![]() ![]() once you successfully manage to open AirDroid a page will finally load and you'll hear a notification from your phone (it was the fourth try for me). If you fail to open AirDroid the page will just time out so you go for the app on the second position and reload the page on your browser, then the third and so forth. Again, blindly tapping on your phone access the Apps Drawer and start the app placed on the first position (upper left corner under the search bar), in your computer's browser type the phone's IP followed by ":8888" (192.168.1.143:8888 in my case). Now it's time to connect to AirDroid, to do this you need a computer connected to the same wifi network that the phone is connected, and since you already know the phone's IP this becomes a process of trial and error. I understand there are other apps with similar functionality but the fact that Airdroid starts with an A is very helpful here because it shows (at least for me) on the first row of your Apps Drawer. The first time you run Airdroid a couple of extra screens will appear trying to get you to subscribe to access all the extra features so this will make things a little more complicated for those installing for the first time, try to google these images so you know whre to tap. A ping test will confirm that the phone is succesfuly connected to the network.įortunately when I received the phone it had already installed Airdroid, so this made the process a little easier for me. On the router check for connected devices and the IP of the phone. We all have a mental image of where things are located on the phone so this should be easily doable (slide from the top, tap to enable wifi, long press to see list of available networks, tap to select network) and if you are sitting next to the router the unprotected network will appear first in the list. In my case I did all this blindly tapping on the blank screen, if your screen is more damaged you can use an OTG cable and a mouse or keyboard, you can find more info on this in other threads.įirst I needed to connect the phone to a wifi network, which I managed creating an unprotected network with a freshly installed DD-WRT router and clicking blindly on the phone. After a few tries I finally came up with a solution that I think can help anyone facing a similar situation. There are a bunch of software that claim they can recover data but they all need USB Debugging to be enabled, so this was a big barrier. I almost lost hope after reading everywhere that there was not much left to be done when USB Debugging was diabled, so I tried a different approach. A friend of mine just dropped her phone and the LCD stopped working (no cracks, tactile was still working), her phone (Oneplus X) was running stock, unrooted and USB Debugging was disabled, so none of the available solutions were useful in this case. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
Details
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |