On 6
November 2013 the CyanogenMod team started pushing the code of CyanogenMod 11,
based on Android 4.4 KitKat, to GitHub. The first nightly release of
CyanogenMod 11.0 began rolling out for a selected number of devices on 5
December 2013. Since then, M-builds have been released every month for
supported devices, offering a more stable experience than nightlies. With build
M6 it was clarified that CyanogenMod would no longer be releasing final builds
specially tagged "stable", but instead would utilize the rolling
release model with M-builds representing a stable channel.
CyanogenMod
is based on the Android Open Source Project with extra contributions from many
people within the Android community. It can be used without any need to have
any Google application installed. Linked below is a package that has come from
another Android project that restore the Google parts. CyanogenMod does still
include various hardware-specific code, which is also slowly being open-sourced
anyway.
All the source code for CyanogenMod is available
in the CyanogenMod Github repo. And if you would like to contribute to
CyanogenMod, please visit out Gerrit Code Review. You can also view the
Changelog for a full list of changes & features
Reboot into recovery (latest official TWRP
recommended).
Wipe Data, System and Cache if it's a fresh
install.
Wipe Cache and Dalvik Cache if you're
updating from a previous version of CM 11.0.
Flash ROM and Gapps.
Reboot.
Download
links:
Changelog: