figmentPez
Staff member
I'm thinking about rooting my cellphone. What do I need to know?
...get the right shovel to dig it out? I don't know...I'm thinking about rooting my cellphone. What do I need to know?
What model is it?I'm thinking about rooting my cellphone. What do I need to know?
Well, what you need to know depends largely on why you're rooting your phone. If you don't have a good reason to root it, then you should probably just avoid it to reduce the number of variables affecting how your phone operates - or more critically what things may cause it to stop operating.I'm thinking about rooting my cellphone. What do I need to know?
Motorola Moto G, 1st gen LTE modelWhat model is it?
I don't have enough room in my phone's main storage for Hearthstone, and unfortunately Android is kind of stupid about using SD cards for programs. You can move (some) data over to the SD card, but even then you have to be able to install to the phone first. I've heard tell that there are programs that allow you to treat the SD card more like main memory if you root your phone.Well, what you need to know depends largely on why you're rooting your phone. If you don't have a good reason to root it, then you should probably just avoid it to reduce the number of variables affecting how your phone operates - or more critically what things may cause it to stop operating.
And it's a pretty good phone...Though since the Marshallow update I've been having issuesThe samsung s5 is pretty reasonably priced used today, and starts at 16GB internal.
Which will unfortunately run very slow on his older phone.That would get you up to marshmallow
My son has one and has been happy with it, but I don't think he's been keeping up on the OS releases. We bought it earlier this year, it's $160 used on amazon right now, and while there were obvious scratches and dings on the case the phone has performed flawlessly, and in any case is leaps and bounds better than the older android tracfone he used to use. We are able to keep him on tracfone with the bring your own phone program, and it's costing us $100 per year for his service and all the minutes and texts he can use (it's not unlimited, he just doesn't use much).And it's a pretty good phone...Though since the Marshallow update I've been having issues
Possibly, but it's cheaper than a new phone.Which will unfortunately run very slow on his older phone.