make a SD card so I can revert back to my regular nook operating system. At age 70 the more I read the more confused I get, there is just too much information out there. Is there a simple list of instructions with no exotic extras suggested and starting with the 1.4.2 OS?
Hello, hope this vid helps (better than trying to read instructions).
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XBjxZxHoUsY
Thanks for the link but...
I viewed the video but it seems to be about restoring to the original software. I guess I did not explain well that I have an unaltered nook tablet and have done nothing yet. I need first to create a sd card to insert and boot to. My understanding is that I then turn off, remove the card and reboot to access the B&N software with no permanent change to my nook. Is that possible with 1.4.2?
Perfectly possible and exactly what you should do. I'll find a link in a bit, busy at the moment.
If you run CM7 from an SD card you can do a power on start to CM7 and reboot back to native nook. Booting to the SD version does nothing to the internals of the nook. The following address should get you to the development thread for CM7 alpha final. Follow the instructions for the SD version.
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1481826
I suggest a Sandisk Class 4 micro SD card. Depending on how much material you intend to download, get an appropriate size card. I am using an 8 GB and I have allocated all the leftover space to the last partition.
Directions are easy. Download the file and unzip to get the image. Use the win32diskimager program to write the image to the SD. CAUTION here be sure it is the SD that you write the image to. Google Mini Partition Wizard Home Edition and download the home edition noted as freeware to reallocate the SD space. That is simple as well. Go to the bottom partition and move the slider to the right and then save.
If you have specific questions please post and someone will respond.
Bill
I apologize for misunderstanding your original post, anyway here's another YouTube vid you can check out...hopefully this one works out for you.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XxKO8-seTLU
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1679089
Generally, if you follow the steps above (short of installing the Asian apps), you'll be fine. Easy 1/2 hour to 1 hour to go through the downloading of apps, OS, Root image, etc. to having a bootable Nook that's running off the MicroSD card.
Keep in mind that ROOTing the Nook (easy, doesn't hurt) is needed to prevent B&N from disabling your external MicroSD card CM7 OS boot in the future. (You can skip ROOTing if you want to tempt fate later on however....)
Keep in mind that Sandisk MicroSD cards are generally recommended for their stability, speed, and trouble free use. You can use other brands, but if you encounter an error with your new OS, use a Sandisk card instead.
adorable said:
Keep in mind that ROOTing the Nook (easy, doesn't hurt) is needed to prevent B&N from disabling your external MicroSD card CM7 OS boot in the future. (You can skip ROOTing if you want to tempt fate later on however....)
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
This is only really necessary if you think B&N will push some update that will affect the current method used to bypass the bootloader.
This would imply a level of intelligence I don't think them capable of.
aquarian1 said:
Is there a simple list of instructions with no exotic extras suggested and starting with the 1.4.2 OS?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Hi, Aquarian1. I'm old, too.
Did you get it figured out? It really is fairly straightforward once you understand what each basic step is doing. You can practice repeatedly until you get comfortable without doing any harm or damage.
Let us know how it's going. The folks here are awesome. We'll get you there!

[HOW-TO] Building a CM10.0 SD card for Nook Tablet

NOTE: to build CM10.1 SD card, see http://forum.xda-developers.com/showpost.php?p=36685310&postcount=1.
[Caveat emptor: adopt/follow this guide at your own risk].
FWIW, below is a digest of the process to create a SD card running CM10.0 builds by XDA Developer Succulent which is posted at his blog http://iamafanof.wordpress.com and which I have used to build a CM10.0 SD card for my 16GB Nook Tablet:
Download the pair of files cm-10-yyyymmdd-UNOFFICIAL-acclaim.zip and cm-10-yyyymmdd-UNOFFICIAL-acclaim_sd_hd.zip from http://iamafanof.wordpress.com/2012/11/03/cm10-0-jelly-bean-for-nook-tablet-uploading/, and SD_Boot.zip from http://iamafanof.wordpress.com/2012/11/11/how-to-guide-bootable-cm7cm9cm10-sdcard-for-nook-tablet/.
Download gapps-jb-20121011-signed.zip from http://goo.im/gapps/gapps-jb-20121011-signed.zip.
Using a disk partition tool (such as MiniTool Partition Wizard Home Edition) create 4 partitions: boot (Primary, FAT32), system (Primary, Ext4), data (Primary, Ext4), and sdcard (Primary, FAT32). Set the partition ID type for the boot partition to 0x0C FAT32 LBA and set its Active flag (otherwise the SDcard will not be bootable). Once this is done, the boot partition should appear as a (read/write accessible) drive under Windows. (Note that you can adjust the suggested sizes of the partitions upward to fill up the entire SDcard; FWIW the sizes I use on my 8GB card for the 4 partitions are, respectively: 0.5GB/0.5GB/2GB/[remainder of SDcard]).
Copy to the boot partition of the SD card the following files from cm-10-yyyymmdd-UNOFFICIAL-acclaim_sd_hd.zip: boot.img (in folder p2), flashing_boot.img, MLO, recovery.img, u-boot.bin.
Modify the zip files using drag and drop with winrar/winzip (do not extract and repack the zip files):
Replace updater-script in folder META-INF\com\google\android of cm-10-yyyymmdd-UNOFFICIAL-acclaim.zip with the updater-script from in folder p2 of cm-10-yyyymmdd-UNOFFICIAL-acclaim_sd_hd.zip.
Replace vold.fstab in folder system/etc of cm-10-yyyymmdd-UNOFFICIAL-acclaim.zip with the vold.fstab from folder CM10_Jelly_Bean\1_os of SD_Boot.zip.
Replace updater-script in folder META-INF\com\google\android of gapps-jb-20121011-signed.zip with the updater-script in folder CM10_Jelly_Bean\p2\gapps of SD_Boot.zip.
Copy to the boot partition of the SD card cm-10-yyyymmdd-UNOFFICIAL-acclaim.zip and gapps-jb-20121011-signed.zip (that get modified with the replacement updater-scripts and vold.fstab files in the above steps).
Put the SD card into the NT, and boot from its power off by inserting a powered USB cable. Press and hold the N button as soon as CyanoBoot comes up to get the boot menu to display.
Select SDC Recovery.
[Optional but recommended step, in case you accidentally forget to replace the updater-script file(s)] Select Backup to backup your current NT config (/boot, /recovery, /system, and /data).
Select "Install zip from SD card" and install the modified cm-10-yyyymmdd-UNOFFICIAL-acclaim.zip file.
Select "Install zip from SD card" and install the modified gapps-jb-20121011-signed.zip file.
Select "Power off" to turn off the NT.
Boot the NT from its power off by inserting a powered USB cable; after about a minute you should see boot animation lasting for a few minutes followed by initial wifi network and google account setup process, after which your CM10 on SD is ready for use.
A few additional points worth noting:
If you plan to backup your NT current ROM config then add to the boot partition size at least 600MB for each backup (to save space you can copy/archive backup data folders to your PC and remove their copy from the boot partition).
Generally the lower rating (and also cheaper) class 4 SD cards are more suitable for running a ROM than the higher classes 6 and 10 cards (since the latter are optimized for large & sequential block read/write at the expense of random read/write). So if you happen to use a class 10 or 6 card and your apps frequently crash or freeze, consider switching to a lower class SD card.
Did you ask succulent if it was OK to post his work here? Someone already did it in the dev section and he was a little upset that he wasn't even consulted about it.
Sent from my CM 10 SD nook tablet. Thanks devs.
Thanks for the tutorial. I've used XDA for a long time and loaded lots of custom ROM's, but I'm finding this Nook Tablet situation ridiculously complicated. I'm having trouble understand your step number 8.
"Copy to the boot partition of the SD card and gapps-jb-20121011-signed.zip..." doesn't make grammatical sense. Is there a typo here?
sanjosanjo said:
Thanks for the tutorial. I've used XDA for a long time and loaded lots of custom ROM's, but I'm finding this Nook Tablet situation ridiculously complicated. I'm having trouble understand your step number 8.
"Copy to the boot partition of the SD card and gapps-jb-20121011-signed.zip..." doesn't make grammatical sense. Is there a typo here?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I just looked at it and it appears you are failing to read it. There are clear and concise instructions as provided by Succulent and cut and pasted by digimax.
It clearly says to copy the ROM and the gapps.
Sent from my CM 10 SD nook tablet. Thanks devs.
SlowCobra96 said:
I just looked at it and it appears you are failing to read it. There are clear and concise instructions as provided by Succulent and cut and pasted by digimax.
It clearly says to copy the ROM and the gapps.
...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
There were indeed typos in the cited paragraph (thanks to sanjosanjo for spotting them), and I already fixed them.
digixmax said:
There were indeed typos in the cited paragraph (thanks to sanjosanjo for spotting them), and I already fixed them.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Did you reword them from succulents site because those are what I used when I did my SD card and I had zero issues following them.
Sent from my CM 10 SD nook tablet. Thanks devs.
On Step 8, did you mean to copy the cm-10-yyyymmdd-UNOFFICIAL-acclaim.zip to the boot partition instead of the cm-10-yyyymmdd-UNOFFICIAL-acclaim_sd_hd.zip because in step 12 you say to install cm-10-yyyymmdd-UNOFFICIAL-acclaim.zip? I've followed your steps for replacing the files, but did not put the sd_hd.zip on the SD card, only the normal acclaim.zip.
I'm going to try it now and see what happens.
Edit: says installation aborted. This was when trying to install the cm-10-yyyymmdd-UNOFFICIAL-acclaim.zip that has had the files replaced from the sd_hd.zip
LucasMN said:
On Step 8, did you mean to copy the cm-10-yyyymmdd-UNOFFICIAL-acclaim.zip to the boot partition instead of the cm-10-yyyymmdd-UNOFFICIAL-acclaim_sd_hd.zip because in step 12 you say to install cm-10-yyyymmdd-UNOFFICIAL-acclaim.zip?
...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yes (I corrected it).
LucasMN said:
...
Edit: says installation aborted. This was when trying to install the cm-10-yyyymmdd-UNOFFICIAL-acclaim.zip that has had the files replaced from the sd_hd.zip
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I had neglected to indicate in step #3 that the partition type of /system and /data is (Primary, Ext4).
digixmax said:
FWIW, below is a digest of the process to create a SD card running CM10 builds by XDA Developer Succulent which is posted at his blog http://iamafanof.wordpress.com and which I have used to build a CM10 SD card for my 16GB Nook Tablet (caveat emptor: adopt/follow it at your own risk):
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
thanks for this great thread digixmax. what is the difference between your method and just directly writing succulent's IMG file to a card?
his post looks like it was updated 12/25, although perhaps the image file is from 12/08. is yours updated since then?
http://iamafanof.wordpress.com/2012/11/18/cm10-0-jellybean-sdcard-img-for-nook-tablet/
zeiss74 said:
thanks for this great thread digixmax. what is the difference between your method and just directly writing succulent's IMG file to a card?
his post looks like it was updated 12/25, although perhaps the image file is from 12/08. is yours updated since then?
http://iamafanof.wordpress.com/2012/11/18/cm10-0-jellybean-sdcard-img-for-nook-tablet/
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
First off, just to be clear: I did not invent this process, rather my post is intended to be a streamlined digest of Succulent's blogs on how-to build CM SDcard -- including in particular the blog http://iamafanof.wordpress.com/2012/11/11/how-to-guide-bootable-cm7cm9cm10-sdcard-for-nook-tablet/. This process gives you the maximum flexibility at the outset in sizing the partitions, creating extra partitions, etc. This process has also worked for some of the other CM10 builds that are available on XDA such as ChrisHoffman's and Hashcode's builds, as well as the Paranoid Android build posted on Succulent's blog.
Succulent's pre-made SD card image is the simplest/quickest way to create a bootable SDcard of his CM10 builds: you just download and write the image to SDcard and it's ready to go. It's possible to adjust the partition sizes after the image is written to the card but with some risks of messing up the partition table which could make the SDcard not bootable. There have also been reports that NTs running these images appear to have same identical MAC address, thus any two of these NTs will not be able to get on the same LAN (e.g., in the same household WiFi LAN) at the same time.
Re: Succulent's v12/25: I just flashed it (internally on emmc) today and it works great, but he has not posted cm-10-xxxxxxxx-UNOFFICIAL-acclaim_sd_hd.zip for it so you'll have to wait a bit if you want to build the image from scratch.
digixmax said:
First off, just to be clear: I did not invent this process, rather my post is intended to be a streamlined digest of Succulent's blogs on how-to build CM SDcard -- including in particular the blog http://iamafanof.wordpress.com/2012/11/11/how-to-guide-bootable-cm7cm9cm10-sdcard-for-nook-tablet/. This process gives you the maximum flexibility at the outset in sizing the partitions, creating extra partitions, etc. This process has also worked for some of the other CM10 builds that are available on XDA such as ChrisHoffman's and Hashcode's builds, as well as the Paranoid Android build posted on Succulent's blog.
Succulent's pre-made SD card image is the simplest/quickest way to create a bootable SDcard of his CM10 builds: you just download and write the image to SDcard and it's ready to go. It's possible to adjust the partition sizes after the image is written to the card but with some risks of messing up the partition table which could make the SDcard not bootable. There have also been reports that NTs running these images appear to have same identical MAC address, thus any two of these NTs will not be able to get on the same LAN (e.g., in the same household WiFi LAN) at the same time.
Re: Succulent's v12/25: I just flashed it (internally on emmc) today and it works great, but he has not posted cm-10-xxxxxxxx-UNOFFICIAL-acclaim_sd_hd.zip for it so you'll have to wait a bit if you want to build the image from scratch.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
thanks!
also, dumb question but if you "remove SD card" in step 14, how is "CM10 on SD ready for use" in step 15? do you reinsert it?
zeiss74 said:
also, dumb question but if you "remove SD card" in step 14, how is "CM10 on SD ready for use" in step 15?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Mistake on my part, leave the card in the NT.
ok, worked great (the second time). the first time i used 7zip to change the zip files, but then i read a readme.txt from succulent that said to only use drag and drop with winzip/winrar to change the zip files, so i downloaded winrar and it worked. the first time i got the "installation aborted" error.
thanks again, i'm super excited to try CM10. been wanting to update this NT for some time now.
Just an FYI it isn't the pre-made image file that causes the repeating MAC Address it is something in the CM 10 build. I have 2 NT 16's running different build dates of CM 10 SD and both have identical MAC Addresses. Somewhere in the build of CM 10 it appears that it is taking the MAC Address from a developer unit and applying it to everyones NT. Or so it would appear.
SlowCobra96 said:
Just an FYI it isn't the pre-made image file that causes the repeating MAC Address it is something in the CM 10 build. I have 2 NT 16's running different build dates of CM 10 SD and both have identical MAC Addresses. Somewhere in the build of CM 10 it appears that it is taking the MAC Address from a developer unit and applying it to everyones NT. Or so it would appear.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
My NT has the same MAC address regardless of whether it's running stock, running CM10 internally or off SD card.
I think there is something wrong with your build images or possibly with your NTs (you can look up the NTs' MAC addresses in /rom/devconf/MACAddress on their emmc).
digixmax said:
My NT has the same MAC address regardless of whether it's running stock, running CM10 internally or off SD card.
I think there is something wrong with your build images or possibly with your NTs (you can look up the NTs' MAC addresses in /rom/devconf/MACAddress on their emmc).
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
So I have 2 broken NT's that despite the stock os showing the correct MAC Addresses and even the Mac config files showing the correct to the individual NT Mac address, when I load CM 10 despite not doing anything to change the configuration files other than updater-script, I broke it? Really?
And on top of that the pre-made images are known to have the same Mac address. Though the exact same files, sans imager program, couldn't possibly be problematic?
Somehow I doubt your stock os, if your using the succulent build for cm10, has the same Mac address.
Does your MAC end in 9f:fd ?
Sent from my CM 10 SD nook tablet. Thanks devs.
SlowCobra96 said:
So I have 2 broken NT's that despite the stock os showing the correct MAC Addresses and even the Mac config files showing the correct to the individual NT Mac address, when I load CM 10 despite not doing anything to change the configuration files other than updater-script, I broke it? Really?
And on top of that the pre-made images are known to have the same Mac address. Though the exact same files, sans imager program, couldn't possibly be problematic?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
If your two NTs running stock OS still show two distinct MAC addresses then I don't think you have broken the NT per-se. Most likely you simply didn't properly build one or both of CM10 SDcard images. Your problem is the type Succulent often refers to as "residue" problems.
Somehow I doubt your stock os, if your using the succulent build for cm10, has the same Mac address.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It is the same MAC address, but believe whatever you want.
Does your MAC end in 9f:fd ?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Nope.
Then im a ****ing idiot and you are a god. Shrug. I am an not adverse to admitting when I am wrong, however in this situation I don't believe I am. Apparently my 2 NT's are completely special. Oh wait, anyone running the Image files have the same issues. There is nothing shared between the two NT's. SD cards arent shared. Not a single file is shared. Not even the build date of the CM 10 files is shared. So again I say, there is a problem with the SD version of CM 10 not reading the correct MAC. How you got lucky with your mac reading correctly from SD and EMMC I don't know, especially considering anyone else that has multiple NT's in the same house suffers the same issue.
i have two followup questions to help me better understand this setup.
1. what are the different partitions on the card? and why wouldn't we make the boot partition as large as can be? i went to back up my NT apps (about 100) to bring them to my CM10 card, and they are 800MB, and the only partition i can copy them to from my PC is boot. so i'm out of luck with 500MB (250 MB free). also, since boot is the only partition i can access from my PC, it means that's where all my videos and music will have to be copied. so it seems like i should make boot 4+ GB. i don't own any large apps (like those 2 GB racing games) so i would guess my other partitions don't need to be huge. am i missing anything? with the tablet up and running but few apps, the 0.5GB boot partition is about 50% full, the 0.5 GB system partition (no longer labeled such) is 64% full, while 2GB data and 4.5GB sdcard are 5% and 0% used (per minitool)
2. if this doesn't change the stock NT, then what are steps 10 and 11 doing? where are they installing something? from the SD card to the SD card, maybe in another partition? do i need to keep those zip files on the boot partition once they are installed?
thanks for any assistance to help my understanding.

[Q] Which post instructions best to make n2a build equivalent?

Hi, in the Nook Development forums, I found this post from Albert Wentz: http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1439630
But unless I'm confused, I believe there are many other posts with other roll-your-own instructions? Such as: http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1466583
All I want to do is build the SD card for my kid's nooks (versus paying $20 to N2A) so I can boot to it to run Android just like the N2A card. Does anyone know which post N2A may have followed to build their version? Or is Al's post the most modern build? Or the 2nd URL I list?
I'm quite technical so know I can do this, I just need to know which is the latest and greatest, or if there are many diff build customizations, which, let's say, is the most popular ? I mainly care that it has Google Play and Amazon App stores, and that I can sideload ebooks, mp3's,videos. If it comes with other apps, fine, but I'm fine with downloading,installing any I wish afterwards.
And.....some posts mention you don't have to modify your nook at all, just boot to the SD card, but others say it modifies the Nook (roots it), so that if you ever had to return it you'd have to restore it (hence best to back it up beforehand). Which is correct???
Al's method works fine. Anything you mentioned that you wish to try will work. I ran boot to SD android rom for several months before I took the plunge and rooted my 8gb Nook to a full android tablet.
It in no way modifies the internal workings of your Nook. The Nook allows booting to the card by design. Just use a Sandisk card of 8gb or more for best results and all you need is a class 4 speed rating. Believe it or not, a class 10 doesn't work as well.
YMMV
Good luck and have fun with it!
jaxn51 said:
Al's method works fine. Anything you mentioned that you wish to try will work. I ran boot to SD android rom for several months before I took the plunge and rooted my 8gb Nook to a full android tablet.
It in no way modifies the internal workings of your Nook. The Nook allows booting to the card by design. Just use a Sandisk card of 8gb or more for best results and all you need is a class 4 speed rating. Believe it or not, a class 10 doesn't work as well.
YMMV
Good luck and have fun with it!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
OK thanks, so if I understand you, rooting is a separate method, as in my 2nd URL referenced. (and in reading that, the SD card is only used to flash (or pull) the image from, to put onto your Nook.) I don't know about backup, but I don't think I want to mess with the stock OS for now. Maybe if B&N abandons it. I guess I don't see it as a big deal that my kids will need to reboot each time to toggle between nook OS and Android.
I read that about the Class4 vs 10. I think I even read posts about class 10's not only running slow, but acting really buggy? Is that right?... One of our SD cards is a 16GB class 4 and a 8GB class 6. Anyone heard if class 6's have any issues?
Extremely easy process to build a card similar to N2A to run a very stable CM10 from:
http://iamafanof.wordpress.com/2012/11/18/cm10-0-jellybean-sdcard-img-for-nook-tablet/
dtetner water
asawi said:
Extremely easy process to build a card similar to N2A to run a very stable CM10 from:
iamafanof.wordpress.com/2012/11/18/cm10-0-jellybean-sdcard-img-for-nook-tablet/
Ooops!
I just realized both URLs I posted (even 1st one from Albert) mention rooting.(altering tablet) My mistake. Ok, so where's the mainstream single post on XDA forums that describes the most popular non-root (boot to SD) process? I'd rather follow a post off XDA website. And if I have issues, maybe fallback to that URL you gave me, although his English is not so great, so afraid I might get lost in his partitioning instructions. I also don't have a Linux box at home (re: his mention of EXT4) although I have been trained on/worked with Linux some. Although running Jellybean since it's the latest & greatest sounds nice....although I've read enough articles from mainstream tech sites that state it's a bit too buggy? I'm sure ICS is plenty good enough and all apps support it.
Whats the difference between CWM (clockwork mod) and CM (cyanogen)? Wikipedia just says "The CyanogenMod source code repository also contains the ClockworkMod Recovery"
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
The step by step you'll find somewhere here on XDA actually is the work of the guy I posted to. So my link is the source. That "Iamafanof" blogger is the person "Succulent" you'll see referred to here at XDA. Entirely up to you of course, but I don't see why you wouldn't at least check it out.
Edit:
You do not need a Linux system and I don't know what gave you the idea you would. The process is extremely simple: Download a rather large file, burn it to an sd-card, expand one partition (optional but recommended).
asawi said:
The step by step you'll find somewhere here on XDA actually is the work of the guy I posted to. So my link is the source. That "Iamafanof" blogger is the person "Succulent" you'll see referred to here at XDA. Entirely up to you of course, but I don't see why you wouldn't at least check it out.
Edit:
You do not need a Linux system and I don't know what gave you the idea you would. The process is extremely simple: Download a rather large file, burn it to an sd-card, expand one partition (optional but recommended).
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I thought that because as far as I'm aware, the EXT4 that he mentions (for P3 Data1) is a linux type partition. (unless some Windows partitioning tool can create it I'm not aware of) I'm willing to try his steps. So I guess you'd recreate the "P3 FAT32 SDCARD" partition the same size as it was before then? And the P4 (EXT4) you'd resize, as you mention, to take advantage of all the rest of the space on your 8 or 16GB card. But what free tool under Windows can create EXT4 ?
baytee said:
And the P4 (EXT4) you'd resize, as you mention, to take advantage of all the rest of the space on your 8 or 16GB card. But what free tool under Windows can create EXT4 ?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You do not have to create any EXT4 partition. Nor any other other kind of partition. All you have to do is expand the FAT32 partition. MiniTool is free and will do that for you.
http://download.cnet.com/MiniTool-Partition-Wizard-Home-Edition/3000-2094_4-10962200.html
Edit: And, FWIW, I went and checked. Mini Tool can also create EXT4 partitions, should you want to.
I got that image onto the SDcard, it now has 4 partitions:
BOOT 249MB (FAT32)
350MB (EXT3) 91% used
600MB (EXT3) 3% used
SDCARD 713MB (FAT32)
13GB Unallocated
So I would right click partition "SDCARD", extend it to the 13GB.
But, in his post he mentions one partition (P3,DATA1, which MiniTool doesn't show any partition labeled as such, but I assume he's just talking about the 3rd partition (the 600MB Ext3 partition) being used to store just apps & app data. (I assume since it's EXT3 which is compat w/linux i.e. Android) If so, what do you think..is 600MB enough for downloading/installing lots of apps? Or is it wiser to extend it to maybe 2 or 4 or even GB? For example I have the Humble Bundle games for Android Tablet. The installs (APK) are huge...anywhere from 30-200MB themselves..... I assume their post-install size takes up a different amount of space (more) than the APK itself, just as with Windows EXE installers? And if I recall correctly I believe once installed, you can del the APK... Anyhow, I'm emailing the company to see what install reqs for disk space are, since all they list the APK size.
Only you know how large data partition you need but it sure looks like you need it larger than 600.
So, to add some sort of instructions:
Delete partitions 3 and 4 (the 600 and 713 MB ones)
Apply changes (top left)
Create a new partition 3. Make it EXT4, Primary and the size you want
Apply changes
Create a new partition 4, FAT32, primary to pick up whatever is left unallocated
Apply changes
Don't forget to "apply changes"
baytee said:
...
But, in his post he mentions one partition (P3,DATA1, which MiniTool doesn't show any partition labeled as such, but I assume he's just talking about the 3rd partition (the 600MB Ext3 partition) being used to store just apps & app data. (I assume since it's EXT3 which is compat w/linux i.e. Android) If so, what do you think..is 600MB enough for downloading/installing lots of apps? Or is it wiser to extend it to maybe 2 or 4 or even GB? For example I have the Humble Bundle games for Android Tablet. The installs (APK) are huge...anywhere from 30-200MB themselves..... I assume their post-install size takes up a different amount of space (more) than the APK itself, just as with Windows EXE installers? And if I recall correctly I believe once installed, you can del the APK... Anyhow, I'm emailing the company to see what install reqs for disk space are, since all they list the APK size.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Although all apps downloaded from Google Play will reside on /data partition, many apps keep their data separately in the internal user-media partition or on the external SDcard (the 4th /sdcard partition in your case). For example, I have a video game app which takes ~30MB for itself in /data but ~350MB for data storage on the SDcard. The Titanium Backup app works the same way. So you'll have to anticipate not just the app's storage size requirement but also its targeted partition for data storage.
Does this also work for CM 12?
Can these instructions be used with CM12 Lolipop?
panamamike said:
Can these instructions be used with CM12 Lolipop?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yes, if you can find a CM12 ROM image that was specifically compiled to run on SD.
Sent from my BN NookHD+ using XDA Premium HD app
digixmax said:
Yes, if you can find a CM12 ROM image that was specifically compiled to run on SD.
Sent from my BN NookHD+ using XDA Premium HD app
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Where can I find that ROM image? I haven't had much luck finding such a ROM, I haven't seen that specified.
panamamike said:
Where can I find that ROM image? I haven't had much luck finding such a ROM, I haven't seen that specified.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I am not aware of any CM12 SD-based ROM build for the Nook Tablet, but you can find CM11 SD-based builds for the NT at https://iamafanof.wordpress.com/category/nook-tablet-2/.

[Q] SD Card Problem

Hello, I am new to this forum, but have been reading a lot of the information regarding running CM7 on a Nook Color. Thank you to everyone that has been kind enough to share their knowledge about this.
I am pretty new to the thought of running the Android platform on my Nook. My main goal is to be able to use the Nook Color for more than what the B&N operating system will allow. I would like to be able to use it to take notes in business meetings, using an external keyboard, and maybe have a little more functionality for email.
I am having trouble getting the generic sd card image burned to my micro sd card. I have downloaded the image from verygreen's thread. I have tried using Winimage and Windisk32 to burn the image, and have had limited success. My card is a Sandisk, class 4, 8GB card.
I did get the image burned once, and got the CM7 7.2.0 encore zip file copied, and there was a hangup in the booting process. I believe the error message was incomplete image, or something similar.
I have reformatted the sd card numerous times (using sdformatter), and have tried both imaging programs to try to re-burn the image back to the card, and I get a write successful alert, but I cannot see any files on the card. Windows explorer says that the card is empty, and that thee is only 115MB of storage available, so something is happening.
I thought that maybe the files were hidden, so I copied the CM7 zip file over, and put it in the Nook Color. The NC booted up into the B&N home screen.
As a side note, I would like to be able to, if it is possible, to boot into a menu, and select whether I wanted to boot into the B&N platform, or the Android platform.
Any suggestions that you can provide will be greatly appreciated.
Have a great day.

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