The
general advice that you'll find on the web about getting an OTA update
faster is to go into your app settings and clear the Google Service
Framework data. According to Morrill, what this effectively does is
change the primary ID that Google servers use to identify your device,
which is basically like doing a factory reset without losing your data.
This breaks the connection to Google Cloud Messenger, and will have a
number of negative side-effects like messing with push notifications,
and generally making apps that use GCM act screwy until it figures out
what your new ID is (which sometimes won't happen unless you wipe the
data for that app.)
Unfortunately, what this doesn't do is help you to get your OTA faster. Actually, Morrill suggests that if you're impatient, the best option is to do an adb sideload of
the update package (assuming this is available for your device and you
know what you're doing of course). Additionally, Morrill says that going
to the Software Updates settings menu and mashing the "Check for
updates" button also doesn't help you at all.
Morrill
also goes on to explain how and why Google does OTA rollouts of
software. Essentially, the first 24-48 hours after the announcement of
an update, only about 1% of devices will actually receive the update
itself. If the error reports come back clean, the rollout will continue
going at 25% of the user-base at a time until it gets to everyone, which
Morrill says typically takes one to two weeks.
Good
things to keep in mind. All in all, the end result is just be patient,
because there isn't much that you can do to get your update any faster.
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