It does, but is sometimes specific to the devices where it works on some and not on others. You'd have to check the forum. I recently rooted my new Optimus V and put aospcmod (a port of cyanogenmod7) on it and it works really well. The overclocking does work on my phone so I have it set to drop cpu speed to 176Mhz when load is low, and ramp up to low 700s when needed. Many run settings higher than 800MHz with this phone, but I don't want to burn it out since it works well right now.
lopaka ________________________________ From: Anthony Q. Martin <[email protected]> To: [email protected] Sent: Mon, March 7, 2011 6:20:53 AM Subject: Re: [H] NookColor ==> Android 3 (HoneyComb) Tablet? Does this one build in overclocking? That might be worth it. I now have Deep Blue's v04 image running on my NC. I have the microSD formated so that I can use all 16GB...and 13GB of that is for the sdcard storage. Some apps won't appear in the market, but there is a spoof method for that that I need to implement. The NC is a suprisingly good tablet. I'm just not sure if it is enough to keep me from wanting an iPad 2 or iPad 3. On 3/7/2011 9:00 AM, Robert Martin Jr. wrote: > http://www.cyanogenmod.com/devices/nook-color > > Check the forum regarding cyanogenmod on the nookcolor. I've been running this > on my last 3 android phones and really like the additional speed and functions > available. I've been considering getting a tablet myself, but only once the mod > is available and stable. > > lopaka > > > > > ________________________________ > From: Anthony Q. Martin<[email protected]> > To: [email protected] > Sent: Sun, March 6, 2011 9:04:47 AM > Subject: Re: [H] NookColor ==> Android 3 (HoneyComb) Tablet? > > What I'm trying to do is get a couch computer....or in this case, a couchpad. > > So, I got this nookcolor...if you had a microSD card to it, you can set it up >to > boot honeycomb off the SD card without bothering the internal 8 GB card that > hold the NookColor version of Android. So I have them both setup now. > > The only problem is the HoneyComb version is, as you noted, incomplete. One > problem is that I can't use the entire 16 GB SD card to store stuff. Seems to > only allow 1.25GB of storage space for apps, data, and stuff. Also, it doesn't > play video well at all. But with only 1.26 GB of storage, you can't do much > else without having to worry about space. > > But I do like the browser on this thing. Better than the one on the NookColor > by far. I could probably do most of what I want on the regular Nook, though, >but > you get zero apps (well, you get an handful). But no Angry Birds, Maps, and a > few other goodies for Android. Nook gives you only a tiny handful of good > apps. With HoneyComb, I can get Kindle stuff and Nook, DropBox, PDF, TIVO and > Google TV, etc. Angry Birds looks good on the Nook, too. The 6inch wide >screen > (in landscape) is easy to read on the nook if you set fonts and things > correctly. > > There is no easy way to switch back& forth from NookColor to HoneyComb, >though, > sayou have to remove the SD card from the NookColor to boot back into >NookColor. > > If Honeycomb were more complete and if the hack were more fully worked, I'd >make > the switch and install Honeycomb on the Internal SD, but no way am I doing that > now. > > On 3/6/2011 11:08 AM, Gary Hunter wrote: >> I have the Motorola Xoom which is HoneyComb based. If you are just reading >> books I wouldn't get the Android, it is still very buggy. Having said that I >> do really like it, it is responsive. The dual cores help it multitask much >> better than my old Android phone. Once the bugs are all ironed out it I feel >> it is way better than my iPad. The one thing I still feel is inferior to the >> iPad are the media players but that could be because I haven't found the >> best one yet. >> >> >> >> On Sun, Mar 6, 2011 at 8:03 AM, Anthony Q. Martin<[email protected]>wrote: >> >>> Has anyone on this list tried this? If so, what are your thoughts? >>>
