Uber1

Tuesday, 7 March 2017

How to sign up for Google Analytics

Get started with Analytics

To start collecting basic data from a website or mobile app:
  1. If you don’t have an Analytics account, create one. If you do have an Analytics account, sign in. Both options are available at google.com/analytics:
    • Click SIGN IN > Analytics.
    • If you don’t have an account, click More options > Create account.
      If you do have an account, enter the email address and password associated with the account.
  2. Set up a property in your Analytics account. A property represents your website or app, and is the collection point in Analytics for the data from your site or app.

    Properties contain reporting views. Views let you create filtered perspectives of your data; for example, all data except from your company’s internal IP addresses, or all data associated with a specific sales region.
  3. The next step is to modify the code for your site or app by adding the Analytics tracking code so you can collect data in the Analytics property you set up.

    Follow the instructions to set up web tracking or mobile app tracking.

    If you’re going to be collecting data from an app, familiarize yourself with the best practices for mobile-app analytics.
For complex installations and data collection, use Google Tag Manager. Read Implementing Analytics with Google Tag Manager for a complete walkthrough with examples.



Next steps

You can configure your account, properties, and views in order to fine tune access to your data and which data is available.
For example, you can:
You can modify your tracking code to collect additional kinds of data, for example:
  • User interactions with things like links, buttons, video controls, and other dynamic elements of your site or app. Learn more about event tracking.
  • Ecommerce activity like user engagement with product lists and internal promotions, and how successfully users moved through your purchase funnel and checkout process. Learn more about ecommerce and enhanced-ecommerce data collection and reporting.

Saturday, 4 March 2017

When to Hire A personal Injury Attorney

Many people choose to hire an accident lawyer after they've been involved in a car crash that results in personal injury and monetary losses.

Why Should You Hire a Lawyer?

Technically, you can file a personal injury claim against an insurance company by yourself. Some people choose this route when they've suffered only mild injuries and have the time to research the legal claims process themselves. Also, skipping an attorney will save you some money in legal fees.
However, an accident attorney— especially a personal injury attorney—can help you go up against big auto insurance companies and their team of lawyers. Your attorney already knows the personal injury laws and procedural rules and can effectively handle all the legwork for you. He or she will act as your advocate throughout the entire case.
Because an insurance company's lawyers have the knowledge to reduce compensation and even deny the claim altogether, hiring an accident attorney is the best option for people who:
  • Have suffered severe injuries.
  • Are faced with expensive medical bills.
  • Have experienced a significant loss of wages due to their injuries.

Reasons to Consult an Accident Attorney

Consider hiring an accident attorney if any of the following apply to you.

Auto Accident Injuries

Severe Injuries
Generally, the severity of your personal injuries is measured by the:
  • Type of injury (or injuries) you've sustained.
  • Length of time it takes (or will take) for you to recover.
  • Cost of medical bills (and any other therapeutic procedures) you've incurred.
    • This also can include the estimated cost of future medical procedures.
Long-Term or Permanently Disabling Injuries
Generally speaking, a long-term injury is one that lasts for around a year or longer, while a permanent injury is one that disables you for life. These types of personal injuries seriously affect your ability to become and stay employed—not to mention the quality of your life.
Proving long-term and permanently disabling injuries can be tricky business, and your personal injury attorney probably will consult with each medical professional you've seen. He or she even might request the presence of your medical professionals during any legal proceedings.

Disputed Liability

When an insurance company disputes its policyholder's liability for the car crash, the company is basically saying that the policyholder is not at fault (or is at least claiming you don't have enough proof of fault) and, therefore, the insurance company is not responsible for paying for your damages.
An accident attorney will help you provide this proof and show that the other party was indeed at fault.

Refusal to Pay

Refusal to pay (which can but doesn't necessarily stem from a disputed liability) or refusal to pay a fair amount is when an insurance company outright won't make a fair settlement offer—or any offer at all.
DMV.org Insurance Finder
Join 1,972,984 Americans who searched DMV.org for car insurance rates:
 
 

Tips for Hiring an Accident Lawyer

Because of possible situations such as statutes of limitations (which can vary by state), it's important to hire a personal injury attorney and get the claims process going as quickly as possible; however, you don't want to hire the first attorney for whom you see a billboard on the highway.
Consider these tips as you look for the right accident lawyer.

Personal Injury Focus

Just as there are many different doctors who focus on many different areas of medicine, there is a wide range of lawyers from which to choose.
As you choose your accident lawyer, make sure he or she focuses on personal injury accidents.
NOTE: Some states' State Bar websites have directories of attorneys organized by their areas of practice.

Car Accident Experience

Not all personal injury attorneys have experience with cases that deal with personal injury caused by a car accident. Some focus more on slip-and-fall accidents, others on work-related injuries, and others still on premise liability cases.
Make sure the attorney you choose has represented individuals who've suffered personal injuries specifically related to car crashes.

Attorney's Reputation

Perhaps nothing spreads reputation more powerfully than word of mouth, and in this day and age you can go beyond just talking to people about their own personal injury attorney experiences to actually researching these attorneys yourself. Simply hop online, search the attorneys' names, and see what others have to say about him or her.

Dedication to Your Case

Here, you'll want to consider a couple of factors.
First, take a look at the attorney's current caseload. While it's not impossible for a skilled lawyer to juggle multiple cases at one time (actually, it's pretty normal), you probably don't want to put your trust in the hands of an attorney whose focus is spread uncomfortably thin.
Second, consider how the attorney treats you and your case. Sure, you probably won't communicate every day, but does your lawyer regularly update you on your claim's status? Make him- or herself available to answer your questions? Return your phone calls in a timely fashion?

Comfort Level

Finally, evaluate your comfort level with the attorney.
You can start gauging your comfort level from the beginning (for example, how do you feel about the attorney's success rate with car accident cases?) and continue beyond the time you hire him or her.
Sometimes, evaluating your comfort level can prevent you from hiring a personal injury attorney who isn't well suited for your case; other times, it might convince you it's time to change course with a new attorney.
Just remember, you suffered personal injury and monetary loss due to a car crash you believe someone else caused. Use these tips—and trust your gut—as you search for the right accident lawyer.

Saturday, 25 February 2017

How to install a Custom Rom

Hi Guyz, 
Have you been hearing about all this custom ROM business - Cyanogen, DamageControl, etc and wondering what in the world all those are about?
Or perhaps you already know what those are but are still afraid of trying custom ROMs on your phone because you don't know how to install them or don't want to lose your data and current OS state?
Well, today is your lucky day because in this article from the "I wish somebody showed me how to do this crap when I was getting started" series, I will show you how to
  • easily install a custom ROM but only after you
  • back up your current system and exact phone state so that you can
  • restore to that exact state with a click of a button
What do you have to lose now? Try out a new ROM and go back to your original OS in a matter of 30 minutes.
Sounds like a good deal? Then let's go.
Note: By the way, having written this tutorial, I know it may seem like there is a lot to do here, scaring you away, but in reality there really isn't - I was simply trying to provide as much detail and be as clear as possible, covering all the bases.
I am using an Sprint HTC Hero (CDMA) in this tutorial and in fact this is exactly how I got Android 2.1 on it using the DamageControl ROM, weeks before it was released by Sprint (in fact, it's not even released yet at the time of this writing).
The specific phone used is not important and I listed it just for reference - ROM Manager should work with pretty much every Android phone.

Custom ROMs

At first I started an explanation of custom ROMs here, but it quickly outgrew itself and demanded to be in a separate post. Who am I to argue with the creative genius?
Proceed to read the Custom ROMs For Android Explained And Why You Want Them article and then come back here - I'll be waiting.
By the way, if you are wondering, you will most likely have to wipe when upgrading to a custom ROM (of course, we'll do a full backup first) but once you've installed it, any regular updates are usually applied right over the current version and don't require any wipes.
Remember, all your Google contacts sit in the cloud and will be sync'ed right back as soon as you boot the new ROM and log into Google.

The Steps

Here are the steps, at a glance. Look the list over and move on to the more detailed explanation of each bullet point.
  1. Root Your Phone
  2. Install ROM Manager App
  3. Back Up
  4. Download The ROM You Want To Try
  5. Flash It
  6. Want To Go Back? Restore It

1. Root Your Phone

The first thing you need to do is root your phone. Don't be afraid - we already covered this in the Rooting Explained + Top 5 Benefits Of Rooting Your Phone article a few weeks ago, so go ahead and read that first - I'll wait.
Rooting is usually a 5 minute process, and many guides around the web explain what that process is for your exact phone model and Android version combinations, just Google "YOUR_PHONE_MODEL root".
Now that you have root, let's proceed to the next step.

2. Install ROM Manager App

This is the easiest step. Go to the Android Market on your phone and install ROM Manager.
This excellent application handles backing up and restoring, as well as flashing new ROMs, all from an easy user interface. This application requires root, which is why we've first gone with step 1.
Got the app installed? You should see something like this:
[Complete Guide] How To Flash A Custom ROM To Your Android Phone With ROM Manager + Full Backup & Restore [Complete Guide] How To Flash A Custom ROM To Your Android Phone With ROM Manager + Full Backup & Restore

3. Back Up

This part is very easy and in fact I dedicated a whole tutorial just to this subject which you can read if you want more details about the backing up and restoring process.
Done reading the backup tutorial? Now check this out: you don't even have to perform a manual backup - ROM Manager will automatically ask if you want to back up or not in step 5, when you are flashing the new ROM. This is what it will look like:
[Complete Guide] How To Flash A Custom ROM To Your Android Phone With ROM Manager + Full Backup & Restore

3.1. Flash A Recovery Image

If you read the backup/restore article above, you may have seen that there is a one-time step that was needed before ROM Manager, or any other manager, can install ROMs, back up, restore, or do anything with Nandroid Backup - and that is flashing a recovery image.
Important: unplug the USB cable during this step, as some users are reporting problems flashing recovery while plugged in (thanks DennGir and others).
This recovery image contains a boot loader which replaces your original boot loader.
The boot loader gives you the ability to run Nandroid backup and restore commands outside of the OS.
It also lets you install ROMs but we will not do that today. Since the OS cannot back itself up fully while running, ROM Manager will reboot into this boot loader to perform Nandroid operations.
[Complete Guide] How To Flash A Custom ROM To Your Android Phone With ROM Manager + Full Backup & Restore [Complete Guide] How To Flash A Custom ROM To Your Android Phone With ROM Manager + Full Backup & Restore [Complete Guide] How To Flash A Custom ROM To Your Android Phone With ROM Manager + Full Backup & Restore
Again, remember: this step needs to be done one time only.

4. Download The ROM You Want To Try And Copy It To Your Phone's SD Card

Here is where you need to do a bit of research and find the ROM image you want to put on your phone. If you don't know exactly what you're looking for, again, Google can help you - just search for "YOUR_PHONE_MODEL ROM" and look around.
For instance, if you have a Nexus One, you may want to go with CyanogenMod and if you have a Sprint HTC Hero (CDMA), you will want to check out DamageControl.
If you bought ROM Manager Premium, which I recommend, you would have a "Download ROM" menu enabled right within the app, containing some of the most popular ROMs, so you don't have to look for them online or spend time downloading them on your computer and copying to the phone.
If you choose not to use ROM Manager Premium or if the ROM you want is not included in the default list, then keep reading this section.
Each ROM you find will be based on a specific Android version - make sure to pay attention to that.

DamageControl ROM For The HTC Hero

In my case, I knew that there were not many options for my Sprint HTC Hero and I quickly found that the DamageControl ROM was exactly what I'd been looking for.
It is currently based off Android 2.1 and it's exactly what I had flashed on my phone to come up with this [p]review: Detailed Mega Review Of Android 2.1 On Our HTC Hero – Discover All The New Features (With Lots Of Screenshots).

Download The ROM You Selected

Download the ROM image, which is usually a zip archive, and copy it into the root folder of your SD card.
Important: you do not unzip the .zip file - just copy it as is.
You can do it by
  • attaching the phone with a USB cable and selecting the option of mounting the SD card to be used as a drive on the computer
or
  • unmounting the SD card, physically taking it out of the phone, and inserting into your own card reader
or
  • downloading the ROM straight from the phone browser
Once you've copied the ROM image, you can proceed to flashing it in step 5.
If you purchased ROM Manager Premium for $3.99, in addition to thanking the developer for the awesome job, you've also unlocked a few premium features.
In particular, the Premium version can download ROMs compatible with your phone straight from ROM Manager. Just select "Download ROM" and see which ones are available for your model.
Unfortunately, there is no ROM entered into the app for Sprint HTC Hero at the moment, so you still have to download it manually using the directions in step 4.

5. Flash It

The process of installing new firmware or low-level system software in general is called flashing.
We will be flashing the new custom ROM over the stock one that came with your phone.
  • Pop open the ROM Manager and click "Install ROM from SD Card"
  • The ROM you downloaded in step 4 should show up in the list. If it doesn't, make sure you've put it into the root folder of the SD card.
  • Click on the ROM and you should receive a popup inviting you to
    • back up existing ROM (which you should do unless you've already backed up manually) and
    • wipe data and cache, which you should only do if you want to do a clean install, i.e. when upgrading from the stock ROM. Note: this does not wipe your SD card data - it only wipes the phone's internal memory.
  • Follow the rest of the prompts and voila - the ROM is being installed!
Check out these screenshots I took, showing the full process:
[Complete Guide] How To Flash A Custom ROM To Your Android Phone With ROM Manager + Full Backup & Restore [Complete Guide] How To Flash A Custom ROM To Your Android Phone With ROM Manager + Full Backup & Restore [Complete Guide] How To Flash A Custom ROM To Your Android Phone With ROM Manager + Full Backup & Restore
[Complete Guide] How To Flash A Custom ROM To Your Android Phone With ROM Manager + Full Backup & Restore [Complete Guide] How To Flash A Custom ROM To Your Android Phone With ROM Manager + Full Backup & Restore [Complete Guide] How To Flash A Custom ROM To Your Android Phone With ROM Manager + Full Backup & Restore
The flashing process should take 5-10 minutes installing everything and then 10-20 minutes during the first boot. Please be patient during this process.
Once the phone boots, you should find yourself in the new ROM.
This is it - end of the road! You've done it! Enjoy your fast and clean phone.

Problem During Flashing?

If after the "Reboot and Install" step, you immediately get a picture of Android with a big exclamation point, most likely it means the ROM image you downloaded was not cryptographically signed by the developer (which happens if they were in a hurry to release or simply don't use encryption).
That's OK - you can fix this by:
  • clicking the exclamation point screen, which goes to the ClockworkMod recovery menu or simply rebooting into recovery manually (that's one of the options in the ROM Manager). Alternatively, you can boot into recovery by holding Power and Home buttons together while powering up your phone
  • selecting the option that says "install zip from sdcard"
  • toggling the "toggle signature verification" option to turn the verification off (it should say "Signature Check: Disabled")
  • giving flashing another try by selecting "choose zip from sdcard" and selecting the right ROM, just like before
I took some screenshots of this process to make this easier to comprehend:
[Complete Guide] How To Flash A Custom ROM To Your Android Phone With ROM Manager + Full Backup & Restore [Complete Guide] How To Flash A Custom ROM To Your Android Phone With ROM Manager + Full Backup & Restore [Complete Guide] How To Flash A Custom ROM To Your Android Phone With ROM Manager + Full Backup & Restore

6. Want To Go Back? Restore It

Alright, you may want to restore the original full backup of your OS that you took in step 3 (or 5). Maybe you forgot something in the original installation or want to go back to stock for another reason - no problem.
Install and load up the ROM Manager app in the custom ROM you flashed (basically, repeating step 2). Now use the "Manage and Restore Backups" menu to find your backup and restore it (including the OS itself and all the apps, settings - everything that you backed up).
After you're done restoring, you'll be back to your original OS as if nothing ever happened (was it just a dream?)
You can read more about the Backup/Restore procedure in our tutorial called [Complete Guide] How To Fully Back Up And Restore Your Android Phone Using Nandroid Backup.
[Complete Guide] How To Flash A Custom ROM To Your Android Phone With ROM Manager + Full Backup & Restore [Complete Guide] How To Flash A Custom ROM To Your Android Phone With ROM Manager + Full Backup & Restore [Complete Guide] How To Flash A Custom ROM To Your Android Phone With ROM Manager + Full Backup & Restore

Friday, 24 February 2017

How to Flash MTK android (Unbrick MTK)

What's needed:
  • USB data cable
  • MediaTek USB VCOM drivers
  • SP Flash Tool ( Latest version MTK Flash Tool v. 5.1343.01 (18.10.2013))

  • First of all, make sure that you have MediaTek DA USB VCOM drivers installed.
MTK Android Flashtool Drivers
Flashing the whole ROM
  • First of all open SP Flash Tool, then click Scatter-loading button to load the correct scatter file
    (MT6575_Android_scatter_emmc.txt or MT6577_Android_scatter_emmc.txt, depending on which phone you have) for your device and ignore any message that may appear.
MTK Android Flashtool
  • Turn off your phone, remove the battery and replace it after some seconds (and don't turn on the phone).
  • Press F9 (or hit Download button) and connect your phone into the computer via USB data cable.
    The process will start and a red progress bar will appear.
MTK Android Flashtool Connect to Computer

MTK Android Flashtool Connect to Computer

  • After the red progress bar is complete, there will appear a purple progress bar.
MTK Android Flashtool runtime trace mode
  • Right after the purple progress bar is complete, a message will appear underneath it:
    Please insert USB cable in x seconds” and then the download will start right away (you will see the yellow progress bar filling up).
MTK Android Flashtool runtime trace mode

  • When the yellow bar is complete, you'll get a popup with a green circle and Download OK message,
    which means that the process has been successfully terminated.
MTK Android flashtool Download

  • You can now safely disconnect your phone and turn it on. The process ends here.
Flashing only part of the ROM
  • In case you want to flash just one part of the ROM, that is also possible. In the shown example, only recovery image will be flashed.
    Deselect all parts except the one(s) you want to flash and then press F9 (or hit Download button).
MTK Android Flashtool
  • The tool will immediately show a warning because not all parts are selected, but you should continue anyway. Safely press Yes to continue.
MTK Android Flashtool

  • The download of the chosen partition image will start and after the yellow bar is complete, the popup with the green circle should appear.

MTK Android Flashtool

MTK Android Flashtool
  • Please note that, even though it isn't mandatory to select it on the list of images to flash,
    preloader file must be present in the same folder as the other partition(s) that you want to flash, or else phone will not be able to enter into download mode.

Attention: Please follow the instructions carefully. I will not take any responsibility on whatever may happen with your phone.

Very important warning: Always make sure that you trust the sources of the ROM you download and know that it is meant for your phone
After flashing a wrong preloader, your phone will be completely dead (can't be powered on, it will not charge and won't be detected anymore by the computer) and there is no way to recover it.
================
[Tool]SP FlashTool ||MTK Android FLASHER
http://forum.xda-developers.com/show....php?t=1982576
======================
Mediatek - Flash Tool - Info page
Mediatek - Flash Tool - Downlaod page

SP Flash Tool v. 3.1224.0212 (01.11.2013)

MTK Flash Tool v. 5.1320.00 (23.05.2013)
MTK Flash Tool v. 5.1343.01 (18.10.2013)


SP Flash Tool are for SmartPhone productsMT6573\72 Innovative Platform for Mainstream Smartphones
MT6575 Dual-SIM smartphone platform for the mainstream market
MT6577 1 GHz Dual-Core Smartphone Platform
MT6582 Quad-Core Cortex-A7 1.2GHz+CPU Smartphone Platform
MT6589 Quad-Core Cortex-A7 1GHz+CPU Smartphone Platform

MTK Flash Tool is for Feature Phone chipsMT6223 GSM/GPRS solution for ULC/ULC+ market
MT6235 GSM/GPRS/EDGE solution for Mainstream Multimedia
MT6236 GSM/GPRS/EDGE Feature- rich Multimedia solution
MT6238 GSM/GPRS/EDGE Premium Multimedia solution
MT6239 GSM/GPRS/EDGE Premium Multimedia solution
MT6250 Single- Chip GSM/GPRS/EDGE- RX entry- multimedia solution
MT6252 GSM/GPRS/EGPRS entry- multimedia single chip solution
MT6253 Single- Chip GSM/GPRS entry- multimedia solution
MT6255 Single- Chip GSM/GPRS/EDGE- RX Smart Feature Phone solution
MT6268 High- end EDGE/GPRS/WCDMA Feature Rich Multimedia Phone Solution
MT6276M HSPA Data Modem Solution
MT6516 EDGE/GPRS Feature Rich Multimedia Smart Phone Entry Solution



MTK Flash tool v. 5.x fix a critical bug about SP Flash Tool 3.x where the SP Flashtool reads iincorrectly the scatter file of some new mobilebased on MTK6582 (error: recovery partition is not flashable).