I've done a lot of research about rooting a device but I can not even come up to this point because my phone is not recognized by windows 8.1 at all.
My intention is to establish a usb-connection between an android-device(Samsung GT-I9506) and a pc in order to use it for phonegap. Some other devices properly work collaboratively with phonegap but this one seems to refuse all attempts.
Important points:
1. The device is charged up when connected to a pc.
2. Use-Debugging is enabled
3. All drivers are installed, furthermore it's a Samsung PC and Phone
A related topic is this one: USB connection issues
But unlike the problem in the topic above my phone does not appear in the adb-list when entering:
adb devices
I plugged my phone into another pc(Windows 8.1) as well where it was not recognized either.
Thanks in advance.
If your system installed Android ADB Interface Driver then only you can see your Device in IDE.
You can check that
Go to Control Panel
Go to Device Manager
And find Android Phone like
It turned out that the usb cable was the reason for broken communication between pc and phone.
Strange enough that this faulty cable was able to load the phone but unable to establish a communication channel to other devices.
And the moral of this story is a usb cable of a smarthphone might be faulty even if other electrial supplies are still intact.
Related
I am creating an app (running in USB accessory mode) that will recognise when a specially made device (that I am also working on) is plugged in and connect to it.
I have written code in the app for this recognition to happen but now need to test it and the specially made device is not made yet.
So, I was wanting to test my app by somehow setting my PC up to be recognised as a usb host device that my phone can connect to, I spent a long time googling and looking for a way to do this or a different way to test this but came up empty.
How do I set my PC up in this way to test my app or what would be a good way to test this automatic usb connecting?
Thank you kindly,
EDIT:
Even the name of a cheap device that runs in android usb host mode would be sufficient as I could still just plug that into my device to check if it is working.
I think your question is how to emulate USB Host mode with the Emulator and setting up a bridge with an emulated device on the PC. This is not possible (yet).
See Emulator documentation. In the "What's not supported section" it is said that virtual hardware is not supported for USB.
I have samsung galaxy note 10.1 and model GT-N8000, I want to connect it to android studio and want to run my own made app. But my android studio not showing anything and even pc do not detect it , not even popping up notification to show me that some thing is connected. I check this device to other computers but got same thing.
So what could be a problem. I have done resetting , but nothing is helpful, Updated driver, installed the google driver for usb, installed the universal driver. But nothing is really helping. So at least pc should detect it but its not.
Any solution. ? Please help
Make sure, that you chose Connect as Camera or PTP on your phone.
Go to developer settings and activate Adb-debugging or USB-debugging.
Also check, whether you have installed the correct drivers. Try to reinstall the correct drivers.
And make sure that neither your USB cable nor your USB-drive is faulty. If so try to use another cable and different usb-drive.
You could also try to connect your phone wirelessly to Android Studio
Couple of things you can try -
Go to settings, developer options and turn USB Debugging on. If it's off, Android Studio will not detect your phone.
If you PC is not detecting your device, either your USB cable is faulty or your USB drive. Only way to know is connect your phone to another USB-Drive or connect it using another cable.
I can't seem to connect my Samsung Galaxy Note II (N7100) to my Windows 8 Machine (aiming to use the phone for debugging - but current can't even connect the device as mass storage). No USB notification is shown when connecting the mobile by cable.
Things I have checked thus far:
USB Cable (works on different machine and with HTC phone)
USB Ports (tried different ports, 2.0 and 3.0, all working)
PC USB Drivers
Phone (connects to my Win 7 machine)
Samsung Kies (and Samsung driver) and Google USB Driver both installed
PS. The reason Im asking this here is because I'm aiming to use the phone for development and I'm hoping to get some answers that aren't "have you double checked the cable?" like on every Google search I have performed so far. Hopefully another developer recognises this issue.
OK. so You've obviously done the basics and made sure all the cabling is functional.
it sounds like the Volume is not mounting in windows 8
if it's not detected in Windows Device Manager, and More importantly, if it's not visible in Disk Management, then the volume simply is not Mounting.
I would suggest
Try connecting to a Windows 7 Machine and see if it works, if it does, Then Most likely you need Windows 8 Drivers
I would be contacting Samsung Engineers for support on the Issue
What version of Kies are you using
i found this that might be useful for you
Ultimately, as you know the volume is not mounting due to Driver issues, and this needs to be resolved if you are to have a solution
You could always Try setting up XP Mode in Windows 8 and see if it recognizes that way.
Granted this is a bit of a workaround and a bit stuffy, but. Hey, it's another option.
let me know how you go
Go to dial pad & type *#0808#
It displays USB settings
Select MTP+ADB option
Press OK button
Connect to USB cable to PC
It shows Connected as a media device."
I'm about to start writing some Android applications, I have downloaded Jave/Android and Eclipse.
I have a test Android tablet (Viewsonic Viewpad 10s) which I will be running the software on.
I was hoping to be able to just plug the Android device straight into my PC to allow me to debug/run applications on the tablet.
I have purchased a male->male USB cable and plugged it into both devices, but nothing happens, it doesn't even come up with an 'unknown device' in the 'devices' window. Is there something else I need to be doing to get Windows to recognise this device? (I'm running Windows 7 (64bit)).
Alternatively, is this the best way to be running/debugging on the tablet? I was thinking that there might be a network debugging application, as both devices are on the network?
I'm totally new to Android, so might be missing something obvious. Although I have set the 'USB Debugging' within the 'Development' menu.
Thanks in advance.
Rich.
It's a Windows problem, Windows isn't capable of recognize your tablet on its own, you need to install the appropriate USB drivers for your device in order to use your tablet when it is connected to your PC.
Under a GNU/linux distribution like Ubuntu everything is much more easier and you can just plug in your device without installing anything, you just have to set the right permissions for the device once.
Unplug the device from your machine
Install the driver for your device : http://www.viewsonic.com/support/downloads/drivers/_download/tablet/viewpad10s/ViewPad_10s_USB_driver.zip
Plug your device in
look at the device for a notificaiton saying debugging enabled.
If you dont, you will need to open Device Manager, find the listing that your computer thinks the device is and right click and uninstall it. Then unplug and replug.
I've been able to find a few posts on StackOverflow about how to control USB devices using an Android phone -- which I understand is impossible (The Android being a USB device and all.)
However, I would be perfectly happy to set up my application to communicate with the other computer (a Linux host) as a USB device. (Like a really expensive mouse...)
Does anybody have information about how to set up an Android app/phone to use the USB connection and exchange data with a host computer. Obviously, it already works at some level -- it's how Eclipse and Android SDK/debugger do what they do, but I'm still looking for some way to do this in an application.
(My current phone, BTW, is a Droid Incredible.)
Thanks,
R.
Basically you'd need to install the USB device driver and the ADB toolsuite from the SDK, either that or reverse engineer their functionality and build it into something else.
Then you enable USB debugging on the phone.
And then you can do something like an adb port forward to allow an application on the pc to connect to a network socket listener on the phone. Note that connections cannot be made in the other direction, but once a connection is made it is bidirectional.
If your version of android supports tethering over USB, you could also leverage that to implicitly create a network between the PC and the phone, at which point you can make connections in either direction. Just make sure nothing starts accidentally pumping lots of data through the phone's mobile network!
(Many android phones actually can experimentally function as USB hosts, but you have to compile new drivers into the kernel, install the new version, and make up a cable to provide USB power to the device as the phone cannot. Also you lose the ADB over USB channel which makes debugging a pain)