Yes, definitely! I don't have as much use for a tablet these days, which is an unfortunate thing. My phone is big enough to cover most use cases, and my iPad 2017 is too big to be used comfortably for most things - it's not ergonomic to hold upright in most conditions, it's slippery without a folio case (and cases are hard to find unless you get an official Apple one which is very expensive), typing on it is a pain because of how thin it is, and the only saving grace it has in terms of typing is the mini floating swipeable keyboard added to iPad OS in recent years.
I'd definitely love to run something like a Nexus 7 again! Perfect form factor for most things, including media consumption, reading books, and much much more!
I add it through their web interface. I signed up several years ago, but I spent 2020 and 2021 updating OSM for my city to be as good as Google Maps for major places, posting their open and close times, better pin placement and such.
Man, I always wanted a Nexus 7, but it was never easy to get one in my country back then. And then Google officially partnered with Amazon and Flipkart to launch the tablet...right after I'd gotten a new iPad.
Interesting, I saw some of this UI on my Android TV last week. Unsure if that's how it's always been or if they were doing some A/B testing. It was refreshing to use a UI that was intuitive, NGL.
The last phone I tried it on was a Redmi Note 8 back in 2021. I waited for a year using the stock ROM, and finally applied for the bootloader unlock. Got my code fairly quickly (7 days), and unlocking from there was a breeze. I don't think the process has changed much these days, but yeah, it's a pain having to go through that to unlock your bootloader.
Man, I loved ICS. I've spoken about this before on a post from a few days ago.
Here's when I used ICS as my main operating system on my computer for over a year
Oh man, the LG Optimus One! That was a pretty sick phone. Ran stock FroYo OOTB. Can't recall if it ever got an update to GB though
Android tablets are just hard to come by in a good configuration. Last time I found decent ones were in 2013: Nexus 7, and before that the Motorola Xoom.
Both had great support for custom ROMs.
There's also the fact that modern Android has simply gone away from the design philosophy that set android tablets apart in Honeycomb.
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