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menace23
Ambitioniertes Mitglied
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Vielleicht liegts am USB-Kabel oder wie schon erwähnt, am USB-Port.
Folge dem Video um zu sehen, wie unsere Website als Web-App auf dem Startbildschirm installiert werden kann.
Anmerkung: Diese Funktion erfordert derzeit den Zugriff auf die Seite über den integrierten Safari-Browser.
menace23 schrieb:@Nachor, sagmal was sagt diese +59% bei dir im Homescreen auf der rechten Seite aus? Hab ich schon paarmal gesehen weiß aber nicht was das ist.
mich4h schrieb:Ohje Ohje
Schau auch mal ob du im Ordner data/nvram/md/NVRAM/NVD_IMEI
die Datei MP0B_001....
Ich kann es dir nicht genau erklären aber ich versuche es einmal wie ICH das bei meiner Recherche über das IMEI Problem verstanden habe@andyw890i
Ich habe hier noch eine Anleitung mit dem MauiMETA 3G Tool gefunden,wenn das Stockrom flashen nicht hilft wird das wohl noch deine einzigste Möglichkeit übrig sein
Android Phones IMEI null (invalid) repair {Guide} - GSM-Forum
What a lame answers. Especially ones suggesting to root phone.
They guy clearly told he is able to restore MP0B_001 in phone, but its SOFT-IMEI and is lost after wipe/factory reset.
@ Original question by ToldarkenHansam, which is kinda outdated, but considering lame answers here:
To restore HARD-IMEI in NVRAM hidden partition use SN Write Tool or Maui META 3G. They are able to write hard IMEI and calibration to NVRAM partition.
@ kokabunga - if you have nvram.bin backup you can easily resore it with SP Flash Tool. Just open your scatter file with any text editor, find a __NODL_NVRAM section and remove __NODL_ part from it. Reopen scatter in SP Flash Tool and you'll be able to check NVRAM partition.
It might not be able to upload it without other parts selected. But you can you Options->Write memory, then manually enter start address, which will be show on download/upgrade page near NVRAM and length (your nvram.bin length) - that will always work. Be careful to write correct address thou.
Sidenote: all suggested methods before only touch SOFT-IMEI, stored in /data/nvram/md/NVRAM/NVD_IMEI/MP0B_001. Its lost with any wipe/reset, because whole /data partition are formatted. Then the whole /data/nvram directory (if it's empty) are restored from hidden NVRAM partition on EMMC. If you've corrupted your NVRAM when it won't restore correct IMEI ofc. With all methods mentioned above (i.e. replacing MP0B_001, echoing to pttycmd1, using mtkdroidtools, mobileuncletools and others) will only edit MP0B_001, i.e. soft copy of IMEI, which will be lost again with next hardware reset. Sure you restore your IMEI that way every time you wipe/reset/upgrade firmware. But its more solid to fix your IMEI partition with SN Write Tool / Maui META 3G so it will be correctly restored automatically from NVRAM at every wipe/etc.
EDIT: @Chrizzly92 this software are very outdate. It generates 24 byte MP0B_001 file, used by old MT6573/6513 platforms. Newer 6575/6577 uses 120 bytes MP0B_001 which are different. If you put 24 byte MP0B_001 generated instead from imei.c software, your phone will be buggy and will be constantly loosing IMEI every few hours until reboot. It's better to use MtkDroidTools or terminal method (echoing to /dev/pttycmd1) to correctly restore 120 byte IMEI file.
ELeichstetten schrieb:Ich kann´s selber leider nicht mehr prüfen, da mein Phone seit heute morgen auf dem Weg zurück zum Händler ist.