@*s!x*: Rechnername = IP (Muss ja auch wissen wo dein N900 ist
)
Benutzername = root
Pw: was du aufm N900 eingegeben hast
Hier ne Anleitung zum übertakten :
Jakiman's N900 Overclocking Summary:
1. Overclock is done by flashing the modified kernel using maemo flasher.
2. No setting or data gets changed/deleted. So it is a transparent flash.
3. In stock form, N900 scales between 250Mhz and 600Mhz dynamically.
4. With Lehto's kernel, it scales between 125Mhz and xxxMhz dynamically.
5. So in theory, during idle, it may actually even use less battery.
6. In most normal everyday use, I do not expect any extra battery usage.
7. Flashing takes literally about 1 second to do. Very quick and painless.
8. If something goes wrong after flashing, just reflash the stock kernel back.
9. So far, majority have reported theirs to work just fine up to 900Mhz.
10. 1ghz kernel is not available to public "yet" due to liability concerns.
11. There are also kernels which overclock not just the CPU but the DSP.
12. The real-life benefits of DSP overclocking is not yet certain it seems.
13. When PR1.2 update comes out, I recommend you to reflash to the stock kernel before updating.
14. PR1.2 may have newer kernel so once you update to PR1.2, we may need Lehto to create newer version of modded kernels.
15. There is no cpu temperature monitoring app / widget / script currently available. (see my last update time of this post)
Nokia Flasher –
tablets-dev.nokia.com restricted downloads
Lehto's Kernels –
Index of /~crailt
General Steps:
1. Power off the N900 completely.
2. Hold "u" on the N900's keyboard, while holding, connect it to the PC via USB cable.
3. You will see usb icon on top right of white Nokia screen.
4. Now you can let go of "u" on the keyboard.
5. Now use flasher utility with the kernel file located in the same directory.
flasher-3.5 -k image_file_name -f -R
6. It should take about 1-2 seconds then it'll say Done.
7. Now your N900 will show white Nokia screen. (reboot)
8. At this time, you can pull out the USB cable.
9. N900 should finish booting up if all goes well.
10. Test out your phone as usual. (Apps, browser, camera, phone etc etc)
11. If any abnormal events occur frequently (crash, hang, screen corruption etc), turn it off, flash it to a slower kernel and test again.
Success Rates
- These percentages are my own totally non-scientific but slightly educated yet conservative estimates:
99% should be stable at 700Mhz.
75% should be stable at 800Mhz
50% should be stable at 900Mhz (although it does seem like it might be about 80-90%)
25% should be stable at 1.0Ghz
5% should be stable at 1.1Ghz
1% should be stable at 1.2Ghz
You are fully responsible for any damage caused by overclocking. Not anyone else.