Not only did developers simply port ROMs, there were also those who cooked their own ROMs and meticulously themed every app and every part of the UI as they pleased. Sure enough there was demand and developers from XDA ported ROMs from other devices. (Back then, Xiaomi didn't sell phones yet), and many more. MIUI's level of customization and theming which was on a whole 'nother level. Samsung's Touchwiz was infamous for being the bloated mess it was, but was subjectively the most user friendly. Sony's timescape UI was very sleek and futuristic. Each skin had their distinct design languages that carried the vision the manufacturers had for their lineup. provided their own skin which pretty much set them apart from each other. It was also at this time when manufacturers such as Sony, HTC, Samsung etc. Furthermore, installing a custom ROM was pretty much mandatory for low-end devices (such as my shitty 800Mhz 290MB ram pos) to gain any semblance of speed and stability. I don't even recall if rotation animation existed back then, I think that it only came with Cyanogenmod. I mean, stock AOSP didn't even have swipe to dismiss notifications, or music playback controls on the notification shade, or the option to reboot when the power button is held. It was arguably the golden age of custom ROMs, since AOSP gingerbread had shit functionality, UI and UX. I booted up my Samsung from Froyo/GB era, and I must say, I kinda miss the "spirit" and novelty the custom ROM scene brought back then.
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