Galaxy Tab P7500 Firmware Update

All Samsung Firmwares for GT-P7500, Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1 EN.

Decane cracking equation. Very often, of produces more of the larger hydrocarbons than can be sold, and less of the smaller hydrocarbons than customers want. • It produces alkenes, which are useful as for the industry. The demand is how much of a fraction customers want to buy. Supply and demand The supply is how much of a fraction an oil refinery produces.

I can't apply updates. C`mon, how hard must this be? Generally, I prefer to. I like how the device feels in the hand, and I'm now accustomed to its longer, narrower shape when held in portrait mode. I find Tab to be generally faster and more responsive than iPad 2, and Android 3.1 is considerably more pleasing than iOS 4. I could go on -- and would -- in a full review, which I was saving for Samsung's TouchWiz UX user interface/skin that released Friday.

I can't install it -- hell, I can't even come close. Before continuing, two interrelated points need to be made.

I had great angst about applying TouchWiz UX because it's permanent. The firmware upgrade would replace the vanilla Honeycomb experience, something I was willing to do for review purposes, and Samsung offers no utility to remove it. My failed update experience shows exactly what's wrong with Android tablets -- fragmentation of the user experience. By comparison, because Apple controls iOS updates, the user experience is fairly consistent, not just on iPad but iPhone, too.

Galaxy Tab P7500 Firmware Update

Because of these two interrelated things, which I'll expand on below, I renew my call for like it does with the. What the Hell? My problem started rather unexpectedly. One of Android's great benefits is the ability to receive over-the-air updates, a. No connection to personal computer is required. I had assumed, therefore, that my Galaxy Tab 10.1 was primed to receive updates.

Now that's unclear to me. In Settings > About Tablet > System updates there are two options: Update and Auto update. There is a check in the box for Auto update, as I would expect. When I clicked the Update option, Tab 10.1 presented a log-in page for entering or signing up for a Samsung Account.

On Nexus S, like Nexus One before it, everything ties to the user's Google Account, and that includes OTA updates. I expected no different from Tab 10.1, which shipped with vanilla Honeycomb 3.1 -- well, more or less. I created a Samsung Account, which afterwards prompted to download an 11.22MB firmware update.

Samsung presented no information about what it was or what it would change. I followed the prompts to download and install the 11.22MB update, which by its small size indicated that it wasn't TouchWiz UX. After the download, Tab 10.1 rebooted and attempted installation.

Instead it presented error 'Failed to update firmware' and recommendation to use Kies connected to a PC. What the hell is Kies? It's Samsung's desktop software for syncing music, photos and other files to smartphones and tablets. I had a heck of time finding it, too, and ended up Googling instead. I initially went from Samsung's to its Download Center, where I was presented with v1 of the software.

Samsung galaxy tab 3 updates

But it's v2 that supports firmware upgrades, which I only found after going through three or four pages of Google search results. Except -- when later examining the file, it's labeled as 2.0 but the About menu indicates 1.x. I downloaded and installed Kies 2.0 to my wife's 13-inch MacBook Pro and then connected Tab 10.1. In the device section, Kies presented: 'GT-P7510 does not support firmware upgrade'. C`mon, Samsung, at least the text could indicate Galaxy Tab 10.1. There's nothing showing what the problem is, either. 'Terrible' is simply not strong enough to describe this user experience, which demonstrates the problems of OEMs having control over anything dealing with the operating system.