Title
Google Play Services 64-bit ARM nodpi Android 90 — Repack Verified
- If the APK is repacked and re-signed, compare the certificate fingerprint:
Raj slumped back in his chair. "Son of a..." It was a bad repack. Someone had likely injected a bitcoin miner or adware into the services framework. Using this would brick the kiosks or, worse, compromise the payment data.
. Modern Android smartphones typically use 64-bit ARM processors, which offer better performance and security than older 32-bit (arm-v7a) versions. This refers to the screen density
Scenario C: MicroG or de-Googled ROMs
Some users want minimal Google services. They use MicroG as an open-source reimplementation. However, certain apps require real Google Play Services. A verified repack allows a contained, non-automatic installation that can be toggled on/off, giving granular control.
Method 1: Standard Sideload (No Root)
- Uninstall updates for the current Google Play Services (Settings > Apps > three dots > Uninstall updates).
- Disable Play Protect temporarily (Open Play Store > Menu > Play Protect > Settings gear > Turn off “Scan apps with Play Protect”).
- Install the
nodpi repackAPK like any other APK. - Reboot immediately after installation.
- Re-enable Play Protect and open a Google app (Gmail, Maps) to verify functionality.
This was the moment of truth. Raj’s terminal screen scrolled green text, checking the SHA-1 hash against the only database that mattered—the Internet Archive’s snapshot of Google’s official signatures from 2019.