Showing posts with label but. Show all posts
Showing posts with label but. Show all posts

Monday, 21 August 2017

Android Already In Flash But Still Bootloop

Android Already In Flash But Still Bootloop

well here amatnewbe will shed some light why youve flashed hp but maih just so / pain. masri we look at the cause.

  1. The first cause of the file ang used.
  2. In the process of flashing files are used very influential matter why? because the file becomes the main ingredient in the process of flashing. if the file being used is damaged then it will not succeed.
  3.  The second cause faulty IC EMMC
  4. IC hp EMMC damaged but can still light up just stuck dilogo / bootlop then flashed some kalipun hp it will never recover.




I know that EMMC damaged hp namely by going into recovery mode.

to mode recovery sign in your android and check the following
� if the first entry into an existing cwm failed to mount sdcard writing it has been ascertained but is not too badly damaged

� when flashed the street but once in the midst of tiba2 failed
� tida can update through recovery
Possible Causes IC EMMC Damaged:
# SDS (Sudden Death Syndrome)
# In Charger for too long (more than 3 hours)
# In the Custom Oprek that does not match the original partition
# When Hank / Stuck in the forcibly pull the battery
# And lain2

Possible beginning ic EMMC want broken:
# Occurrence Sorry android acore The process has stopped unexpectedly
# Appears Unfortunately, Force Closes has stoped
# Often Unmount SD / internal unreadable
# Often Hank / Stuck although not many applications and OS Official
# And lain2

SOLUTION only if ic EMMC damaged namely by taking into service to replace the IC EMMCnya.

nah so I can share information. thank you ...

Source: kaskus.com

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Friday, 18 August 2017

It Has Taken a Couple of Decades but Fixed Wireless is Coming Back in a Big Way

It Has Taken a Couple of Decades but Fixed Wireless is Coming Back in a Big Way


Windstream plans to expand its fixed wireless access operations in 40 U.S. markets, using 39-GHz millimeter wave spectrum, presumably for backhaul and business customer access.

Ironically, Windstream in 2008 wrote down the value of its 39 GHz spectrum holdings to zero, as part of a sale of mobile and wireless assets to AT&T Mobility.

The collapse of a millimeter-wave access services business is not terribly unusual. Whole companies (Windstar and Teligent, for example) went bankrupt after trying to build an enterprise access business using millimeter wave technology, after the passage of the Telecommunications Act of 1996.   

But times change. Platforms become more capable. Costs go down. And with coming 5G mobile networks embracing millimeter wave technology, what was a broken business model two decades ago might well become an essential underpinning of next generation networks, both mobile and fixed.

Google Fiber, Facebook, AT&T and Verizon are a few of the leading firms now developing or planning to use fixed wireless in a significant way for Internet access.

Cambridge Broadband Networks (CBNL) is providing the radios and and Straight Path Communications is supplying the spectrum licenses for the Windstream rollout.

The new technology will allow Windstream customers data speeds of up to 275 Mbps full duplex, and it also supplements Windstreams other fixed wireless access technologies that range in speed from 1 Mbps to 1 Gbps.

Windstream will deploy in seven existing markets where it currently offers fixed wireless access technology - Chicago, New York City, Boston, Cleveland, Philadelphia, Milwaukee and Little Rock  using equipment from CBNL and spectrum from Straight Path.

Windstream will also deploy CNBL equipment in 33 new markets where it will begin offering its fixed wireless technology. Those markets include Atlanta, Baltimore, Charlotte, Cincinnati, Dallas, Detroit, Kansas City, Miami, Minneapolis,Nashville, Oklahoma City, Phoenix, Richmond, San Antonio, Seattle and St. Louis.

Under the agreement, Windstream has the option of eventually expanding fixed wireless to an additional 32 markets where Straight Path owns 39 GHz spectrum.

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