Everything about Google Street View and more!

If you’ve tried to install a custom ROM or tweak a rooted device in the last 24 hours, you might have hit a wall. A silent, frustrating, HTTP 404 wall.

Are you getting a 404 too? Let us know in the comments if you have a local mirror of the SDK 23 zip.

In 2014, Xposed was magic. It proved you didn't need to compile AOSP from source to change the clock color. It democratized hacking. That little green Android logo with the "X" overlay meant you truly owned your device.

As of this week, the domain is . The repo is unreachable. And while the internet collectively shrugged, a specific breed of tinkerer felt a chill run down their spine. What just broke? For the uninitiated: Xposed Framework (by the legendary rovo89) allowed modules to hook into any method of any running app or the system UI. Want to fake your GPS in Snapchat? Xposed. Want to double-tap to sleep on a stock Samsung ROM? Xposed. Want to hide your root from banking apps before Magisk got good? You guessed it.

Xposed hasn't worked properly on stock Android versions above 8.0/9.0 without major hacks (EdXposed/LSPosed). The dl-xda domain was a relic of the KitKat through Oreo era. Letting it die is a symbolic gesture: We are not supporting Android 6 anymore.