Changelog: • Android 13 support • Complete support of EROFS (unofficial change) • /vendor cannot be wiped anymore thru GUI (TWRP team recommendation) • Upstreamed to latest VantomKernel & TWRP sources
Notes: • Min. Android 12 required • Now renamed to STWRP to indicate this is an opinionated build • Wiping isn't supported using EROFS due to its read-only nature • /system might show twice in GUI, this is not a bug • Roms using FBEv1 encryption (+ wrappedkey), EROFS and F2FS compression are fully supported, others might not work. Please don't spam me to build for other roms. • Many thanks to Adi for the base tree, TWRP team for the recovery and Vantom for the kernel sources & Adrian for kernel builds; Pranav for A13 fix
Changelog: • Android 13 support • Complete support of EROFS (unofficial change) • /vendor cannot be wiped anymore thru GUI (TWRP team recommendation) • Upstreamed to latest VantomKernel & TWRP sources
Notes: • Min. Android 12 required • Now renamed to STWRP to indicate this is an opinionated build • Wiping isn't supported using EROFS due to its read-only nature • /system might show twice in GUI, this is not a bug • Roms using FBEv1 encryption (+ wrappedkey), EROFS and F2FS compression are fully supported, others might not work. Please don't spam me to build for other roms. • Many thanks to Adi for the base tree, TWRP team for the recovery and Vantom for the kernel sources & Adrian for kernel builds; Pranav for A13 fix
If riding a bucking bronco is your idea of fun, you’re going to love what the stock market has in store. Consider this past week’s ride a preview.The week’s action didn’t look like much, if you didn’t know better. The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 213.12 points or 0.6%, while the S&P 500 advanced 0.5%, and the Nasdaq Composite ended little changed.
China’s stock markets are some of the largest in the world, with total market capitalization reaching RMB 79 trillion (US$12.2 trillion) in 2020. China’s stock markets are seen as a crucial tool for driving economic growth, in particular for financing the country’s rapidly growing high-tech sectors.Although traditionally closed off to overseas investors, China’s financial markets have gradually been loosening restrictions over the past couple of decades. At the same time, reforms have sought to make it easier for Chinese companies to list on onshore stock exchanges, and new programs have been launched in attempts to lure some of China’s most coveted overseas-listed companies back to the country.