![]() ![]() Since then, subsequent updates (coming through ASUS) to 4.0.3 and 4.0.4 made the device more stable, but didn't solve the problems entirely and this despite my wiping the device clean, reinstalling the latest firmware and manually installing all my apps. To add to the pain, the upgrade introduced a little bug which was also present in various distributions of linux that made it impossible to connect to a specific kind of VPN (which just happened to be the one I need to use). Suddenly this awesome little device became a nightmare of reboots, freezes, and crashing apps. Over time I accepted the various ASUS-vetted updates to the tablet and eventually got one that upgraded it to version 4.0 (ICS, or Ice Cream Sandwich). ![]() ![]() The OS was pretty slick, though Honeycomb was only the first tablet-ready android so there wasn't a lot of polish to it. ![]() For the current status, scroll all the way to the end of the story as I've appended update notices to the end each time I upgraded or switched Roms.īack in December, 2011 when I first got my ASUS Transformer TF101 it came loaded with android 3.2 (Honeycomb). Installing Cyanogenmod on ASUS Transformer TF101Įditor's note: I've updated this story many times since I first posted it. ![]()
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