CyanogenMod is a custom version of the Android operating system. It’s here to offer a 'better' version than Google can provide, with more features and more control for the hardcore user.
It may sound a lot like one of those custom interfaces you get with phones like the Samsung Galaxy S5. But with CyanogenMod there’s no performance-denting, memory-sapping bloat, and it’s pretty easy to get the look and feel of a standard Android phone if that is what you’re after.
The first version of CyanogenMod was produced not all that long after the very first Android phone was released. In the UK that mobile was known as the T-Mobile G1, which went on sale back in 2008.
An exploit was found that let people fiddle with the phone’s insides, and shortly afterwards developer Steve Kondik started working on his own tweaked version of Android. And the first version of CyanogenMod was born. He caught the eye of Samsung and joined the company asa software engineer in 2011.
But that’s not the end of Steve’s story with CyanogenMod. As well as continuing to oversee Cyanogen while at Samsung, Kondik left the tech giant in March 2013.
With the help of hindsight, we know why.
In September 2013, Kondik raised $7 million in venture capital funds to ‘go legit’ with CyanogenMod, with the aim of turning it from a nerdy internet mod to something that could be used in commercial products. It raised another 23 million dollars in December 2013, and Chinese
leviathan of tech Tencent was one of the core backers.
What phones have CyanogenMod?
Phones that use CyanogenMod natively have already started appearing, and unsurprisingly they come from Chinese companies. Companies like Samsung, HTC and LG are unlikely to adopt CyanogenMod any time soon.
Probably the most high-profile phone to get CyanogenMod is the OnePlus One. It’s a phone that sells for as little as £229 but offers specs similar to those of phones costing £400-500. You just won’t find it on the shelves of any shop in the UK. While CyanogenMod is getting a bit more mainstream, it’s still here to appeal to the more investigative, more intense Android phone user.
The one other phone available with CyanogenMod at the time of writing is the Oppo N1, a phone with an unusual swivel camera. Although not widely known, Oppo owns OnePlus, and the relationship between Oppo and Cyanogen is very much a love-in of plucky underdogs.
How do I get CyanogenMod?
If you want to install CyanogenMod on your own phone, you still need a few nerd chops. The steps you need to go through vary between devices, but CyanogenMod has done its best to make the process as simple as possible.
This is one of the benefits of the company having developed on from an indie project roots, where installation instructions generally assume you understand 60 per cent of the techy lingo before you’ve even started.
By going to http://get.cm on your phone, you’ll download a ‘one click’ CyanogenMod installer that will take you through the process. You’ll also need a PC-based installer app available from CyanogenMod, as the process requires a fair bit more than just a simple app install.
But should you bother? Installing a custom version of Android on your phone will almost certainly void its warranty, so it’s worth thinking about. Not terrified by the prospect? Here are some things you can do with the latest version of CyanogenMod, version 11S, as found in the OnePlus One.
Apply system-wide themes at the press of a button
One of the neatest features of CyanogenMod 11 is the theme installer. It’s dead accessible, and lets
you thoroughly reskin your phone with just about zero effort. What’s better than customising your phone yourself? Getting someone else to the leg work for you, of course.
CyanogenMod 11 themes alter fonts, lock screen styles, app icons and even notification and alarm sounds. They effectively give your phone a complete reskin, without any of the residual wonkiness you often get with custom home launchers you can run on any Android phone.
Lots of people think Android offers quick feature switches in its drop-down notifications bar. But it doesn’t - this is one of the features most commonly added in third-party versions of Android.
Normal Android 4.4 instead has a separate page of app switches. CyanogenMod has this page too, but you also get a quartet of your favourite feature switches on the default notifications page, where you get told when your mum gives you a Whatsapp prod.
CyanogenMod lets you set a
whole bunch of different profiles that alter the behaviour of your phone. These profiles save settings for things like Bluetooth, mobile data and Wi-Fi, giving you pretty good control over how much juice your phone uses throughout the day. You can also tweak how notifications come through for SMS, emails and so on.
You can even make them trigger when your phone is docked with an NFC tag, or when it connects to a certain Wi-Fi network. It’s up to you to put in the initial legwork of dictating how these work, but
they should prove extremely useful. You switch profiles manually from the power-off menu, just as you would when switching to aeroplane mode.
CyanogenMod 11 adds a handy little screen customisation section in the Settings menu called Screen Color. This lets you tweak the look of your screen, fiddling with things like contrast and colour saturation.
It even lets you flip about the hues of colours, although this generally results in a supremely unnatural-looking image. This display tweaker will come in very useful if you find your phone’s normal colours a bit oversaturated, or a little dull-looking.
Many phones have little extra gestures these days, but with the latest version of CyanogenMod you get ones that don’t even require the screen to be on in order to register. We imagine this won’t be suitable for all phones, but it works well on the OnePlus One.
Draw a circle on the phone’s screen while it’s in standby and the camera will launch. When music is playing, a two-fingered vertical swipe will play/pause the audio, and left/right arrows drawn will switch tracks. The most unusual, though, is that drawing a V will turn the LED torch on. And there was us wondering why the flash kept on turning on in-pocket. You can turn these off if you’re not a gestures fan.
Are there downsides to CyanogenMod?
These extras only scratch at the surface of CyanogenMod - there’s loads more to discover too. But is there a reason not to try the software?
The main issue is the problem of knocking out your phone’s warranty. However, there’s also the question of future updates. Historically, CyanogenMod has been great at providing up-to-date
versions of Android to act as the base of the software, but it has decided to take its time over Android L.
Needing to deliver a decent-quality experience from day one is the burden of a ‘proper’ company, and that is what Cyanogen Inc. is these days. “We could spend the next 3 weeks working on integrating CM features against this new platform, and then have it suddenly change dramatically and break in the final release of “L”. This would boil down to a waste of time,” said a member of the CyanogenMod team on its official blog.
CyanogenMod also lacks some features found in other custom versions of Android. Most notably, you don’t get the extreme power-saving modes seen in phones like the Galaxy S5.
Should this be enough to put you off? We wouldn’t recommend diving in with CyanogenMod on your brand new contract phone. But for playing around with on an older device? Absolutely, dip in - the water’s warm.
It may sound a lot like one of those custom interfaces you get with phones like the Samsung Galaxy S5. But with CyanogenMod there’s no performance-denting, memory-sapping bloat, and it’s pretty easy to get the look and feel of a standard Android phone if that is what you’re after.
The first version of CyanogenMod was produced not all that long after the very first Android phone was released. In the UK that mobile was known as the T-Mobile G1, which went on sale back in 2008.
An exploit was found that let people fiddle with the phone’s insides, and shortly afterwards developer Steve Kondik started working on his own tweaked version of Android. And the first version of CyanogenMod was born. He caught the eye of Samsung and joined the company asa software engineer in 2011.
But that’s not the end of Steve’s story with CyanogenMod. As well as continuing to oversee Cyanogen while at Samsung, Kondik left the tech giant in March 2013.
With the help of hindsight, we know why.
In September 2013, Kondik raised $7 million in venture capital funds to ‘go legit’ with CyanogenMod, with the aim of turning it from a nerdy internet mod to something that could be used in commercial products. It raised another 23 million dollars in December 2013, and Chinese
leviathan of tech Tencent was one of the core backers.
What phones have CyanogenMod?
Phones that use CyanogenMod natively have already started appearing, and unsurprisingly they come from Chinese companies. Companies like Samsung, HTC and LG are unlikely to adopt CyanogenMod any time soon.
Probably the most high-profile phone to get CyanogenMod is the OnePlus One. It’s a phone that sells for as little as £229 but offers specs similar to those of phones costing £400-500. You just won’t find it on the shelves of any shop in the UK. While CyanogenMod is getting a bit more mainstream, it’s still here to appeal to the more investigative, more intense Android phone user.
The one other phone available with CyanogenMod at the time of writing is the Oppo N1, a phone with an unusual swivel camera. Although not widely known, Oppo owns OnePlus, and the relationship between Oppo and Cyanogen is very much a love-in of plucky underdogs.
How do I get CyanogenMod?
If you want to install CyanogenMod on your own phone, you still need a few nerd chops. The steps you need to go through vary between devices, but CyanogenMod has done its best to make the process as simple as possible.
This is one of the benefits of the company having developed on from an indie project roots, where installation instructions generally assume you understand 60 per cent of the techy lingo before you’ve even started.
By going to http://get.cm on your phone, you’ll download a ‘one click’ CyanogenMod installer that will take you through the process. You’ll also need a PC-based installer app available from CyanogenMod, as the process requires a fair bit more than just a simple app install.
But should you bother? Installing a custom version of Android on your phone will almost certainly void its warranty, so it’s worth thinking about. Not terrified by the prospect? Here are some things you can do with the latest version of CyanogenMod, version 11S, as found in the OnePlus One.
Apply system-wide themes at the press of a button
One of the neatest features of CyanogenMod 11 is the theme installer. It’s dead accessible, and lets
you thoroughly reskin your phone with just about zero effort. What’s better than customising your phone yourself? Getting someone else to the leg work for you, of course.
CyanogenMod 11 themes alter fonts, lock screen styles, app icons and even notification and alarm sounds. They effectively give your phone a complete reskin, without any of the residual wonkiness you often get with custom home launchers you can run on any Android phone.
Lots of people think Android offers quick feature switches in its drop-down notifications bar. But it doesn’t - this is one of the features most commonly added in third-party versions of Android.
Normal Android 4.4 instead has a separate page of app switches. CyanogenMod has this page too, but you also get a quartet of your favourite feature switches on the default notifications page, where you get told when your mum gives you a Whatsapp prod.
CyanogenMod lets you set a
whole bunch of different profiles that alter the behaviour of your phone. These profiles save settings for things like Bluetooth, mobile data and Wi-Fi, giving you pretty good control over how much juice your phone uses throughout the day. You can also tweak how notifications come through for SMS, emails and so on.
You can even make them trigger when your phone is docked with an NFC tag, or when it connects to a certain Wi-Fi network. It’s up to you to put in the initial legwork of dictating how these work, but
they should prove extremely useful. You switch profiles manually from the power-off menu, just as you would when switching to aeroplane mode.
CyanogenMod 11 adds a handy little screen customisation section in the Settings menu called Screen Color. This lets you tweak the look of your screen, fiddling with things like contrast and colour saturation.
It even lets you flip about the hues of colours, although this generally results in a supremely unnatural-looking image. This display tweaker will come in very useful if you find your phone’s normal colours a bit oversaturated, or a little dull-looking.
Many phones have little extra gestures these days, but with the latest version of CyanogenMod you get ones that don’t even require the screen to be on in order to register. We imagine this won’t be suitable for all phones, but it works well on the OnePlus One.
Draw a circle on the phone’s screen while it’s in standby and the camera will launch. When music is playing, a two-fingered vertical swipe will play/pause the audio, and left/right arrows drawn will switch tracks. The most unusual, though, is that drawing a V will turn the LED torch on. And there was us wondering why the flash kept on turning on in-pocket. You can turn these off if you’re not a gestures fan.
Are there downsides to CyanogenMod?
These extras only scratch at the surface of CyanogenMod - there’s loads more to discover too. But is there a reason not to try the software?
The main issue is the problem of knocking out your phone’s warranty. However, there’s also the question of future updates. Historically, CyanogenMod has been great at providing up-to-date
versions of Android to act as the base of the software, but it has decided to take its time over Android L.
Needing to deliver a decent-quality experience from day one is the burden of a ‘proper’ company, and that is what Cyanogen Inc. is these days. “We could spend the next 3 weeks working on integrating CM features against this new platform, and then have it suddenly change dramatically and break in the final release of “L”. This would boil down to a waste of time,” said a member of the CyanogenMod team on its official blog.
CyanogenMod also lacks some features found in other custom versions of Android. Most notably, you don’t get the extreme power-saving modes seen in phones like the Galaxy S5.
Should this be enough to put you off? We wouldn’t recommend diving in with CyanogenMod on your brand new contract phone. But for playing around with on an older device? Absolutely, dip in - the water’s warm.