Saturday, 5 January 2013
Placa de HD + N2A recanto com 4.1 Android Jelly Bean revisão (vídeo)
N2A cards have been around since the Nook Color blocked Android tablets first made popular. I reviewed N2A cards for the Nook Color and Tablet Nook. When I heard that there was a card N2A with CM10 (Android 4.1 Bean Jelly) to the Nook HD +, I was eager to try it out, and the folks at N2A cards were nice enough to give me a copy, along with a 15% off discount code for you to use. For those of you wondering, they are planning on releasing an N2A card to the Nook HD as well.If you are not familiar with cards N2A, basically what they are is an alternative operating system that works entirely out of a memory card. All you have to do is put the microSD card into the slot N2A in nook and he will start automatically from the memory card instead of the operating system. This turns the corner into an open Android tablet with a lot more features and access to hundreds of thousands more apps, against the custom operating system terminated it comes with.As I mentioned in the review corner HD +, I am very fond of device form factor and especially the high resolution screen, not just the fact that there are so few apps from the appstore of B & N, especially free apps.
With a card of N2A this problem is solved once provides access to Google-game appstore and App Store alternative as well. I had no problem installing and running virtually any apps I wanted. The only app I tried that I couldn't work properly was Riptide. Looks great, but no direction is sensitive enough for some reason, even after adjusting for sensitivity settings. Other driving games worked very well, however, this does not seem to be a big problem.Videos play well both on YouTube and Netflix, even in HD. The interface is running a little wobbly with Netflix, but that's nothing new. Scrolling in landscape mode lags and twitches, but strangely in portrait mode works completely fine.The little button "n" at Recanto HD + directs to the homescreen when pressed. And also brings the list of recent apps if you hold down the button.I installed a few games to test the speed and processing power and the Nook HD + had no problem to be playing games like Angry Birds and trigger Dead Star Wars. The graphics look amazing and there is no lag at all.
The quadrant Score for the Nook with HD + N2A timed 2709, which is very good. That is larger than the Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1.Battery life does not seem to be as good as the 10 + hours when running the stock OS, but is still very good. I have been getting a solid 8:0 or more. I noticed that drains the battery very little in standby mode, which is always a good sign.One of the great things about having an open operating system is that you can install any desired ereading apps including Aldiko Kindle, Google Books, Kobo and virtually anything else out there.You do not have access to the application reading the internal HD of the nook + when using a card of N2A, but you can install the app Android Nook, or you can simply remove the card to boot the operating system. The nook Android app does not seem so nice and doesn't have quite all the features that the built-in app for the Nook HD +, but still works for reading ebooks and magazines from Barnes and noble.I installed Google Chrome for web browsing and works very well. I loved the Nook HD + for web browsing because the screen resolution is so high that even the smallest text is very clear and easy to read — you almost never need to zoom.
It professionals
4.1 Android Jelly Bean with access to Google Play. Access Google apps and hundreds of thousands of other Android applications. in addition a few bugs, it works amazingly smooth and is fairly quick and agile.Just take the N2A card and you're back to 100% of the stock; It's like having two corners on one and it doesn't void the warranty.
Cons
Bluetooth won't connect.There is a bug you need to pause media and un-pause or go to the home screen and returns to the application of volume adjustment.Screen rotation is slow sometimes.Not always automatically connects to the Internet Wi-Fi; I often have to unplug my router and go back again to get it to connect.
Verdict
There is no question that running a 4.1 Android N2A card is a big step above the operating system of the actions on the nook HD +. Adds more functionality and basically turns it into a totally different tablet. This card of N2A to CM10 (4.1 Android) has some bugs and is not as polished as the letters of N2A for CM7 I tested the color Nook and Nook Tablet, however. So I can't recommend spending a lot on this particular N2A card until it gets updated.
They offer a download option that is much cheaper at $ 17 with a discount code. At that price it is worth bugs and everything, but you'll need your own microSD card. SanDisk seems to be the best for these cards. And as always, N2A cards are constructed out of an open source project. If you are familiar with the process you can build your own card CM10 for free by following these instructions on XDA.Price: $ 17-$ 90 in N2A cards (use code theebookreader for 15% off)
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