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Post by Cory Trese on Oct 3, 2016 10:31:45 GMT -5
I see. And what about the UI? What about the UI?
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poryg
Templar
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Post by poryg on Oct 3, 2016 14:19:06 GMT -5
Can somehow system UI affect it?
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Post by Cory Trese on Oct 3, 2016 14:50:20 GMT -5
Can somehow system UI affect it? Sure, that is possible. I have heard from users of Cyanogenmod that various Android themes and UI skins can cause massive performance hits. If you're using an OTA UI, then we're testing and I can certify that it doesn't have a negative impact.
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Post by Deleted on Oct 3, 2016 15:21:48 GMT -5
The CyanogenMod UI is the ASOP UI i think. Is looking similar to my Nexus 4 with STOCK Android 4.x.
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Post by Cory Trese on Oct 3, 2016 15:24:08 GMT -5
The CyanogenMod UI is the ASOP UI i think. Is looking similar to my Nexus 4 with STOCK Android 4.x. Yeah, always hard to tell just from the looks. As you know, two similar looking things can be accomplished with very different Java.
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poryg
Templar
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Post by poryg on Oct 3, 2016 15:39:30 GMT -5
In my device there is EMUI 3.1, but it's only a matter of interest :#
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Post by Cory Trese on Oct 3, 2016 15:51:14 GMT -5
In my device there is EMUI 3.1, but it's only a matter of interest :# That is one I don't think I have. Hopefully they're sticking close enough to the Google reference implementation to not have too big of a negative impact.
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poryg
Templar
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Post by poryg on Oct 3, 2016 15:58:30 GMT -5
It's the UI provided by Huawei. Designed for mobiles, but they used it for the Huawei MediaPad m2 tablets as well... Quite an inconvenience in certain situations as I am lacking the easy access to the print screen button and overall simplicity of the UI, but otherwise I am quite content with it.
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Post by Cory Trese on Oct 3, 2016 16:18:26 GMT -5
I wish I could do more to support the thousands of Android variations, bugs, implementations and issues but we're already doing more than we can really afford to.
I know Google is making an effort, one way or the other, to force OS developers to produce reference-compatible implementations ... sadly that would at least give us a consistent set of 10,000 bugs to address. As it is with the fragmentation (in both JVM, ART, Dalvik, OS, UI, etc) within Android it is just such a mess.
I really, truly pity people who don't use C++ for everything. Hand coding everything yourself can be exhausting, but it is far easier than supporting the insanity that is Android.
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poryg
Templar
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Post by poryg on Oct 3, 2016 16:38:40 GMT -5
It's alright. Huawei is working on an official update to Android 6.0, which should eliminate many annoying bugs. Hopefully that would be able to fix the problem with the game speed... (Actually the 6.0 has already been done, it's just in the process of betatesting)
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Post by grävling on Oct 6, 2016 13:27:37 GMT -5
I was reading a swedish language site where somebody was complaining about animation speeds on their Cyanogen Mod, and they were told to go play with this code: plus.google.com/+NickButcher to change animation duration. They reported back that it fixed the problem they were having, not on Nexus and not on ST. Just thought I would mention it.
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Post by fallen on Oct 6, 2016 14:13:54 GMT -5
I was reading a swedish language site where somebody was complaining about animation speeds on their Cyanogen Mod, and they were told to go play with this code: plus.google.com/+NickButcher to change animation duration. They reported back that it fixed the problem they were having, not on Nexus and not on ST. Just thought I would mention it. Cyanogen mods and all mods definitely just add one more layer of bugs to the mix
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Post by Cory Trese on Oct 6, 2016 15:41:17 GMT -5
We definitely recommend running the OS the device manufacturer ships. They are most likely to have a focus on that particular device's performance.
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Post by grävling on Oct 6, 2016 23:36:44 GMT -5
Unless, of course, the phone has been abandoned by them ....
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Post by Deleted on Oct 7, 2016 4:19:22 GMT -5
We definitely recommend running the OS the device manufacturer ships. They are most likely to have a focus on that particular device's performance. Most of the devices supported by Cyanogenmod got its own maintainer, optimizing the AOSP with Cyanogenmod-Addons on the special needs of the specific device. Like the original device developers does it. And compared to the orginal AOSP, Cyanogenmod offers a better performence, a better battery live usefull extensions missing in the AOSP. Or features, which only recieve the next version of the orginal AOSP. As example, some of the CM 13 (Android 6) stuff gets added in the AOSP Android 7.
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