MTKDroid Tool is a small application for windows computers, which allows you to perform various tasks, including Rooting the device, Creating Scatter file for MediaTek devices, taking the backup of the stock firmware on MediaTek devices, and lots more.
Droid Tool is compatible with all versions of Windows OS, including Windows XP to Windows 11 (x32 or x64 bit). If in case you were looking for the latest version of the tool, then use the following links to get it on the computer:
Password to Extract: MTK (adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle []).push(); Notes[*] For Mediatek Devies: Droid Tool is made for Mediatek Devices. Though it does/may support mobile devices with other chipsets, but some select features may/may not work correctly for other chipsets.
[*] Android Exploit Alert: MTK Droid Tool contains Android Exploits, which helps to gain root access on the Android Devices. These exploits are/will be taken as virus/malware by various AntiVirus Applications.
DROID is a software tool developed by The National Archives to perform automated batch identification of file formats. Developed by our Digital Preservation department as part of its broader digital preservation activities, DROID is designed to meet the fundamental requirement of any digital repository to be able to identify the precise format of all stored digital objects, and to link that identification to a central registry of technical information about that format and its dependencies.
DROID uses internal signatures to identify and report the specific file format and version of digital files. These signatures are stored in an XML signature file, generated from information recorded in the PRONOM technical registry. New and updated signatures are regularly added to PRONOM, and DROID can be configured to automatically download updated signature files.
DROID 6.5 onwards provides two download options for users. The first is embedded with Java OpenJDK runtime for Windows users and does not require Java to be installed to run. The second can be run on any system with Java 8 to 17 installed.
User support is available from our Google Groups discussion page, ideal for questions about DROID, or assistance getting DROID working. Alternatively you can contact us via email. Bug reports, feature requests, and code contributions should be raised through GitHub Issues. We welcome contributions of new formats and format signatures to the PRONOM registry. If you wish to contribute, please use our online form. Signature Files and their release notes can be found below:
DroidConvert transforms a DROID CSV export into the structure required for digital transfers to The National Archives. This is for use by Public Record bodies preparing digital collections for transfer. The Readme included within the download contains information on using this tool.
MTK Droid tool is a free software published in the Other Comms Tools list of programs, part of Communications.
This Other Comms Tools program is available in English. It was last updated on 22 April, 2024. MTK Droid tool is compatible with the following operating systems: Android, Ios, Linux, Mac, Other, Unix, Windows, Windows-mobile.
The company that develops MTK Droid tool is Mediatek Inc. The latest version released by its developer is 2.5.3. This version was rated by 19 users of our site and has an average rating of 3.6.
The download we have available for MTK Droid tool has a file size of 10.49 MB. Just click the green Download button above to start the downloading process. The program is listed on our website since 2015-12-09 and was downloaded 82,629 times. We have already checked if the download link is safe, however for your own protection we recommend that you scan the downloaded software with your antivirus. Your antivirus may detect the MTK Droid tool as malware if the download link is broken.
How to install MTK Droid tool on your Windows device:Click on the Download button on our website. This will start the download from the website of the developer.Once the MTK Droid tool is downloaded click on it to start the setup process (assuming you are on a desktop computer).When the installation is finished you should be able to see and run the program.
I have been recently hired to maintain a very large program (only two Activities, about a hundred Fragments, and several hundred layouts). Furthermore, most of the content of the layouts (images and text) as well as the order that the layouts appear is dynamically determined via the company's Web API.
Unfortunately there is no documentation. No map, nada. The company hired a 3rd party to make this app long before they even had Android programmers. And the quality of the code is poor at best (even variable names are confusing and contradictory).
The project that generated this question is no longer under my control, so this question has become moot. But it does seem to be a common issue, so I'm leaving this question open. Perhaps in the future some kind of tool/solution will be arise. I hope this thread is useful to other programmers in that situation.
There is also the Developer Assistant app for Android which can inspect a view hierarchy at runtime and then display the most probable layout names visible on the screen. The heuristic is involved so it won't work 100% accurate, but still can be helpful and works completely offline (a disclosure: I made this app).
While this does not actually give you the name of the inflated XML file, it could be very useful. If you are lucky, you can even grep for the resource IDs to narrow down the search for which XML files to look at.
The Hierarchy Viewer allows you to debug and optimize your user interface. It provides a visual representation of the layout's View hierarchy (the Layout View) and a magnified inspector of the display (the Pixel Perfect View).
In android 3.0 to onward, the Hierarchy Viewer tool is now deprecated. There is a standalone LayoutInspector. You can access it by clicking on tools from top bar of your Android Studio.
Thanks a lot for getting back to me. Download from the link you gave is slow, so it will take a while. So i should try with Windows 7, can I do it through VirtualBox perhaps? I guess I'll have to find someone that has Windows 7.....
So this is the official tool from Coolpad/Yulong? Right? It's not a tool that Himax uses? I remember you saying that you got YGDP (sorry for the misspelling) from a Himax representative, or something like that.
Maybe I'll have more luck using YGDP. I'll try to backup IMEI with MTK Droid Tools first using Vcom drivers, because I read that it's not possible to use the phone within virtualbox virtual machine (I have a Windows 7 installation there) .... If all else fails, I'll have to find someone with Windows 7. My other computer is running Linux, and I don't wanna install Windows 7 just because of this... :P
i used a stock ROM with blank IMEI. To backup IMEI I flashed a different ROM on my phone using CWM and then connected it to MTK Droid Tools which detected my phone just fine (I used a CyanogenMod ROM from the Russian forum). I backuped IMEI, and the stock ROM of course (from recovery) and then used SP Flash Tool to flash my phone. Stock CoolUI rom needs to be rooted, you will need Vroot to do this. MTK Droid Tools still won't recognize your phone. To restore IMEI you need to install a custom recovery (CWM using Mobile Uncle app from the market) and flash a custom ROM (I used the CyanogenMod ROM again). MTK Droid Tools will now recognize your phone and IMEI can be backed up.
Hey, yes I probaly could use YGDP on Windows 7, but I kinda forgot to try it there, sorry. It should work just fine. I did download the CPB from the link above and it was detected by YGDP. Things would probably be easier if I usedYGDP because I wouldn't need to restore IMEI (assuming it wouldn't overwrite it), but cest la vie.
Can you tell it is it possible to do a factory reset on custom ROMs if I don't set it to reset the SD card? I know you said something about not formatiting the SD card from the phone when using custom ROMS. While I was flashing I decided to test things out so I tried to do a factory reset from the CM AOSP ROM. Before doing that I removed the SD card from phone but I did set it to factory reset both internal storage and sd card (even though it wasn't there). The result was a boot loop. I could only see the Coolpad logo. Re-flashing with SpFlash Tool helped. Now I wonder would it be possible to do a factory reset from a custom ROM if I don't touch the SD card?
I have been going around in circles with this issue, there are so many people who have issues similar to mine, but not one of them is the same. I am trying to get flutter fully set up, but can't resolve one of the issues.
And it's right, there is no "tools" folder in my SDK folder. How on earth do I fix that? I have installed all the SDK tools, even the NDK (not that flutter picks that up) I have tried creating a tools folder and copying sdkManager.bat (including the bin folder) from build-tools, but that just tells me to update my SDK manager, which when attempted just fails.
FYI, the command line tools will add a new folder cmdline-tools inside your SDK Folder. If you look in there cmdline-tools/latest/bin you will see sdkmanager - but your license issue should already be resolved.
I had my SDK installed on a separate folder and command-line tools were missing. even though I downloaded and extracted it into the SDK folder this error was still there. took me sometime to figure it out.
No need to uninstall android studio what you need to do is just go to the andriod studio app go to android sdk and install cmdline toolkit then close the app and type flutter doctor you will get it installed
I encountered a problem where the Android SDK would not reinstall due to the presence of old SDK files at /Users/my_user_name/Library/Android/sdk. To address this issue on macOS where the Library directory is hidden, here are the steps I followed:
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