I'm moving onto an LG V20 soon and reading up on acquiring root and other assorted things.
I stumbled across this interesting thread. It looks like LG has a root check on the V20 (first noticed on the T-Mobile version) that was slowing down performance and sucking battery for rooted users.
It made me wonder if the G3 has something similar.
Unfortunately, i lack a computer to actually check.
Can anyone read thru the initial post in my link and check their rooted G3 for similar?
https://forum.xda-developers.com/v20/how-to/t-mobile-rooted-lgv20-rctd-root-t3661490
Braaainz said:
I'm moving onto an LG V20 soon and reading up on acquiring root and other assorted things.
I stumbled across this interesting thread. It looks like LG has a root check on the V20 (first noticed on the T-Mobile version) that was slowing down performance and sucking battery for rooted users.
It made me wonder if the G3 has something similar.
Unfortunately, i lack a computer to actually check.
Can anyone read thru the initial post in my link and check their rooted G3 for similar?
https://forum.xda-developers.com/v20/how-to/t-mobile-rooted-lgv20-rctd-root-t3661490
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
yes the g3 had this. Content of the rctd file is identical. Didn't cause any performance issues that I'm aware of though
Any kernels where it was ripped out?
Braaainz said:
Any kernels where it was ripped out?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
None that I'm aware of. Aside from aosp roms
Yeah, that's what i thought. When I've tried AOSP ROMs, I lost HDMI out thru the slimport and lost full functioning of Bluetooth mouse; features that are must have for me.
I'm hoping some Dev might strip it out of a stock kernel (i don't have a computer).
Braaainz said:
Any kernels where it was ripped out?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Braaainz said:
Yeah, that's what i thought. When I've tried AOSP ROMs, I lost HDMI out thru the slimport and lost full functioning of Bluetooth mouse; features that are must have for me.
I'm hoping some Dev might strip it out of a stock kernel (i don't have a computer).
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Out of curiosity, I may look into that. I believe breaking it down and removing stuff is easier than building from scratch. Also, what was the last aosp ROM you tried. I have no way of testing those features but im on the latest linage and its pretty stable. They may have fixed it if you haven't tried in awhile. Also, why do you want it removed? I didn't think it really did anything and that's why devs haven't bothered to remove it.
EDIT: Broke down the 30g kernel and removed the line in init.lge.rc that started the rctd (root checker) service. Works as intended
billard412 said:
EDIT: Broke down the 30g kernel and removed the line in init.lge.rc that started the rctd (root checker) service. Should work but backup your boot image with twrp before you flash. I'm on linage and can't test whether or not it boots.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks. Before i saw your post though, i found a free xda app where someone has it set to strip the root check from LG Devices.
On my stock rooted marshmallow 30D, G3 851, it performed without a hitch.
Phone is more responsive, far more responsive... which frankly surprised me with a bit. Battery life has also dramatically improved. However, it's only been about an hour, so I'm wanting to wait a bit and see if it holds.
Here's a link to the app.
https://labs.xda-developers.com/store/app/com.zacharee1.rctdremoverforlg
UPDATE
Okay! So last night i was streaming video thru Kodi and using my slimport to send to my TV. In the past, with a charger connected to my phone, my battery would discharge instead of charge (even tho slimport is supposed to use minimal battery).
After using the app, my phone charged doing those things like it was supposed to. Phone felt cooler(but that could be my imagination).
Phone is definitely faster. Keyboard is much more responsive, scrolling is improved also.
I should note that I've always had issues with heavy battery loss (i rooted immediately after getting the phone). I use a ZeroLemon battery, so it never was a huge issue, but still.
Braaainz said:
Thanks. Before i saw your post though, i found a free xda app where someone has it set to strip the root check from LG Devices.
On my stock rooted marshmallow, G3 851, it performed without a hitch.
Phone is more responsive, far more responsive... which frankly surprised me with a bit. Battery life has also dramatically improved. However, it's only been about an hour, so I'm wanting to wait a bit and see if it holds.
Here's a link to the app.
https://labs.xda-developers.com/store/app/com.zacharee1.rctdremoverforlg
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
That's cool. Def gonna bookmark that link for when I'm back on stock. Didn't think the root checker had that kind of effect. If they are really using the root checker to deny warranty, this will save a lot of people
Well, tried flashing CleanRom. Lost TWRP and root. PurpleDrake no longer works.
Argh. Any hints on rooting 30D?
Braaainz said:
Well, tried flashing CleanRom. Lost TWRP and root. PurpleDrake no longer works.
Argh. Any hints on rooting 30D?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
kingroot is the only thing that roots 30d.
Related
I've had my E4GT for about 2 or 3 weeks now, I received the OTA update to FI27 last week, and overall I'm pretty happy with it (I was happy before the update though, but to be honest because I only had the phone a few days I haven't noticed a difference ).
I rooted my last phone, which was a Virgin Mobile LG Optimus V, but that was because Virgin loaded it with a bunch of bloatware and there was a very good ROM that removed all of it, improved battery life, etc etc.
But with this phone, I don't find I have any issues with battery life, I have plenty of space on my phone with way more apps installed than I had on the Optimus, it runs smoothly, and the only complaint I have is that my LED notification light isn't working correctly, which I know can be fixed with an app.
So, to all the people that have rooted and know what else this phone can do, is there a good reason other than "you can install lots of different custom roms" that I should root my phone? What else will I be able to do with it? What benefits will I see? Installing different ROMs doesn't mean much to me. Even though I did that on my old phone, there was a real reason to do it: I could install more than 4 apps on it (and I kept that same ROM on it the entire time). I don't have that issue with this phone, so why should I?
Thanks
I personally consider customization, removing bloatware, and tweaking to your own liking genuine and legitimate reasons. You also have Ad blocking & WiFi tether though.
You shouldn't if you are happy with it.
I rooted for those reasons..
-Tired of stock look. Install new roms.
-Use apps needing root like titaniun backup.
-Get rid of stock apps.
I didnt root for almost 2 months. I was eager to try ics leaks before ota so I eventually rooted.
Sent from my SPH-D710 using xda app-developers app
someguyatx said:
I personally consider customization, removing bloatware, and tweaking to your own liking genuine and legitimate reasons. You also have Ad blocking & WiFi tether though.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Well this is what I don't really understand. What sort of customization and tweaking can be done to the phone? What are the effects of it?
BluesRulez said:
You shouldn't if you are happy with it.
I rooted for those reasons..
-Tired of stock look. Install new roms.
-Use apps needing root like titaniun backup.
-Get rid of stock apps.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Don't you really only need Titanium Backup if you are gonna be rooting though? The bloatware I can deal with as the phone hasn't (yet) told me that I don't have enough space to stop me from installing new apps.
mewikime said:
I've had my E4GT for about 2 or 3 weeks now, I received the OTA update to FI27 last week, and overall I'm pretty happy with it (I was happy before the update though, but to be honest because I only had the phone a few days I haven't noticed a difference ).
I rooted my last phone, which was a Virgin Mobile LG Optimus V, but that was because Virgin loaded it with a bunch of bloatware and there was a very good ROM that removed all of it, improved battery life, etc etc.
But with this phone, I don't find I have any issues with battery life, I have plenty of space on my phone with way more apps installed than I had on the Optimus, it runs smoothly, and the only complaint I have is that my LED notification light isn't working correctly, which I know can be fixed with an app.
So, to all the people that have rooted and know what else this phone can do, is there a good reason other than "you can install lots of different custom roms" that I should root my phone? What else will I be able to do with it? What benefits will I see? Installing different ROMs doesn't mean much to me. Even though I did that on my old phone, there was a real reason to do it: I could install more than 4 apps on it (and I kept that same ROM on it the entire time). I don't have that issue with this phone, so why should I?
Thanks
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
There is no reason for you to root. You are happy that's good.
XDA's 4,697,117+ Members are just nuts. We're unhappy with our stuff and insist on making it less useful to us.
Nothing to see here....
Seriously if you need to ask and don't want to investigate for yourself then rooting and certainly these forums are not for you.
I root because
- Hate Touchwiz look
- Customization
- Themes
- Battery Saving options
- AOSP (AOKP)
- JELLYBEAN
- Better reception and data
You may be happy with bloat. I do not want battery resources going to apps I will never open. I like battery life. I like optimization. I like customization. If you don't see a need then don't do it. But if your phone ever drowns don't complain that you lost all your game data or texts and stuff. With titanium backup I can even set a schedule to back up those items for me at whatever time to my sd card. So if my phone drowns I pop my as card into my new phone and its all there. Also make nandroids when I receive my replacement its like my phone never died. Its all exactly how I had it.
sent from my BAD A$$ Epic touch
I run stock 90% of the time.
My main reason to root at least after FF18
-Tethering
-Tethering nothing more
I said after FF18 because on Gingerbread there's no need to root for tethering thanks to FoxFi but since ICS, Sprint block it and they are working on a new version for ICS when they found a way again I'm back to Stock.
Do what you want!
That is what is most important.
If there was any legitimate reason, it would be because you want to.
Otherwise you are just following what someone else says. Of course, there are very good reasons for both. The one thing I am told a lot by people on the other end of the phone conversation consistently, is that there seems to be feedback and they hear themselves a lot(- since I started Modding). What do I care, I hear everyone just fine. But I do care. I use my phone for work a lot. NOW, someone else is going to post after this that you can play with modems and what not to clear this up... which is true. And also you can reflash and do this & do that. What if the person using the phone just wants simplicity.... stay stock! Do not pass go. It takes tweeking, fine adjustments, research and ROM updates(The almighty Search box on XDA is awesome) and time to figure some of this stuff out. And ALSO it doesn't hurt to have an interest in android, Apps, ROMs and so on and so on.
Sometimes either the manufacturer or the carrier sends out updates that just don't work well. I like having the ability to keep it working properly, not working the way Sprint thinks is best for me.
You have only had your phone for a month. I have had mine for about a year, and others here have had it longer. If you are trying to convince us not to root, you should spend your time on the Sprint message boards instead of here.
Your happy that's what matters. Your choice
Sent from my HTCEVOV4G using Xparent SkyBlue Tapatalk 2
It comes down to personal choice. Android is customizable right out of the box. It is even more so once you root and get under the hood.
Agreed with all that say it's your choice. Also your habits are very important. One of the reasons why I love Android is that I can literally change my software whenever I want. I was running AOKP 2 days ago, M'ICS the day after. Now today I'm on stock rooted FI27.
Honestly though, this phone is really good out of the box. I had the LG Optimus V for over a year as well, and the only way to get that phone to perform was to root it and put a custom ROM on it. It was actually a great phone for being low end. I had said that when I upgraded to this phone that I wouldn't root it, but that didn't last long. Really though, you can easily get the performance you're looking for on this phone without rooting it.
I rooted for UV/OC ability.
And I really didn't like touchwiz, but I accidentally found that it comes stock with both the ICS launcher and TW launchers, so that was a plus.
I'm on a stock rom running agat's source 6.5 kernel. Runs great. Only thing better would be if I could find an optimized stock rom (much like Sprint Lovers on the OG Evo 4G.)
I'm rooted because I like to tell my devices what to do.
I guess rooting might make more sense if you've ever been an administrator or if you've ever ran any Linux machine.
Sent from my SPH-D710 using xda premium
Tethering and titanium backup. There is no way to truly backup data without root and on something as accident prone as a smartphone that's a necessity.
Sent from my SPH-D710 using Tapatalk 2
mewikime said:
Don't you really only need Titanium Backup if you are gonna be rooting though? The bloatware I can deal with as the phone hasn't (yet) told me that I don't have enough space to stop me from installing new apps.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You can't reliably backup say your angry bird progress without TiBu or the like and being rooted. Sure for this specific series of apps there have been applications made to back up the save progress but they have proven often at times to be unreliable.
Maybe your favorite app gets pulled from the market, lets say flash. Too bad you didn't back up the APK. Of course for flash you can download the apk from adobe still so not a great example but you get the idea.
But overall something like Titanium Backup comes in handy if you ever need to format the phone. Like say the OTA to ICS, problems for unrooted users were easily solved by a factory reset (except for that brick bug triggered by factory reset...). Nice to be able to restore all your user apps with all their settings and save data.
I rooted so I could use a PS3 controller back on gingerbread. As time goes on many things that required root like taking screenshots have become officially available in Android or OEM firmware. Question is you want to be able to do completely normal and reasonable things up to a couple years ahead of Google catching up? Surely if someone locked down your windows PC so you couldn't do things you take for granted you would wish for root access.
I waited about 5 months before I finally rooted my phone. My old phone was rooted and I liked CM7 and MIUI but with stock ICS on this phone I was getting amazing battery life and I was using GO Launcher and it looked great. The only thing I hated was the black status bar and it could only be changed if it was rooted.
There are a lot of roms for our phone but I really missed the CM7 rom I had on the old optimus S. It supported status bar transparency and I could change the color of the status bar and status bar text. It looks like no rom for our phone has that feature. Right now I'm on MIUI which has a great looking UI but battery life isn't nearly as good as the unrooted FH13. I get the best battery life with CM9 which is still a lot less than before when it wasn't rooted. My phone used to last around 60 hours with very light use and now I could only get around 48 hours with CM9 and maybe 30 hours with MIUI. But I'm still happy with it since I get tons of beautiful themes and new features and I like to try new roms and it keeps me busy lol.
Rooting allows you to have full control of the device whether its software or hardware. I agree that this phone is just fine stock. It just works and its fast.
Reasons why I'm rooted
Titanium backup, roam control, extended toggles, root explorer to push custom themed apps to /system/app. When rooted you can do almost anything with your phone that comes to your mind. There's a pic of the super super handy extended toggles that I can't live with out.
Sent from my SPH-D710 using xda app-developers app
leaderbuilder said:
There is no reason for you to root. You are happy that's good.
XDA's 4,697,117+ Members are just nuts. We're unhappy with our stuff and insist on making it less useful to us.
Nothing to see here....
Seriously if you need to ask and don't want to investigate for yourself then rooting and certainly these forums are not for you.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
byrdcfmma said:
You have only had your phone for a month. I have had mine for about a year, and others here have had it longer. If you are trying to convince us not to root, you should spend your time on the Sprint message boards instead of here.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I wasn't trying to imply that anyone who has rooted this phone is nuts, you shouldn't have done it, and that it's less useful. I was asking what are some specific advantages to rooting, how does rooting make it more useful, as at the moment I have had no issues with the operation of the phone, but I don't know the full extent of what it can do when rooted, and I thought that these forums would be the place to get such answers from experienced rooted users who have had their phones for a year and know more than I do. I should have worded my initial question differently to explain that better.
hrffd said:
I root because
- Better reception and data
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
This is interesting to know. At home I get 1 bar of reception if I'm lucky, dropped calls, and no 3G data. I had to ask Sprint for an Airave. When I leave my street but am still in the general neighbourhood I get no service again. Is reception improved by root-only apps or certain ROMs?
patrao_n said:
You may be happy with bloat. I do not want battery resources going to apps I will never open. ... But if your phone ever drowns don't complain that you lost all your game data or texts and stuff. With titanium backup I can even set a schedule to back up those items for me at whatever time to my sd card. So if my phone drowns I pop my as card into my new phone and its all there. Also make nandroids when I receive my replacement its like my phone never died. Its all exactly how I had it.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks for telling me that. It's not that I'm happy with them, I just haven't yet had my phone tell me I can't install a new app. When that happens no doubt I wouldn't be pleased. I assumed that because I hadn't opened the bloatware apps that they weren't using battery resources so it's good to know that they do, and that this is a good reason for rooting and removing them. Your reasons for using Titanium backup were something I hadn't thought of as well.
Omar04 said:
I run stock 90% of the time.
My main reason to root at least after FF18
-Tethering
-Tethering nothing more
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Again, good to know. As I said, I've had the phone a couple of weeks and only now with a lower workload have I really had time to sit and contemplate what to do with my phone, and look into what it does and what it can do. I have the paid EasyTether app but I haven't used it on this phone yet. I also saw that it comes preloaded with Sprint Hotspot app.. I take it then that EasyTether won't work on this phone with current stock setup?
mjs2011 said:
Agreed with all that say it's your choice. Also your habits are very important. One of the reasons why I love Android is that I can literally change my software whenever I want. I was running AOKP 2 days ago, M'ICS the day after. Now today I'm on stock rooted FI27.
Honestly though, this phone is really good out of the box. I had the LG Optimus V for over a year as well, and the only way to get that phone to perform was to root it and put a custom ROM on it. It was actually a great phone for being low end. I had said that when I upgraded to this phone that I wouldn't root it, but that didn't last long. Really though, you can easily get the performance you're looking for on this phone without rooting it.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I think if I did root, I'd do what I did with the OV and stick with the same ROM for a good time. Again, not to insult those that do (see above reply), but I don't think I'd have the balls to run different roms on a daily basis in fear of bricking it and also because once I've found something I'm happy with I'm usually okay not to look any further!
Mattix724 said:
I'm rooted because I like to tell my devices what to do.
I guess rooting might make more sense if you've ever been an administrator or if you've ever ran any Linux machine.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yeah, no. No Linux experience here except for a tiny bit of stuff on my seedbox, installing 7zip and using Putty to unzip iso's and stuff.
I'm going to spend the next couple of days reading the various forums, looking at what ROMs are available, what they do, etc etc, checking out what apps that require root access I'm missing out on.. one has piqued my interest already: Root Call Blocker. But I use my phone to make calls, make texts, check emails, surf the web a bit, and let the kids play a few games on it. So this is why I was wondering if there were any other benefits for me to do this.
I am planning to root my G3 D851. I would to know what is the worst case scenario and will it be fixable? by the way I moved from iphone to G3. I have been jailbreaking my iphone for a while, but in iphone the worst case would be to just restore the device. I bit scared if android would be not fixable.
Main reason for rooting is removing bloatware and fixing heat issue when gaming.
Anything can happen watch videos online over at you tube
raaghul said:
I am planning to root my G3 D851. I would to know what is the worst case scenario and will it be fixable? by the way I moved from iphone to G3. I have been jailbreaking my iphone for a while, but in iphone the worst case would be to just restore the device. I bit scared if android would be not fixable.
Main reason for rooting is removing bloatware and fixing heat issue when gaming.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
G3 has been the easiest root I've ever done. Once you get a Recovery on your phone most things are pretty fixable. You can always pop it in download mode and restore the stock files on it. Not always the easiest thing ever, but usually doable. I Soft Bricked my Galaxy S4 quite a bit and I boot looped the g3 already. Just had to do a reset.
I rooted by device and installed the custom recovery. What are the things should I do in it, especially for reducing the heat on my phone?
There's a fix in dialer to disable thermal monitoring...I guess its buggy? But unless your phone is super hot I wouldn't worry. A little heat isn't that bad.
Make sure you have SuperSU installed though
Naturesretard said:
There's a fix in dialer to disable thermal monitoring...I guess its buggy? But unless your phone is super hot I wouldn't worry. A little heat isn't that bad.
Make sure you have SuperSU installed though
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
disabling that would not reduce heat, it increases heat lol. My phone get to 42 degree C battery temp.
As everyone said, this is the easiest root i have done. The most important thing for you to do is read, read, read! Make sure to also read the problems people have been having in order to avoid them. In other words, dont just read the first & second post of the thread, read em all.
raaghul said:
I rooted by device and installed the custom recovery. What are the things should I do in it, especially for reducing the heat on my phone?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You could try putting something like trickster mod and under clocking the processor so that it doesn't heat up, turn the brightness down, or Greenify will kill apps so things aren't running in the background. Just some Suggestions.
Afaik, you need a kernel that supports uc or oc.
raaghul said:
I rooted by device and installed the custom recovery. What are the things should I do in it, especially for reducing the heat on my phone?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
The 1st thing you should do now is go into recovery and perform a backup. Do this before anything else.
The 2nd thing you should do now is install something like Titanium Backup (worth the cost) and freeze any unnecessary apps such as any of the T-Mobile apps (except visual voicemail) and any carrierIQ related apps/services. There is a list around here somewhere of all the apps/services that are good to freeze to speed up the phone and remove bloat. Search around a bit. There are a few threads dedicated to debloating, increasing battery life, and increasing responsiveness.
After that, you may want to do some reading on xposed and g3 tweaksbox. It's really great and actually eliminated the desire to flash other ROMs for me. But before you go flashing/changing things, make sure you do plenty of reading first to ensure you do things right the first time.
As they say...
"Measure twice, cut once." <--- Live by this. Good luck and have fun! :highfive:
Naturesretard said:
Afaik, you need a kernel that supports uc or oc.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Lol this is the first time I've been around at such an early stage of development. I forget some of the simple stuff cuz of it.
Sent from my LG-D851 using XDA Free mobile app
Hey guys, is rooting really worth it on this phone. I mean just look at all the threads of this issue and that issue after somebody roots. I mean for me the phone is awesome as it is with exception to it's poor SPARK speeds. But that can't be fixed by rooting. I have yet to see any real gain posted by anyone other than removal of Sprint bloatware which is much less than any other carrier. So really is the gain worth the hardship and potential issues this phone seems to have after rooting?
All I see is this phone has X issue and then next line is always the same I rooted or I installed Y ROM. It seems to me that Samsung has done something to make this phone unreliable/unstable once the Factory integrity has been compromised either through rooting or ROM replacement. I did root mine using CF auto root before seeing all these issue posted. I can say now after rooting that I as well am seeing little bugs with touch screen response, as well as other little bugs it did not have before rooting. So this just strengthens my hunch about Samsung somehow making this device less stable once it is compromised.
I don't think I am going to fool with it any further. I don't want to become one of the many help I rooted and my phone won't boot post popping up around here lately.
You dont have to install ROMs to better your device, you can root stock odexed and it will be fine.
It unlocks more capabilities the phone cant do when its pure stock, such as Freezing wake locking apps that drain battery, or enabling etc mods that make the device better under certain circumstances.
You will run into issues whether rooted or not.
Is it worth it? Depends on user opinions. Does it have more problems than usual, Sure from time to time.
The peoples reviews of custom roms are there for a reason. There are things that are fixable and others that cant be fixed or modified upon.
Its more about exploring the full capabilities your device can do when it is rooted.
How far this device has come is massively huge because of the help brought from the community and devs.
You will typically find best performance and reliability with stock android with very few modifications. I use to flash a lot of roms/kernels on my Epic 4G and 4G touch and wouldn't call either of them reliable. I stay with mostly stock roms with my GS4, just Knox removed and everything is real stable.
Solarenemy68 said:
Hey guys, is rooting really worth it on this phone. I mean just look at all the threads of this issue and that issue after somebody roots. I mean for me the phone is awesome as it is with exception to it's poor SPARK speeds. But that can't be fixed by rooting. I have yet to see any real gain posted by anyone other than removal of Sprint bloatware which is much less than any other carrier. So really is the gain worth the hardship and potential issues this phone seems to have after rooting?
All I see is this phone has X issue and then next line is always the same I rooted or I installed Y ROM. It seems to me that Samsung has done something to make this phone unreliable/unstable once the Factory integrity has been compromised either through rooting or ROM replacement. I did root mine using CF auto root before seeing all these issue posted. I can say now after rooting that I as well am seeing little bugs with touch screen response, as well as other little bugs it did not have before rooting. So this just strengthens my hunch about Samsung somehow making this device less stable once it is compromised.
I don't think I am going to fool with it any further. I don't want to become one of the many help I rooted and my phone won't boot post popping up around here lately.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I have both rooted and unrooted, stock roms and custom roms on a few devices at home. Does JUST ROOTING cause any additional problems? No. Its essentially like installing any other apk. Where majority of the bugs and problems come in is user error and custom roms. Don't get those confused as they typically are. Most "I rooted any my phone isn't booting" posts are from people that do things improperly. Or sometimes things just don't stick and you have to try again. CF Autoroot didn't work the very first time I flashed it on my wifes device (last night) after I had used it more times than I can count on my own since 1 week after device launch. I flashed it again, worked great. She didn't like stock, so I flashed my own custom rom on her device.
Custom Roms come with their own bugs if they aren't just simply stripped stock. Want less chances of bugs? Use the completely debloated and no-knoxed ones. They just make things simple by removing both carrier bloat and added items (can also be buggy themselves). Also keep in mind that the software shipped isn't always bug free . We saw some big changes to the actual code from NIE to NK2, we aren't 100% sure why they changed things in some places but I'm not an expert there at all. Ever wonder why Tmobile or verizon may have a feature thats actually turn off or locked on our device? It could be buggy for a specific carrier and the carrier just decided they wouldn't include it for their customers.
Samsung perposely sabatoging our devices because they are rooted...... eh they did have nexus devices at one point in time. So I'm going to give them the benefit of the doubt and say this isn't the case. You may have just experienced bad results. I don't go a device without rooting, if not only to remove carrier bloat. MY last 3 devices I did not even let sprint reps boot before I took it home and rooted (literal first boot is rooted stock) I have been to the sprint techs LESS than when I had stock devices. This also allows certain users to fix their own problems themselves, and not leave device issues in the hands of carrier techs who by default will generally do a software reset and send you out the door.
Pros vs cons of rooting? Completely down to each specific user.
Yes rooting is absolutely worth it. For hotspot tethering, and Xposed. But you do need to add a fix to Xposed if you do decide to install it on this device.
Sent from my SM-N910P using XDA Free mobile app
beezar said:
Yes rooting is absolutely worth it. For hotspot tethering, and Xposed. But you do need to add a fix to Xposed if you do decide to install it on this device.
Sent from my SM-N910P using XDA Free mobile app
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If you have hotspot tethering included in your plan like I do why would you need to root to have it? Unless you are trying to get it for free?
Solarenemy68 said:
If you have hotspot tethering included in your plan like I do why would you need to root to have it? Unless you are trying to get it for free?
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reguardless if you pay for it or not, it limits the amount of devices you can connect/tether to. Who's to say I only want to tether 4-5 devices? What If I'm traveling and have 6 devices?
If you don't like rooting, this certainly isn't the place to try and shun it. If you are looking to be convinced to root again? Still the wrong place. You root because you want to, or you want to do something that you can't without root. Plain and simple. Rooting is essentially controlling your own device while you OWN IT. Not owning a device someone else has complete control over.
millerboy3 said:
reguardless if you pay for it or not, it limits the amount of devices you can connect/tether to. Who's to say I only want to tether 4-5 devices? What If I'm traveling and have 6 devices?
If you don't like rooting, this certainly isn't the place to try and shun it. If you are looking to be convinced to root again? Still the wrong place. You root because you want to, or you want to do something that you can't without root. Plain and simple. Rooting is essentially controlling your own device while you OWN IT. Not owning a device someone else has complete control over.
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I root everything I own that can be rooted. My question has about the N4 as it seems like I said it has more issues after a root then it did before and that seems fishy. The way Sprint and Samsung are handling the poor data speeds is already a screw job when they are both aware it is a real problem. Add to that the more mods you do to the phone the more unstable it gets that just seems shady. I was not asking to root or not to root so much as I was asking is THIS device worth the trouble?
Solarenemy68 said:
I root everything I own that can be rooted. My question has about the N4 as it seems like I said it has more issues after a root then it did before and that seems fishy. The way Sprint and Samsung are handling the poor data speeds is already a screw job when they are both aware it is a real problem. Add to that the more mods you do to the phone the more unstable it gets that just seems shady. I was not asking to root or not to root so much as I was asking is THIS device worth the trouble?
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Seems you aren't running the right rom. I haven't had any major instabilities.
It's not the rooting that causes the problems, its what they do after they root.
Sent from my SM-N910P using Tapatalk
Solarenemy68 said:
I root everything I own that can be rooted. My question has about the N4 as it seems like I said it has more issues after a root then it did before and that seems fishy. The way Sprint and Samsung are handling the poor data speeds is already a screw job when they are both aware it is a real problem. Add to that the more mods you do to the phone the more unstable it gets that just seems shady. I was not asking to root or not to root so much as I was asking is THIS device worth the trouble?
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As we all have said before, its user opinionated and what they do regarding with root in general.
I go with rooting because of extra battery saving features such as Greenify + Xposed, Underclocking GPU and CPU. To top that off, force lower dpi resolution and tablet mode on specific apps to see more on the screen. Modifying files such as build.prop and user key controls for enhanced performance, and like everyone, changing Sounds and boot anims, moving apps from user to system to help with stability etc.
If its unstable doing certain things well thats the bummer downside to the Apps or devices capabilities. But as long as you can get more out of the device ( which you can! ) with all the freedom of not being locked to user specific controls. It makes it better!
Thats how i feel.
I mean you can root the device and just install twrp and just keep it like that just until something catches your eye. I personally say if you rooted your previous devices. You should root the note 4. I am rooted and I am just plain stock cause I almost bricked my device. So I am going to wait until 5.0 gets to our phones before I flash anymore roms but until then I'm going to be completely stock.
Root your phone immediately.
Root your phone immediately. My god, what are you thinking going around unrooted?
Oh, you want details?
Open the hidden stuff if you want details.
Just kidding. I too suffered from doubts and waited several months before popping my phones warranty cherry.
Root is nice, even on the Note 4. But:
If you don't need root for anything special and you are perfectly happy with stock without root, DON'T ROOT!
If you need superuser authority (titanium backup?), if you want to disable Exchange Security so you can have work email but still use the fingerprint scanner, or you just like having better/different looks than stock in some way not achievable without root, ROOT.
That advice is general and applies to all phones. If you don't need/want it, why ask?
I can vouch that rooting the Note 4, installing custom Recovery and operating the custom ROMs is the similar to any other Samsung phone of recent vintage both in manner and difficultly (e.g. S3, S4, S5). (not the same though so do your research)
I have nothing against any ROM but, from personal experience, the ROMs from Pongoface and co work extremely well and look really nice. Make sure to wipe data and let them have 10 minutes or so to settle after first boot.
Those are:
[PORT] BoBCaTROM
and
[Port] Sprint Xnote (The time to settle was important on this one for me. Else, I got forced closes, not sure
Everything is stable on my phone after rooting and a LOT of Xposed mods. It just makes my phone much better.
If you have rooted all your other phones, then really why are you asking this question? You already know the benefits and risks of rooting so there is no need for us to tell you what to do.
Sent from my SM-N910P using XDA Free mobile app
Solarenemy68 said:
I root everything I own that can be rooted. My question has about the N4 as it seems like I said it has more issues after a root then it did before and that seems fishy. The way Sprint and Samsung are handling the poor data speeds is already a screw job when they are both aware it is a real problem. Add to that the more mods you do to the phone the more unstable it gets that just seems shady. I was not asking to root or not to root so much as I was asking is THIS device worth the trouble?
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False. False. False. What's shady is the lack of knowledge on behalf of a user which these issues are caused by. There is no "shady" business going on that would cause instability issues upon rooting your device. Instead of a carrier or Samsung playing shenanigans with it's customers by introducing bugs and instability issues if a user roots their device, it would be more logical for Sprint and Samsung to simply lock down the bootloader and take measures to prevent root in the first place... such as all the Verizon and AT&T customers who are still crying about not having root. If you want to believe otherwise that's up to you.
As already mentioned by millerboy3, rooting doesn't cause the instability issues you or anybody else might be having. The more mods you do the more unstable the rom??? That's just plain and simple ignorance my friend. Yes it could be true that a rom might be "buggy" but if a rom is well planned and time taken to ensure everything is right, then there will not be stability issues. There are roms out there with tons of mods that are 10 times more stable and faster than the stock rom. I happen to have a rom that fits that criteria along with a few other people. With that said, I do agree with you on the fact that the Note 4 is perfectly awesome straight out of the box without the need to root it. This is the first phone I've owned that I really don't feel the need to change anything because everything works great stock. There are a few mods that I find are well worth the effort and definitely worth rooting the phone for.
tx_dbs_tx said:
False. False. False. What's shady is the lack of knowledge on behalf of a user which these issues are caused by. There is no "shady" business going on that would cause instability issues upon rooting your device. Instead of a carrier or Samsung playing shenanigans with it's customers by introducing bugs and instability issues if a user roots their device, it would be more logical for Sprint and Samsung to simply lock down the bootloader and take measures to prevent root in the first place... such as all the Verizon and AT&T customers who are still crying about not having root. If you want to believe otherwise that's up to you.
As already mentioned by millerboy3, rooting doesn't cause the instability issues you or anybody else might be having. The more mods you do the more unstable the rom??? That's just plain and simple ignorance my friend. Yes it could be true that a rom might be "buggy" but if a rom is well planned and time taken to ensure everything is right, then there will not be stability issues. There are roms out there with tons of mods that are 10 times more stable and faster than the stock rom. I happen to have a rom that fits that criteria along with a few other people. With that said, I do agree with you on the fact that the Note 4 is perfectly awesome straight out of the box without the need to root it. This is the first phone I've owned that I really don't feel the need to change anything because everything works great stock. There are a few mods that I find are well worth the effort and definitely worth rooting the phone for.
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He said it much better than I.
i'll also throw a vote in for rooting. i've come to consider AdAway & Xposed as must-haves, which both require root.
The N4 was the first phone I considered not rooting, it was that good straight away. However, then I remembered why I rooted, besides custom ROM's, and it was 2 (now 3) main reasons.
1- AdFree: After seeing ads all over a bunch of my favorite apps, I remembered I didn't have AdFree installed, which requires root. This is my biggest quality of use reason, if you've ever went to tap something in an app only to have a ninja ad come out of nowhere right as your finger hit the screen and redirect you to a website or the app store, you know what I mean.
2- TWRP + Titanium Backup - The ability to backup ALL my apps and settings to a separate SD card was huge, plus all the other features of TB.
3 - Lastly, I found Xposed: I'd never used before, but now, I couldn't imagine not having it. It's allowed me to tweak things that irritated me, like color schemes on the contacts and dialer screens, without the worry of installing custom ROM's or RW editing mods.
Just my feedback, your requirements may differ.
Sent from my SM-N910P using XDA Free mobile app
Newbie, who wants to have better use of ExtsdCard
I am looking into rooting, for the first time. After an update to my, prior, S4, I couldn't edit my ebooks, about 700, delete photos, several thousand, or remove duplicates, on my extsdcard. I just got a new Note 4, and a 128G extsdcard. If there is anyway to restore my control of the sdcard that I paid for, other than rooting, please tell me. Otherwise, Android and Samsung are forcing me to root. Am I wrong??
Thank you very much,
Randy "Pugmeister"
Pugmeister said:
I am looking into rooting, for the first time. After an update to my, prior, S4, I couldn't edit my ebooks, about 700, delete photos, several thousand, or remove duplicates, on my extsdcard. I just got a new Note 4, and a 128G extsdcard. If there is anyway to restore my control of the sdcard that I paid for, other than rooting, please tell me. Otherwise, Android and Samsung are forcing me to root. Am I wrong??
Thank you very much,
Randy "Pugmeister"
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I'm a little fuzzy on what your saying. Are you saying that you can't edit or delete the contents of your external SD card in the note 4? If so, that's not a problem root could solve, as you should have full control over everything on the external card. Rooting would allow you access to edit the main android system files on the internal storage.
Sent from my SM-N910P using XDA Free mobile app
Hello everyone,
I am a returning Android user - just got my G4 last week. I've had everything from the original droid to the iPhone 6. I have been away from Android for a while before coming back to the G4. So far I really like it (thought it is a bit laggy at times compared to the iPhone).
Will rooting help with this issue? Besides gaining root so that I can freeze stupid apps, are there any other current benefits to rooting this model? My understanding is that very few if any stable ROMs are available?
I have the Verizon version. I'm running 5.1. The kernel is 3.10.49-g8555e66. Software version is J14.LGE.VS896.0
So - is this one rootable? If so, what can I do? If I can flash ROMs, how difficult is it since from what I hear, the bootloader remains locked?
Thanks! (i'm sorry if these questions have been answered - i actually have been searching for the answer to no avail. I always worry a bit when I see a 'how-to-root' that is from a few months ago...makes me wonder if maybe mine is updated to the point where it's not possible). So I thought Id ask!
Peace,
Tommy
Voyaging said:
Will rooting help with this issue?
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Nope.
Besides gaining root so that I can freeze stupid apps, are there any other current benefits to rooting this model?
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Blocking adds, using xposed, etc.
Pfeffernuss said:
Nope.
Blocking adds, using xposed, etc.
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What is xposed?
Sent from my VS986 using XDA Free mobile app
Voyaging said:
are there any other current benefits to rooting this model?
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Changing DPI
Xposed Framework
Xposed Modules (App Settings, AppOpsXposes, G4 TweaksBox)
Adaway
CTT Mod
60FPS, 100% JPEG
Ive installed CTT mod and can say for my Taiwan model ive gained at leaset 2 more hours of SOT and phone is much cooler when video or gaming.
So rooting is needed just to gain these benifits and many others.
Only drawback is you wont be able to OTA once rooted so if thats important then dont.
Voyaging said:
What is xposed?
Sent from my VS986 using XDA Free mobile app
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http://bfy.tw/27oZ
Thanks everyone. The more I think about it, I think i'm gonna be fine without root. I want to be able to get the latest OTAs and do not think that the ability to freeze a few apps is worth sacrificing that. Also - after a few days, my phone is performing very well and the battery life is phenomenal. I bought a kit with two other batteries and i haven't needed to put even the first replacement in today. Been off charger since 7am and i'm at 48% right now at 8:25pm. I think i can be happy with it the way it is. THank you for your helpful responses.
I'm thinking about upgrading from my Samsung S4 to the LG G4. I primarily use my phone for some moderate/heavy graphics gaming, normal phone calling/texting/photos, and tethering as my main home internet. It seems like from what I've read that the easiest way to root the G4 is to take the OTA 13b update then flash a rooted image that's posted in the forums correct? Would you guys recommend this phone for what I need out of it? My main reason for upgrading is because my S4 overheats easily while I download things when tethering. Also, I hate phones that don't have a removable battery or lacks a microsd slot. Have you guys noticed any extreme overheating issues where the phone will close down apps or shutdown completely? Let me know your thoughts, thanks!
aznjosh said:
I'm thinking about upgrading from my Samsung S4 to the LG G4. I primarily use my phone for some moderate/heavy graphics gaming, normal phone calling/texting/photos, and tethering as my main home internet. It seems like from what I've read that the easiest way to root the G4 is to take the OTA 13b update then flash a rooted image that's posted in the forums correct? Would you guys recommend this phone for what I need out of it? My main reason for upgrading is because my S4 overheats easily while I download things when tethering. Also, I hate phones that don't have a removable battery or lacks a microsd slot. Have you guys noticed any extreme overheating issues where the phone will close down apps or shutdown completely? Let me know your thoughts, thanks!
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I havent used a Samsung phone since the Galaxy Nexus so I can't directly compare but I did come from the HTC One M7 which was a great phone. With that said, I find the G4 to be the best phone I have used in a long time. It just works. It is fast, has an incredible screen and doesnt have to too much LG skinning over Android UI. I haven't noticed any overheat issues with it, and like you I love the fact that the battery is removable. Usually I get more than a full days worth out of the battery, but on really heavy usage days its nice to be able to put my other battery in and not worry about my phone dying.
As far as rooting goes, if you by the G4 then taking the OTA and rooting from there is your best bet. I personally prefer this thread http://forum.xda-developers.com/g4/general/lg-g4-100-root-success-directives-root-t3180586 because it is easy to follow and it will provide you with a backup of your stock system image incase something goes wrong and you want to quickly go back to stock or to your last good configuration. If you don't want to root your own, you could just use one of the existing pre-rooted images and skip to step 3 of the tutorial I linked.
The only thing I don' t like about this phone is that the bootloader the carrier devices, which means no custom ROMS unless your on the international unlocked version. There was work happening on unlocking the bootloader for our devices but last I checked it would only work with the VS986 version 10 software, so all of us on 11a, 12b, or 13b are SOL until they figure out how to unlock our bootloaders. Besides that, I love this phone.
Thanks for your response! I ended up buying it so that's great to hear! My S4 bootloader was locked as well. Seems like all Verizon phones from now on will have bootloader locked unless it's the Google phones.
quick question, i am in 10B version and can i use the root injection in this thread (http://forum.xda-developers.com/g4/general/lg-g4-100-root-success-directives-root-t3180586) to root the device?
ajeevlal said:
quick question, i am in 10B version and can i use the root injection in this thread (http://forum.xda-developers.com/g4/general/lg-g4-100-root-success-directives-root-t3180586) to root the device?
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You should be able to. AFAIK it works for all software versions.