I also have SD Maid Pro installed, OneDrive and Titanium Backup, but haven't bothered with a custom launcher. If you have trouble, ask around the forum I linked to (or google). I wish I could be more helpful with the rooting, but unfortunately it was 8 months ago and I've forgotten the exact steps. Inserted micro SD card and followed link2SD's prompt to choose ext2 and reboot.These instructions are specific to the InkBOOK but at least some of them will work on other eReaders running this Android 4.2.2 variant. But there are a series of eReaders that basically run this same Android 4.2.2 Boyue and Onyx to name two. Installed link2SD and link2SD Plus on my onyx. I chose the one listed in the title above, the inkBOOK Obsidian.Using my laptop I created an external micro SD card partitioned with 75% FAT32 and 25% ext2 using MiniTool Partition Wizard I followed this guide to then get Link2SD working.I think it was also a fiddle to get SuperSU installed. Root the Onyx Boox Afterglow2 using the attachment here ( ) Yes, I had to use google and it took a few reboots to get right. Here are the steps I used to make my Onyx Boox Afterglow 2 work with enough space for my purposes: I'm not sure why I didn't do it sooner! It has completely solved my app storage issue!!! I’ve pretty much given up on there ever being a “unicorn” ereader device that does everything I want it to do (stylus enabled for notetaking/PDF highlighting, exportable to Evernote and/or One Note and a good ebook reading experience that doesn’t require me to convert my lengthy TBR list of ebooks purchased from Amazon.) If such a device ever exists it’ll probably be far too expensive for the mass consumer market unless Amazon is the company that develops it, and Bezos doesn’t seem interested in releasing a new version of the DX at all, much less one with a stylus.I've just started using Link2SD (Plus). The Onyx BOOX Note Air3 is an ePaper tablet with a 10. The recently released smaller Note S device reverted back to the lesser specs of Onyx devices released prior to the Boox Note. Flere ugers batterilevetid og behagelig lsning er e-bogslserens fordel fremfor tablets, og denne Onyx InkBook skulle vre den eneste e-bogslser, der lader dig lse digitale bger fra bibliotekernes e-bogsreol. Testujc jednego z pierwszych InkBooków od firmy Onyx natknem si na problem dotyczcy migotajcego podwietlenia ekranu na najniszych trzech stopniach j. Combine that with the fact RAM prices have kept spiking off and on for most of the past couple years and it’s understandable why nobody’s tried to match the Boox Note, including Onyx itself. The kernel does support newer versions of Android (including 8.0 and the recently released 9.0, nicknamed Pie) but the System on Chip (SOC) software to run wifi and everything else an ereader like this does is only available in bulk purchases of 10,000 or more. Apparently, this device uses the i.MX6 processor that was first unveiled at CES in 2011. Why ONYX decided to break protocol and create a navbar/status bar combination that doesn't respect immersive mode is BEYOND me. But the software issues are very annoying. Apart from the screen tilt issue, hardware wise the device is pretty good and actually quite good looking. The tech website has a post on this device and I found a couple of comments on it very interesting. All in all, the inkBOOK Onyx isn't a bad device.
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