Android for nook color download






















After maybe 30 minutes, it finished writing the image to the card. I then inserted it into my Nook Tablet, powered up while holding down the "N" button , and waited a few minutes for the initial setup to complete. When it did, presto: my Nook was now running Android 4.

I'm sure many readers will point out rightly so that you can accomplish much the same thing on your own for free. But that takes some know-how, and there's little support to be had if things go wrong. Here you're getting a bootable card which you can remove if you want to return to the Nook OS, no harm done that's already configured with the popular CyanogenMod version of Android. It's literally a plug-and-play solution. To turn your Nook Color into an Android tablet:.

Download a virtual image of your preferred version of Android on your computer. Insert the microSD card into your computer. Unzip the Android disk image if necessary and write it to the SD card.

Run Etcher, choose the image, and select your SD drive. Remove the memory card from your computer. Power down your Nook Color and insert the microSD card. Power on the Nook Color. If everything worked properly, your Nook Color boots into the Android version you chose, making it a fully functional Android tablet.

Your settings, downloads, and modifications from this point are saved on the memory card, keeping the Nook Color's internal storage undisturbed. When you're ready to go back to your stock Nook Color, all you do is power down the device, remove the microSD card, and power it up again.

Class 4 is about as slow as you can get away with, but Class 6 or 10 will make the experience much smoother. Likewise, 4 GB doesn't give you a lot of room for apps, so if you intend to make extensive use of your Nook Color's newfound capabilities, you might want to consider a higher-capacity memory card. Actively scan device characteristics for identification.

Use precise geolocation data. Select personalised content. Create a personalised content profile. With WinImage, open it up as administrator with Vista , click Disk, then select "restore virtual hard disk image on physical drive". Select your SD card from the list make certain it is the right one and hit OK.

Select the image file generic-sdcard. Hit "Yes" and it will write the image to the memory card. Next, download a Nook Color CM7 build; there are several to choose from. The latest stable version is probably the best to go with perhaps not, see update below since all known issues have been fixed. Nightly builds contain the latest features and tweaks, but are more likely to have bugs and issues. For this review, I used the latest nightly build.

Once the file is downloaded, don't unzip it. Just drag it onto the main root folder of your new CM7 memory card as is. Shut down your Nook Color. Pretty soon a little penguin will appear in the upper-left corner and a bunch of code will process for a few minutes.

The screen will go completely black after some time. That's it. Just remove the card to go back to your regular Nook make sure to shut down first. You have to install them separately using the method below. Download the Google Apps pack for CM7.

The latest version can be found here. Place it on the root folder of the CM7 memory card as is like you did with the CM7 build file. Now you need to boot the Nook Color in "Recovery Mode". The directions at XDA say to hold down the "n" nook key and power button for about 6 seconds to turn the Nook on, then release.



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