on 04-02-2013 16:27
on 04-02-2013 16:27
Hi, Does anyone have any indication if or when O2 are going to release this update for HD7?
Solved! Go to Solution.
on 19-03-2013 20:03
on 19-03-2013 20:03
on 30-03-2013 16:25
Ive completely given up although i did update to 7.8 using the workaround posted previously. Bought a SIM Free Lumia 620 so to hell with O2 and long contracts.
on 30-03-2013 16:39
on 30-03-2013 23:23
Got an update on my HTC HD7 thinking that it was the start of the updates to 7.8 . Sadly it was the one update to bring it to 7.10.8779.8 . Sorry to reignite the old thread but anyone heard anything new? Hate being left in the dark...
Thanks
Aaron
on 31-03-2013 00:27
on 31-03-2013 00:27
on 11-04-2013 11:11
I just got that small update as well. The force update thing with pulling the internet just doesn't work for me. An O2 support person told me a month ago that it was imminent. So where is it O2? Why are you the last network to give us the 7.8 update?
11-04-2013 22:38 - edited 11-04-2013 22:54
@Anonymous wrote:The force update thing with pulling the internet just doesn't work for me.
Is there a reason why you don't want to use the SevenEighter method? This should work for everybody.
on 12-04-2013 08:46
Yes there is. It's because I can't afford to risk bricking my phone.
David
12-04-2013 09:19 - edited 12-04-2013 09:23
@Anonymous wrote:Yes there is. It's because I can't afford to risk bricking my phone.
Fair enough, any update is "at your own risk", but it's worth noting the following.
1. The "seveneighter" process is not a ROM-flash. It just downloads the standard MS update files, without running the provider-check.
2. The process creates a restoreable backup prior to update.
3. I have now updated 15 phones using this method. There have been no problems whatsoever. The only thing you need to do is make sure that you "tick" the right language packs when running the update. If in doubt, choose them all....
To be clear, the standard MS-Update routine does the following: (1) Check if there is an update available; (2) Check if the service-provider has approved that update; (3) install the update. The seveneighter process just skips step (2), that's all.
In other words, it's pretty much the same as the force-update, but without all the connect/disconnect faffing about.
on 12-04-2013 09:51
I was tempted by that utility but Googling it reveals that several people have had problems with it. Even it's own website says it cannot be refstored back so I'm not sure why you say it can. Interestingly I could find no reports at all of anyone's phone being bricked by the official update despite the statutory warnings. There just seem to be too many people who have had issues with Seven-Eighter and the one question that sticks in my mind as a programmer; why can it not detect the languages required and install them like the official update obviously can?
I need my phone to stay in touch with family and clients. I simply cannot risk being without it. If this was just a spare phone then I would use that utility without hesitation but in this never-ending recession when money is tight I can't risk screwing it up and having to go out and blow nearly £500 on a new smartphone.
I tell you something though: In the future I will always buy unbranded phones. Last year I dumped my contract and went solo with a small provider who uses the O2 network. Now, given the cash, I can buy any phone I want, any time I want. AND I get unlimited internet instead of some silly 500MB per month!