Distributions
A CyanogenMod 11.0 M6 test drive
The CyanogenMod 11.0 M6 release was made available on May 4. CyanogenMod, of course, is an Android-based distribution for handsets and tablets. Your editor, in a grumpier than usual mood, decided that this would be a prime opportunity to inflict pain on a helpless handset and see what CyanogenMod has been up to since the 11.0 M1 review published late last year. Since then, Cyanogen (the company) has received another $23 million in venture funding; it is natural to wonder what visible effects all that money has had.
Release cycles and installation
Once upon a time, the CyanogenMod "M" releases were just another form of unstable release, something vaguely similar to the -rc releases used in the kernel setting. So one would expect a series of "11.0 Mn" releases to lead up to a stable 11.0 release eventually. But that is not how things work in 2014; the "M" releases have become the new stable. They are released on a monthly schedule, with something that looks like a three-week "merge window" followed by one week of stabilization time. The plan is that the "M" releases are safe for general use and that users can routinely follow them to get bug fixes on a monthly schedule. There will be no separate "stable" release. Meanwhile, more adventurous users can continue to use the nightly snapshots.
The handset in question is a Nexus 4, the result of extensive surgery joining parts from two devices, one of which suffered a trip through the washing machine while the other did a high-speed faceplant on an unforgiving floor. The device works nicely despite its difficult life, though; your editor did not wish to brick it in the process of installing a new operating system onto it. That is a natural fear for most users, many of whom may not even have a sacrificial device to play with. So it is natural to wonder if the installation procedure has been made easier or less fraught.
It turns out there's a nice application out there that does all the work for you now; it supports a number of devices, including the Nexus 4. Just plug the device in with a USB cable and let things go. One assumes it works like a charm — if you have a Windows or Mac OS machine. Linux, the operating system at the base of Android (and, thus, CyanogenMod) is not supported. One should probably be charitable and assume that the CyanogenMod developers expect Linux users to be a hands-on group and that they just don't want to ruin our fun.
So it was off to the Nexus 4 page for
installation information. Whoever maintains that page clearly hasn't
gotten the memo about the new release scheme; the "M" releases are
described as "more stable than a nightly but potentially some
issues
". The page suggests the RC and stable releases, neither of
which even exists for CyanogenMod 11.0. If the CyanogenMod developers
are still wondering why users don't seem to understand the new release
cycle, they may want to consider that pages like this one are likely to be
a part of the problem.
If one follows the instructions, one's CyanogenMod installation should be relatively painless. One should, however, take note of the step that says to ensure that the internal storage is mounted before running the adb command to push the CyanogenMod zip file to the device. This step should be noted even though that hint appears after the command in question. Otherwise one may just end up with a bricked device that won't get past the bootloader and where even attempts to reflash the recovery image come back with "partition table not found." Doing a full factory reinstallation and starting over gets around this particular issue, or so your editor has heard; he, of course, would never have made such a silly mistake.
The 11.0 M6 release
Assuming that the Google apps have also been installed (a separate step since those apps cannot be shipped with CyanogenMod directly), the result is something that feels quite similar to a normal, KitKat-based Nexus device. There are some small differences (CyanogenMod puts the classic "Browser" app on the home screen instead of Chrome, for example), but they can be tweaked away if one desires.
The nice thing about CyanogenMod, of course, is that just about everything
can be tweaked if desired. The home-screen search bar — a permanent
fixture on stock Android devices — can be abolished if desired. The quick
settings tiles can be adjusted and rearranged, and there are a lot more of
them than Android provides. It is nice, for example, to have the
flashlight immediately accessible there without the need to install a
separate app. The "profiles" mechanism allows extensive control over the
phone's behavior in different settings, and so on.
The customization of the settings tiles aside, most of these features have been present in CyanogenMod for some time. The list of new features since the 11.0 M1 release is relatively short, but, in general, everything feels more solid than it did in the M1 days. The new "parallel shutdown" is supposed to power down the phone more quickly, but it is hard to see the difference. Quite a bit of work has gone into support for handsets with more than one SIM, but that is not something your editor was able to test. There is a left-handed mode that puts the navigation bar on the left side when in landscape mode. The "Trebuchet" launcher has returned, adding configurability and doing away with the multiple-launcher confusion seen in the 11.0 M1 release. And, of course, there has been a constant stream of bug fixes and hardware-support changes.
Perhaps most notably,
the "Privacy Guard" feature has advanced considerably in this time.
One can mark specific applications to keep
them away from personal information, but it is also possible to
control the
behavior of apps in more precise ways. Access to personal information,
access to location information, use of the camera, the ability to change
settings, and automatic startup at boot are all controllable if one goes
into the advanced mode. This is just the sort of control any user should
have over the capabilities of apps stored on a device they own — or it
would be, if it were just a little more complete.
Given the emphasis on privacy, it is interesting that the one permission that is conspicuously missing is network access. It would seem that there would be few better ways of ensuring that an app will not compromise privacy than preventing it from phoning home, but that is not an option that CyanogenMod provides. Blocking network access would, of course, interfere with the delivery of advertising, and CyanogenMod has shown in the past that it is only willing to rock the boat so far in that area. So apps continue to have an unrestricted ability to talk to arbitrary hosts on the net from CyanogenMod-based systems.
Beyond that, there is little that is new in CyanogenMod 11.0 M6. It's not clear what the company has been doing with its millions beyond the inevitable creation of a new logo. One assumes that the company is hard at work building a business model that will sustain it in the years to come, but there are few hints of what that model will be so far.
In the meantime, though, CyanogenMod continues to be a solid distribution for mobile devices, suitable for users wanting extra customizability, better update support than the original manufacturer provides, or a more stock Android feel without vendor add-ons. It can also serve as a base for those wanting to put together a device that is not deeply tied to Google; that is a topic your editor hopes to pursue in the near future. It is a demonstration that there is still a lot of freedom in Android, even if it is not quite the open, community-oriented, 100% free project that many of us would like to see.
Brief items
Distribution quotes of the week
Lisp Interpreter must be run on something, that's what GNU/Hurd is for.
GoboLinux 015
Six years after its last release, GoboLinux is back, with the 015 release of the distribution that is best-known for a total rearrangement of the traditional Linux filesystem hierarchy. More information about the distribution is available, as are release notes for 015.- Migration from the /System/Links hierarchy to /System/Index
- Embracing "root" as super user name -- that should make recipes more simple to write and soften the task of preparing new releases
- Live USB support off the shelf
- Adoption of Enlightenment as the desktop environment for the first time
[Update: The project has asked that people consider using the official mirror at http://adv1.calica.com/gobolinux/ to reduce load on the primary server.]
Newsletters and articles of interest
Distribution newsletters
- Debian Project News (May 12)
- DistroWatch Weekly, Issue 558 (May 12)
- Five Things in Fedora This Week (May 13)
- Tails report (April)
- Ubuntu Weekly Newsletter, Issue 367 (May 11)
Hands-on with PCLinuxOS 2014.05 (ZDNet)
J.A. Watson takes the recent release of PCLinuxOS for a spin.- Internet — browser, email, chat, IM
- Work — Office, kile, scribus
- Play — games
- Multimedia — music, video, editing and composing
- Graphics and Images — scan, edit, draw
- Administration — System management tasks
Page editor: Rebecca Sobol
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