Monday 7 July 2014

Install Android 4.4.2 KitKat Prism Barebone Custom ROM for Samsung Galaxy S4 I9500 [Tutorial]

A new Android v4.4.2 KitKat Prism Barebone Custom ROM has been made available for Samsung Galaxy S4 I9500.
Prism Barebone custom ROM is deodexed and zip-aligned and is based on the v4.4.2 KitKat OS. It brings in new features such as Black themes, more language support, Omega kernel and loses all the bloat-ware, Samsung apps and the Knox feature.
Prerequisites (things to remember before the installation of custom ROM in the smartphone):
  • Rooting enables users to install custom ROMs or third party apps of their choice and also perform tweaks in the settings to improve the device's performance. Though users get more control over the smartphone this way, it makes the company warranty void and they will no longer be liable to provide future updates [warranty can be restored by flashing the device with stock-ROM].
  • This custom ROM has to be installed only on Samsung Galaxy S4 I9500 model [To check your model: Go to Settings >> About phone >> model number]
  • One of the main prerequisite before installing custom ROM is that the phone must be rooted and must have installed ClockworkMod Recovery / TWRP tool.
  • Rooting of devices leads to complete data wipe out, so make sure to back all the data.
  • Users make sure you have installed USB drivers on the PC to connect your Samsung Galaxy S4 I9500.
  • Make sure your smartphone has more than 80-percent battery.
Disclaimer: This procedure is very technical and should be performed by a person with sound knowledge of rooting (or manual software installation) of Android devices. If the step-by-step installation process is not followed properly, there are chances of the smartphone getting bricked or may even lead to the device being permanently irreparable. International Business Times, India Edition cannot be held responsible for any damage or claims from readers if the procedure does not yield the required results or if smartphones get bricked. Hence users are advised to proceed with caution.]

Step 1: Download Android v4.4.2 KitKat Prism Barebone Custom ROM (here) to your PC.
Step 2: Connect Samsung Galaxy S4 I9500 to PC via USB chord.
[Note: Before plugging the phone to the computer, make sure you have installed USB driver software, if not, click here to download the firmware.]
Step 3: Then, place Android v4.4.2 Prism Barebone zip file  into the phone's SD card memory. [Note: Users are advised to paste the .zip file in SD card root, not in any other folder.]
[Note: Before users begin installing the custom software, make sure the device is already rooted and must have installed ClockworkMod Recovery.]
Step 4: Now turn-off the device and disconnect from the PC.
Step 5: Then perform the regular 'Recovery Mode' sortie by press holding 'volume (up)', 'home' and 'power' buttons.
Step 6: After entering ClockworkMod Recovery mode, perform full data wipe, by choosing 'wipe data/factory reset' [Note: use Volume keys to navigate and power button to select options, while operating under Recovery Mode.]
Step 7: Now, clear the cache memory by selecting 'wipe cache partition.'
Step 8: Then go back to ClockworkMod recovery, and select 'advanced' and tap 'wipe dalvik cache' [Note: This step is optional, but many recommend this procedure so that user will not face boot loops or any other errors in the middle of custom ROM installation.]
Step 9: Again come back to main recovery screen and then tap 'install zip from SD card.'
Step 10: Then tap 'choose zip from sdcard' and go to Android 4.4.2 ROM .zip file in SD card and enter the installation process. [Note: use Volume keys to navigate and power button to select options.]
Step 11: Once done with the installation process, navigate to '+++++Go Back+++++' and re-start the device by opting 'reboot system now' seen in the recovery menu.
Now, your device (Samsung Galaxy S4 I9500) will take minimum five minutes to complete booting process.
Users then head to Settings >> select About phone to confirm the installation of Android v4.4.2 KitKat Prism Barebone Custom ROM.

Samsung Galaxy S4 review: Still Excellent Value For Money

1) Does the Galaxy S4 still offer great value for money?
2) Do all of its new features actually work in an everyday scenario, or are they just gimmicky talking points?

Design

Samsung could have gone to town on the design of the Galaxy S4 but instead it took a more conservative approach, refining certain aspects but keeping things fairly familiar to what we saw on the Galaxy S3. It’s no HTC One M8 in this regard, but the overall changes are very subtle.
At 2.5mm, the bezel is now slimmer than ever leaving very little space between the display and theedge of the device. Speaking of edges, the Galaxy S4’s are now flatter giving the handset a blockier, more robust, appearance. The area above and below the display has also been reduced in order to make room for the Galaxy S4’s larger 5-inch display.
The back panel is embellished with a mesh-like design and is still removable, giving you access to the SIM tray, microSD slot, and battery. The unlock/power button, the volume rocker, a headphone jack, and the microUSB port remain in the same positions they were last time around, creating an instant air of familiarity when handling the device.
The Galaxy S4 measures 136.6x69.8x7.9 mm and weighs 130g, making it 3g lighter than its predecessor, which is suitably impressive when you consider the S4 has a larger 5-inch display and also packs in a bigger battery.
Like the Galaxy S3 (and unlike the HTC One) the S4 is constructed entirely from plastics, but that should come as a surprise to no-one. Samsung’s been dragging its ass for years in this regard, and the Galaxy S4 is no exception despite our prayers for change.
It’s not that we have a problem with plastics, or that we only like handsets crafted from aluminum and fiberglass. Done well, plastics can be just as good as any premium metallic finish on a handset – Nokia’s Lumia 720, Lumia 920, and the HTC One X immediately spring to mind here.
On the Galaxy S4, however, this just isn’t the case. And we’re sort of at a loss as to why this has happened again. HTC, despite appalling financial constraints, managed to turn out something spectacular with its One handset. It tried hard, pulled all its resources, and created something that oozed distinction.
Surely the world’s biggest handset manufacturer ahead of the launch of the world’s biggestsmartphone could have done something similar. Or, failing that, just improved the overall quality of the plastics employed on the handset?
In the end it comes down to this: if you liked the Galaxy S3 and are fond of Samsung’s overall design philosophy and don't mind not having the latest and greatest, then you’ll love the Galaxy S4. For everybody else – and I’d wager we’re the minority here – you’ll be grossly disappointed with the overall look and feel of the Galaxy S4.

Display

The display is a 5-inch Super AMOLED panel with 1920x1080 pixel resolution and a pixel density of 441 pixels-per-inch (ppi). It’s reinforced with Corning’s Gorilla Glass 3 and is the first Full HD Super AMOLED panel we’ve tested. 
Colours are vivid, jumping right off the display, and contrast is astounding, as you’d expect from an AMOLED setup. It’s worth nothing that AMOLED displays use a pentile arrangement of subpixels, meaning there’s two colours per pixel, rather than the usual three, and this results in a lower overall resolution compared to similar LCD setups like that present on the HTC One.
Sat next the HTC One the difference, however, is negligible – both offer superb visual experiences. The HTC One’s LCD panel does seem brighter although we prefer how colours look on the Galaxy S4’s AMOLED. In this respect, and at this level of quality, it is very much a case of swings and roundabouts.
Overall, the Galaxy S4’s display is about as close to perfect as you can get. It’s Full HD, contrast is brilliant, and detail is superb. Video, text, images, web pages, games and applications all look utterly astounding. The Galaxy S4's screen does not disappoint.
We also found the size of the display perfect, too. 5-inches sounds large, but because Samsung implemented the increase without affecting the overall size of the handset the extra 0.2-inches feels natural. You might not even notice it. 
The Samsung Galaxy S4’s 5-inch Full HD Super AMOLED display is constructed from Corning’s Gorilla Glass 3 and has been shown to be practically invincible, surviving knife scratches and being stabbed.
And not just surviving – there isn’t a mark left on the Galaxy S4’s display following the test. And that’s impressive given the nature of what the handset was subjected to.

Samsung Galaxy S4 Updated To Android 4.4 KitKat

You can now get Android 4.4 KitKat on your Samsung Galaxy S4 in the UK, and with the update there’s a full screen immersivse mode for a number of apps. There’s also the addition of lockscreen album art and cloud printing.
Samsung's added a load of visual tweaks to the look of the software, and some users are even reporting better battery life. The update itself will take up 300-400MB of your phone's storage.
However, some have found the Galaxy S4 struggles on Android 4.4 though, including Marcus Yam at Toms Hardware. He found the S4 slows right down under the weight of Android 4.4.
The Galaxy S4 has a Snapdragon 600 chip inside which should come in at 1.9GHz. Yam has found with Android 4.4 KitKat installed it can sometimes slow the CPU down to speeds of 918MHz which is less than half the original speed.

Hardware

The UK version of the Galaxy S4 runs Qualcomm’s quad-core Snapdragon 600 processor clocked at 1.9GHz alongside 2GB or RAM. Android Jelly Bean (version 4.2.2) is the operating system of choice and, as you’d expect, everything ticks along very nicely. There is also a Snapdragon 800 version of the handset available too, although this is harder to come by than the written down 16GB basic version. 

Storage

You get 16GB of internal storage and support for an additional 64GB via the phone's microSD slot. Samsung confirmed 32GB and 64GB variants at launch but we’ve yet to see anything other than the 16GB version here in the UK. 
And that’s rather worrying because once Android and TouchWiz have taken their share of the internal storage you’re not left with much, around 8.8GB, or 55 percent of the listed storage. Comparatively, the 16GB iPhone 5 and 32GB Nokia Lumia 920 ship with almost 90 percent of their respective listed storage.
In a bid to quell moaning about the lack of available space inside its 16GB Galaxy S4 flagship, Samsung has issued a software update aimed at curtailing the level of bloatware present inside its mega-selling handset.
Just don’t go expecting miracles. When it launched the 16GB Galaxy S4 offered 9.15GB of available storage to UK punters. With the update installed you'll now have… wait for it, 9.23GB! 
You do have the microSD card-support, of course, but that’s not really the point. The Galaxy S4 is listed as a 16GB handset. It cost £579 at launch. And you get just over 8GB of storage. For us that’s a real kick in the nuts, and it’s definitely something worth considering before purchasing this handset. 

Benchmark Results & Performance

The Galaxy S4 outperformed the vast majority of other Android phones. However, it’s interesting to note that the HTC One, which clocks in at 1.7GHz on the same chip, actually scored higher in some tests – notably Quadrant.
Still, generally speaking it is without a doubt one of the fastest phones around and should deliver like-for-like performance with the HTC One and other Snapdragon 600 rivals, which are sitting pretty at the top of the high-performance pile at present.
The Galaxy S4 is a 4G capable phone and testing the modem chip in SpeedTest showed a fast ping of 47 milliseconds, a download speed of 18.73 megabits per second and an upload speed of 17.56 megabits per second. This is very good by home broadband standards, showing 4G has the capability to deliver a wireless mobile internet experience on a par with hard-wired solutions. 
As well as general performance the Galaxy S4 is looking like a good prospect for gaming, not least because of the huge, crystal clear display, but also as 3DMark, a gaming benchmark suite, cited the Galaxy S4 as ‘one of the most powerful devices around’. You can expect to get very fast, fluid gaming from Samsung’s latest flagship.

TouchWiz

Android overlays are something of an opinion divider. Some users love them, applauding the added functionality and quirks they introduce, while others prefer the cleaner, vanilla-flavoured setup of Android you get aboard the Nexus 7 and Nexus 4.
TouchWiz brings much to the table and is designed not only to help differentiate Samsung products from Sony and HTC ones, but also to highlight the Galaxy S4’s value-added capabilities.
Things like S-Health, Group Play, Music, S Planner, S Translator, Samsung Hub, and S Voice, as well as all the Air features, are all included out the box and when used appropriately are suitably impressive.
The two-finger dropdown menu, new to the Galaxy S4, gives you instant access to all of the device’s sensors, connections, and modes. In here you can activate Smart Scroll, Airplane Mode,Bluetooth, and Screen Mirroring.
Samsung has bundled all of its Music, Film, TV Shows, and Book services inside the redesigned Samsung Hub, which looks a lot smarter with its image-heavy UX and crisp choice of font. It’s a million miles from the Hubs of old looking more like a Windows Phone app than something you’d find on Android. Impressive stuff.
TouchWiz is a heavy overlay, however, and you do pay a price for all these added goodies. Lag does occur and we consistently experienced glitches while scrolling around the UX. With a quad-core Snapdragon 600 CPU and 2GB of RAM, this really shouldn’t be happening.

Specifications

Length136.6mm
Width7.9mm
Thickness69.8mm
Weight130g
Screen Size5-inch Full HD Super AMOLED
UK LaunchApril 2013
Phone StyleSlab
Typical Price£579.99 SIM-free
Video Resolution1080p
Camera Resolution13-megapixel
ConnectivityNFC / MHL 2.0 / IR LED / GPS / GLONASS / Bluetooth 4.0 /
Built-in Memory16GB + 64GB via SD-slot
High-speed DataHSPA+, 4G LTE
Video CallingYes - 2-megapixel front facing camera