Therefore, Android tinkerers should always make sure they revert back to
a clean stock version of Lollipop before applying any updates, and only then get back to rooting and / or customizing it once the updates are installed.
Not exact matches
One of the things I love about OnePlus phones is that they run a
clean, near -
stock version of Android.
Did a
clean flash though, and fresh OpenGapps (
Stock Version), all went fine and it also looks like the WiFi / Mobile Bug is gone, too.
Having a near -
stock version of Android allows older SoCs like this to run
cleaner than they would with a skinned OS.
Good Lock actually replaces your phone's entire System UI with a customizable
version of the
stock Android interface, so you get a
cleaner look with a handful of personalization tweaks.
Gone is the non-sensical multitasking menu from KitKat, replaced with
stock Lollipop's
version, and the notification shade has been
cleaned up, too.
The
stock apps (phone, contacts, messages etc) have all been given Huawei's Emotion treatment and while they're all functional they're not quite as
clean cut or intuitive as the
stock versions from Google.