Seven tips and tricks for your Nexus 7! Even if you’re a long-time Android user, you most likely stumble over some long “hidden” features that you didn’t know existed from time to time. Just having a look into the settings or playing around with your device will present some kind of new thing that you didn’t know was there before. I continually finding myself browsing through various aspects of my Nexus 7, particularly after the update to Android 4.4, just to see what has changed and what I haven’t noticed before. As such, we’ve included some pretty well known tips and well as a few other hidden gems that most users might not even know about even after using their device for some time.
Do you have apps in which you constantly receive notifications from, but you really don’t want to see them anymore? If you head to the Apps portion of settings, you can select the offending app from the list of installed apps and then just uncheck the Show Notifications option just at the top of the opened page. That’s all it takes to remove the ability for that app to continue sending you notifications.
Upon unveiling the Nexus 5 as the first device running Android 4.4 KitKat to the public, Google promised to bring the update to the recent variants of Nexus devices as well as Google Play editions of Galaxy S4 and HTC One pretty soon. If you have a Nexus 7 (2012 or 2013 Wi-Fi-only edition) or Nexus 10, you’re going to be among the first lucky ones in this regard, as Google has just started rolling out the update to these tablets. If you don’t want to wait for the official OTA update to hit your device and would prefer to take things into your own hands, you can grab the update files from Google’s servers and flash them to your tablet directly, and that’s what we’ll be walking you through in this post. So, read on and get KitKat up and running on your Nexus 7 or 10 tablet right away.
Disclaimer: Please follow this guide at your own risk. Technecore will not be responsible if your phones gets brick or gets some problem.
Also note that the update is for the Wi-Fi-only variants of the Nexus 7, and will not work on the versions of the device with 3G connectivity.
Requirements
Nexus 7 (2012) Wi-Fi edition or Nexus 10 running latest stock Android 4.3 Jelly Bean. (The update may not likely work if your device isn’t running a fully stock ROM.)
Android SDK installed for ADB access.
Download Android 4.4 KitKat Update for:
Nexus 7 (2012) Wi-Fi edition
Nexus 7 (2013) Wi-Fi edition
Nexus 10
Procedure
Connect your tablet to your PC via USB.
Reboot the tablet into recovery, and put it into ADB sideload mode (apply update from adb on stock recovery; could be named differently and placed in some advanced menu on custom recoveries.)
Open a Command Prompt (Terminal on Linux or Mac) window and navigate to the location where you have the OTA update file.
Enter this command:
adb sideload filename.zip
replacing filename with the full name of the update file.
Once the process is finished, reboot the tablet.
You are now running Android 4.4 KitKat on your Nexus 7 and Nexus 10....... Enjoy and like Technecore Official Page on Facebook....