Hello, I did a search and wasn't able to find anything definite, so I'm curious: Is there a way to unlock NAND access and keep the current PRI? I know that Toast's method causes the 1.34 PRI so I'm wondering if there is any other way to go about it. Thanks!
Root with unrevoked 3. Unlock NAND with unrevoked forever. This does not require the leaked ENG bootloader (Toast's method) to be flashed as a signed update, so you do not need to flash the associated rcdata image and lose PRI 1.40
Unrevoked forever is a permanent patch which leaves NAND unlocked even if you apply an OTA which would remove the ENG bootloader.
rpearl said:
Root with unrevoked 3. Unlock NAND with unrevoked forever. This does not require the leaked ENG bootloader (Toast's method) to be flashed as a signed update, so you do not need to flash the associated rcdata image and lose PRI 1.40
Unrevoked forever is a permanent patch which leaves NAND unlocked even if you apply an OTA which would remove the ENG bootloader.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Awesome! Thanks a lot man!
Unrevoked forever IS NOT ROOT. What is so hard for people to understand about that?
To get the 1.4 pri you'll need too root using toast or similar (NOT unrevoked) and then load a FroYo ron that has a dialer capable of using pound codes. This has been talked about EXTENSIVELY there are tons of threads about this on here.
Sent from my PC36100 using XDA App
unrevoked forever is a tool to set your Android phone's security level to S-OFF. The security level is a flag stored on the radio; when the flag is S-OFF, the bootloader (HBOOT) will no longer check the signatures of firmware images before flashing them. This allows custom firmware images to be uploaded, including unsigned boot, recovery, splash1, and hboot images (as well as official images that have been modified). When the system is S-OFF, the NAND flash memory protection is also reduced; this allows all partitions (including /system) to be written to while the operating system is booted.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
From their website.
phobos512 said:
Unrevoked forever IS NOT ROOT. What is so hard for people to understand about that?
To get the 1.4 pri you'll need too root using toast or similar (NOT unrevoked) and then load a FroYo ron that has a dialer capable of using pound codes. This has been talked about EXTENSIVELY there are tons of threads about this on here.
Sent from my PC36100 using XDA App
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
This is entirely the opposite of true.
Unrevoked 3 flashes a custom recovery and also allows root access from the system. This is what, prior to the strange and weird and slightly incorrect terminology introduced in these forums, is called "root access".
Since you now have a custom recovery (I fail to see any other way to get one without using the ENG bootloader and thus losing the 1.40 PRI that you intended to keep), you can apply the unrevoked forever update to unlock NAND. This is what reasonable people call "unlocked NAND" because you can write to the NAND chip while the system is booted. It is what is known here as "fully rooted" because... er... I have no idea why it is called that since it is unrelated to root access.
rpearl said:
This is entirely the opposite of true.
Unrevoked 3 flashes a custom recovery and also allows root access from the system. This is what, prior to the strange and weird and slightly incorrect terminology introduced in these forums, is called "root access".
Since you now have a custom recovery (I fail to see any other way to get one without using the ENG bootloader and thus losing the 1.40 PRI that you intended to keep), you can apply the unrevoked forever update to unlock NAND. This is what reasonable people call "unlocked NAND" because you can write to the NAND chip while the system is booted. It is what is known here as "fully rooted" because... er... I have no idea why it is called that since it is unrelated to root access.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Unlocked NAND != Able to use "su" command in shell to have root permissions
OP: Use Toast's method, flash a 2.2 Stock rooted ROM, and follow these instructions:
http://geekfor.me/faq/how-to-get-back-to-pri-1-40-on-evo/
drmacinyasha said:
Unlocked NAND != Able to use "su" command in shell to have root permissions
OP: Use Toast's method, flash a 2.2 Stock rooted ROM, and follow these instructions:
http://geekfor.me/faq/how-to-get-back-to-pri-1-40-on-evo/
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Once again, unrevoked forever unlocks the NAND chip WITHOUT losing 1.40 PRI.
If you have not rooted yet, there is no reason to used the leaked engineering bootloader
Please, read the text of my post before correcting me.
rpearl is correct. I did what he said (unrevoked3 to get the custom recovery, then flashed unrevoked forever) and I now have full write access to /system while the phone is running (all root apps work fine) and I still have my 1.40 PRI.
Lol I find it pretty funny that Phobos tried to argue about that w/ Ryan haha
Related
So what exactly is s-off/ s-on, or better yet is this something we can find on the phone, more so what is the exact and best description it's called.
tomh1979 said:
So what exactly is s-off/ s-on, or better yet is this something we can find on the phone, more so what is the exact and best description it's called.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
S-On/S-Off is the bootloader security. It means either security is on (S-On) or security is off (S-Off). This switches between verifying images before they are flashed. When security is disabled, you can flash anything you want through the bootloader. If security is enabled, you will have to have the proper signatures. This means that if you have S-Off, you can flash any OTA or other update and not worry about losing root, as you can easily flash the root files (superuser permissions) after the update and have it working again. That's the jist of it anyway.
superlinkx said:
S-On/S-Off is the bootloader security. It means either security is on (S-On) or security is off (S-Off). This switches between verifying images before they are flashed. When security is disabled, you can flash anything you want through the bootloader. If security is enabled, you will have to have the proper signatures. This means that if you have S-Off, you can flash any OTA or other update and not worry about losing root, as you can easily flash the root files (superuser permissions) after the update and have it working again. That's the jist of it anyway.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
if i used simple root, can i do Unrevoked forever over this?
So what exactly is s-off/ s-on, or better yet is this something we can find on the phone, more so what is the exact and best description it's called.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
S-On/S-Off is the bootloader security. It means either security is on (S-On) or security is off (S-Off). This switches between verifying images before they are flashed. When security is disabled, you can flash anything you want through the bootloader. If security is enabled, you will have to have the proper signatures. This means that if you have S-Off, you can flash any OTA or other update and not worry about losing root, as you can easily flash the root files (superuser permissions) after the update and have it working again. That's the jist of it anyway.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks for the reply that was helpful for me, and what I was looking to hear.
Sent from my PC36100 using XDA App
S-On/S-Off is the bootloader security. It means either security is on (S-On) or security is off (S-Off). This switches between verifying images before they are flashed. When security is disabled, you can flash anything you want through the bootloader. If security is enabled, you will have to have the proper signatures. This means that if you have S-Off, you can flash any OTA or other update and not worry about losing root, as you can easily flash the root files (superuser permissions) after the update and have it working again. That's the jist of it anyway.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
if i used simple root, can i do Unrevoked forever over this?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
If your already running froyo then you can't run simple root, however if you have eclair 2.1, I'd suggest it, or even suggest unrevoked3.
Sent from my PC36100 using XDA App
unrevoked forever and ROOT are two different things.
you must already have root (any root capable of flashing, does not matter which), in order to use unrevoked forever.
once you have unrevoked forever, then you can easily reroot or flash any rom if you lose root.
TeknoJnky said:
unrevoked forever and ROOT are two different things.
you must already have root (any root capable of flashing, does not matter which), in order to use unrevoked forever.
once you have unrevoked forever, then you can easily reroot or flash any rom if you lose root.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
i know this!
unless that wasn't directed at me.
Rocklee99 said:
if i used simple root, can i do Unrevoked forever over this?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You should be able to just fine. Unrevoked Forever does something entirely different from Simple Root - it just requires that you have root and a custom recovery before you can use it.
OK guys (and gals) I'm a noob and totally confused myself trying to read 1000s of pages here in the forum. I'm currently running OTA 3.26.651.6 and understand there's a 3.29.****.5 OTA now available. I tried TheBiles idiot proof guide but the link in step 30 is broke. Most of the guides out there seem to be out of date. So I'm looking for some advice from the PROS on which to use and how to use. Remember im a noob so keep it simple. Also is there a glossory about all this like:
What is;(and what do they benefit)
ClokWorkMod
NAND
Rom Manager
ect.
smokinbanger said:
OK guys (and gals) I'm a noob and totally confused myself trying to read 1000s of pages here in the forum. I'm currently running OTA 3.26.651.6 and understand there's a 3.29.****.5 OTA now available. I tried TheBiles idiot proof guide but the link in step 30 is broke. Most of the guides out there seem to be out of date. So I'm looking for some advice from the PROS on which to use and how to use. Remember im a noob so keep it simple. Also is there a glossory about all this like:
What is;(and what do they benefit)
ClokWorkMod
NAND
Rom Manager
ect.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
unrevoked 3.21
You run it on your computer, plug in your phone, and follow the directions. You get full root and ClockworkMod recovery installed on your phone, as well as unrevoked forever. It's super easy.
Pros:
It's super easy
It gives you full root
It gives you root forever (unrevoked forever)
Takes care of everything (root, custom recovery, "S-OFF" AKA unrevoked forever)
Thoroughly tested
Cross-platform support
You can actually set any custom recovery image you want through the menu
Cons:
You need a computer
sturmen - thanks for the quick reply. Also should i update to OTA 3.29*** before or after (or never) i use this method?
Don't update through Sprint (ever). That's not how we roll around here. You're gonna want to root your phone as it is, then flash a custom ROM. You can tell which ones are based on the latest OTA on that wiki page; flashing one essentially "updates" you to that version. Personally, I recommend Fresh Evo 3.3.0.1 if you like Sense, or CyanogenMod v6.0.0 if you don't.
The biles guide was made a while ago, so it makes sense it is out of date. The best next one, that works, would be regaws method. There is even a mac guide using his method if you have a mac.
Will the current unrevoked3 work with build number 3.29.651.5?
OK I ran the unrEVOked3 and it said "done". Do i still need to run unrEVOked forever?
JtotheEremy said:
Will the current unrevoked3 work with build number 3.29.651.5?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yes, the newest version of unrevoked3 worked for me with 3.29.651.5.
Sent from my EVO running Myn's Warm TwoPointTwo and King's #10 CFS.
Thanks Bud
smokinbanger said:
OK I ran the unrEVOked3 and it said "done". Do i still need to run unrEVOked forever?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I've been wondering this as well. I ran the newest unrevoked3 and it gave me full NAND unlock and S-off but I'm not sure if it is permanent and if I should run forever as well.... would appreciate some input on this!
Sent from my EVO running Myn's Warm TwoPointTwo and King's #10 CFS.
Drakhar said:
I've been wondering this as well. I ran the newest unrevoked3 and it gave me full NAND unlock and S-off but I'm not sure if it is permanent and if I should run forever as well.... would appreciate some input on this!
Sent from my EVO running Myn's Warm TwoPointTwo and King's #10 CFS.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Straight from Unrevoked 3.21 RootWiki: here
Does this permanently unlock the NAND flash on my phone?
Yes. The default configuration of this tool disables the phone's security, which also disables the NAND locks placed on the storage by the bootloader. If you choose not to disable security, the /system partition will be read-only after the tool completes.
Using Old Backup's with this?
Here is my question on this. I just recieved my new phone today and I am planning on using this method to root my phone. Before I gave up my old phone I did a Nand backup which has all of my programs my "fresh rom" and ect. on it. Now on the old phone I used the Toast method and nand unlock to root my phone. Will I be able to just do a normal nand restore after I use the unrevoked3 to unlock my new phone? Or do I have to start all over? I checked on the sd card in the Nandroid backup is there. Thank you in advance
ICEReaction said:
Straight from Unrevoked 3.21 RootWiki: here
Does this permanently unlock the NAND flash on my phone?
Yes. The default configuration of this tool disables the phone's security, which also disables the NAND locks placed on the storage by the bootloader. If you choose not to disable security, the /system partition will be read-only after the tool completes.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks.
I read that the other day, but I kept reading posts stating to run unrevoked forever after unrevoked3 to make it permanent. Was a little confused... I guess unrevoked 3.21 includes unrevoked forever, lots of contradicting posts though.
one thing about that wiki that confuses me is when it talks about .ZIP ROMS, once i use unrevoked can I use Fresh's .ZIP?
Drakhar said:
Thanks.
I read that the other day, but I kept reading posts stating to run unrevoked forever after unrevoked3 to make it permanent. Was a little confused... I guess unrevoked 3.21 includes unrevoked forever, lots of contradicting posts though.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Unrevoked 3 was pre-Unrevoked 3.21. That did not do Nand unlock and S-Off and required you to flash Unrevoked Forever to get Nand unlock and S-Off.
JtotheEremy said:
one thing about that wiki that confuses me is when it talks about .ZIP ROMS, once i use unrevoked can I use Fresh's .ZIP?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
.zip ROMs are flashed via recovery. unrevoked should give you CWM recovery, and therefore you should be able to flash ROMs (including Fresh). Make sure you back up, and also wipe data, cache, and dalvik-cache before flashing. If you need help with that, here's a step-by-step:
Have full root with NAND unlock, by unrevoked 3.21 (recommended) or otherwise
Download the ROM you want in .zip format (Go for Fresh!)
Put the .zip into the root of your microSD card
Install Quick Boot from the Market
Use Quick Boot to enter recovery
Go to nandroid, then make a backup
Go to wipe, and wipe data, wipe cache, and wipe dalvik-cache
Select "Flash zip from SD card"
Select the one you downloaded
Let it run
Reboot your phone
Congratulations! You are now part of the cool kids club!
Alternately, purchase ROM Manager Premium which allows you to download, backup, wipe and flash all in one step from within Android and without interacting with recovery. $4.99 and totally worth it.
sturmen said:
Don't update through Sprint (ever). That's not how we roll around here. You're gonna want to root your phone as it is, then flash a custom ROM. You can tell which ones are based on the latest OTA on that wiki page; flashing one essentially "updates" you to that version. Personally, I recommend Fresh Evo 3.3.0.1 if you like Sense, or CyanogenMod v6.0.0 if you don't.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
OK, but what about those of us that don't want a custom ROM? Is there any reliable way of getting from root 3.26 to root 3.29 without a data wipe?
As far as I can tell my best reliable option is:
1) Use Titanium Backup to backup all my apps/settings
2) Use unrevoked3 and the stock 3.29 ROM here to upgrade to 3.29 and regain root
3) Reinstall Titanium and restore my apps/settings
Is this correct, or is there an easier way?
Drakhar said:
I've been wondering this as well. I ran the newest unrevoked3 and it gave me full NAND unlock and S-off but I'm not sure if it is permanent and if I should run forever as well.... would appreciate some input on this!
Sent from my EVO running Myn's Warm TwoPointTwo and King's #10 CFS.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Sent from my PC36100 using XDA App
S-off is unrevoked forever. So if it shows S-off in the boot loader then your good, u don't need to do anything else.
Shane112358 said:
OK, but what about those of us that don't want a custom ROM? Is there any reliable way of getting from root 3.26 to root 3.29 without a data wipe?
As far as I can tell my best reliable option is:
1) Use Titanium Backup to backup all my apps/settings
2) Use unrevoked3 and the stock 3.29 ROM here to upgrade to 3.29 and regain root
3) Reinstall Titanium and restore my apps/settings
Is this correct, or is there an easier way?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
On another Evo which I've helped root, I just downloaded the new 3.29 rooted stock ROM, wiped cache/davlik cache, flash new ROM, reboot, then go back and flash the new radio/PRI stuff and it works without having to wipe phone data.
rmig825 said:
Here is my question on this. I just recieved my new phone today and I am planning on using this method to root my phone. Before I gave up my old phone I did a Nand backup which has all of my programs my "fresh rom" and ect. on it. Now on the old phone I used the Toast method and nand unlock to root my phone. Will I be able to just do a normal nand restore after I use the unrevoked3 to unlock my new phone? Or do I have to start all over? I checked on the sd card in the Nandroid backup is there. Thank you in advance
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It is my understanding that as long as you have the same Recovery flashed (Clockwork or Amon RA) as you did on your old phone you should be able to copy the backups to your SD card (maintaining the same directory structure as they were before) and restore them without issue.
Rooted Evo 2.2 via UnrEVOked 3.21 stock everything. I can't get this to install. I emailed the dev and he told me that I need to use UnrEVOked Forever because 3.21 doesn't have NAND unlocked. According to the UnrEVOked website that is not true. 3.21 does have Nand unlocked.
Do any of you guys have any idea on how I can get this stupid app installed?
Titanium installed a version of it but I think that only Titanium can access it.
SantinoInc said:
Rooted Evo 2.2 via UnrEVOked 3.21 stock everything. I can't get this to install. I emailed the dev and he told me that I need to use UnrEVOked Forever because 3.21 doesn't have NAND unlocked. According to the UnrEVOked website that is not true. 3.21 does have Nand unlocked.
Do any of you guys have any idea on how I can get this stupid app installed?
Titanium installed a version of it but I think that only Titanium can access it.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
If Titanium installed busybox try going to a sheel then type in busybox. If you get a display with a command listing then type in busybox --install /system that should install busybox so you can use the full command set.
kf2mq said:
If Titanium installed busybox try going to a sheel then type in busybox. If you get a display with a command listing then type in busybox --install /system that should install busybox so you can use the full command set.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
What is a sheel? Is this some kind of adb thing? Can you explain it to me step by step like I have down syndrome please.
i have an older version of busybox (1.16.2) and while trying to install 1.17.1 the installer is telling me that installation failed because 1) the device is not nand unlocked or 2) app was unable to remount.
my phone has been nand-unlocked for months. i've even installed this and other busybox versions prior to trying now on this rom. can flashing a new rom (MetroDroid) change my nand-unlock status? (i dont think so)...
Max I got the same exact message from BusyBox. When I emailed the dev he told me that 3.21 does not have Nand unlocked, which does not appear to be true. I have stock everything...IDK wtf is going on with this app. It really blows!
I have titanium backup installed with the busybox version from tib. Downloaded the bbox installer from the market and installed ver. 1.17 just fine.
Rooted with unrevoked forever for s-off and regaw's root method and currently running rooted 3.29.
Thought i would get an error like you guys but install was without a hitch.
You can find out if you are NAND unlocked by turning your phone off and then turning it back on while holding the volume down button. If you see S=OFF then you are unlocked. Also make sure that nothing is using busy box or root and try killing any unnecessary apps with a task killer. You can't change it if something is using it.
Haus: if S is on what Rico have to do? can I change it from that boot screen? Do I have re root?
SantinoInc said:
Haus: if S is on what Rico have to do? can I change it from that boot screen? Do I have re root?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You can use unrevoked forever or install the engineering bootloader, if you plan on flashing a lot of ROMs the eng bootloader is probably your best bet. That will give you the fastboot tools and allow you to use Cyanogenmod
****. You were right man. S=On. I thought Unrevoked 3.21 unlocked nand. Did I screw up somewhere? What is this engineer bootloader u mention. I never heard of it. How do I get it? Is it hard to use?
You'll need to flash a custom Recovery and use that to flash either the eng bootloader or unrevoked forever. I believe ROM manager can install the recovery for you or the Amon RA thread in my sig has the instructions to do it manually. A quick search should turn up the eng bootloader, sorry I don't have the link handy though
Edit: Found it Evo eng hBoot .76 - Recovery Flashable
Could someone explain the difference? I rooted using unrevoked 3
Unrevoked Forever does not root. It is used to set your phone's security setting from S-ON to S-OFF (NAND unlock). This allows you to flash stuff like custom ROMs.
http://unrevoked.com/rootwiki/doku.php/public/forever
Unrevoked3 is a exe package that you run on your computer that will root your phone. It will also flash unrevoked forever for NAND unlock.
http://unrevoked.com/rootwiki/doku.php/public/unrevoked3
THANK YOU!
Im slowly but shortly catching up to everythingon here. So will unrevoked forever wipe all my info off my phone?
No it will not.
So using unrevoked forever won't erase any data? Just turns the s-on to a s-off so you can flash roms,kernels,ect.? Now to back up before doing so is there anyway to back up your txt convos?
Sent from my PC36100 using XDA App
Yes, that is what unrevoked forever does...does a NAND unlock so that you can flash stuff like custom ROMs.
Text convos...meaning the text messages right? There's a few, but the one I use to back them up is called 'SMS Backup & Restore' by Ritesh Sahu. You can find it in the market.
ICEReaction said:
Unrevoked Forever does not root. It is used to set your phone's security setting from S-ON to S-OFF (NAND unlock). This allows you to flash stuff like custom ROMs.
http://unrevoked.com/rootwiki/doku.php/public/forever
Unrevoked3 is a exe package that you run on your computer that will root your phone. It will also flash unrevoked forever for NAND unlock.
http://unrevoked.com/rootwiki/doku.php/public/unrevoked3
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
What you failed to mention, is the actual differences, Unrevoked forever requires your phone to be rooted before you can use it.
What the actual difference between unrevoked3 and unrevoked forever is.
unrevoked forever makes a change that is stored in the radio's NV memory; no ENG bootloader is necessary to continue to flash firmware images. Even if an “unrootable” OTA update is accepted, a device on which unrevoked forever has been run will still be able to reflash a custom recovery image.
What this means is that even if you unroot your phone with a stock non-rooted RUU, you will still be able to reflash a custom rooted rom to your phone.
When they were developed, unrevoked3 was just a way to get a custom recovery onto your phone, you needed to use unrevoked forever to actually root your phone.
This has been changed, unrevoked3 now also provides root.
ICEReaction said:
Yes, that is what unrevoked forever does...does a NAND unlock so that you can flash stuff like custom ROMs.
Text convos...meaning the text messages right? There's a few, but the one I use to back them up is called 'SMS Backup & Restore' by Ritesh Sahu. You can find it in the market.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks going to go look for that now
Sent from my PC36100 using XDA App
I used unrevoked 3. I was able to download the wifi tetherin app...i am able to use wifi for free and all the rooted apps are workin on my phone. But when i check it still says s-on? Dose unrevoked 3 just give you the ability to download rooted apps but not flash custom roms?
Sent from my PC36100
Unrevoked3 previously, before 3.21, only rooted your phone and flashed a custom recovery. Just download unrevoked forever, flash it, and it will give you S-OFF.
Now that i have S-off my computer seems slower when tethering. Is that normal
Sent from my PC36100
I'm currently S-ON with hboot 2.10.0001.
When I try to use Revolutionary to get s-off it tells me that I don't have the right Hboot version.
So I checked the wiki for the tool and it says I need 2.16.0001 or 2.15.0001.
I tried flashing 2.16.0001 in recovery and it appears to work but at the top of my bootloader it still says 2.10.0001?
I'm not sure what the issue is.
P.S. ive been running miui for a while and do have some root just not unlocked nand i guess.
topdnbass said:
I'm currently S-ON with hboot 2.10.0001.
When I try to use Revolutionary to get s-off it tells me that I don't have the right Hboot version.
So I checked the wiki for the tool and it says I need 2.16.0001 or 2.15.0001.
I tried flashing 2.16.0001 in recovery and it appears to work but at the top of my bootloader it still says 2.10.0001?
I'm not sure what the issue is.
P.S. ive been running miui for a while and do have some root just not unlocked nand i guess.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
have you tried unrevoked also you cant flash roms without being nand unlocked (s-off)
UPDATE: Never mind. Unrevoked forever got me S-OFF
I can certainly flash roms and access recovery. No problems there.
I definitely have root (titanium backup works and I can issue superuser commands in terminal)
Is it possible that the bootloader is wrong?
BTW I cant flash different recoveries, it goes through but when I check I still have the same recovery (Amon RA).
I used a very old method of rooting (prior to GB). Everything has been cool but I did revert to stock everything briefly about 7 months ago.
When I took my phone in cause of a burnt out battery.
Can I use unrevoked even though I'm already rooted?
Don't want to mess anything up since everything is working except small things like adaway (requires s-off and won't work unless i use ADB from recovery).
topdnbass said:
I can certainly flash roms and access recovery. No problems there.
I definitely have root (titanium backup works and I can issue superuser commands in terminal)
Is it possible that the bootloader is wrong?
BTW I cant flash different recoveries, it goes through but when I check I still have the same recovery (Amon RA).
I used a very old method of rooting (prior to GB). Everything has been cool but I did revert to stock everything briefly about 7 months ago.
When I took my phone in cause of a burnt out battery.
Can I use unrevoked even though I'm already rooted?
Don't want to mess anything up since everything is working except small things like adaway (requires s-off and won't work unless i use ADB from recovery).
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I myself can't help with the unrevoked ?s because I never rooted a phone with unrevoked
Sent from my PC36100 using XDA App
Lmao revolutionary on 2.2
Sent from my PC36100 using XDA Premium App
Why not update to 2.3.3 OTA and then use unrevoked takes 3 minutes to root
Sent from my PC36100 using XDA Premium App