Rooting your Android phone

in #life7 years ago

I took on the challenge and root my phone. Since this was my first time, I decided to try it on my unused Samsung Galaxy S4. It had been sitting in my drawer for months and I wanted to do something with it.

  1. Rooting the Samsung
    Screenshot_2017-04-26-09-01-52.png
    As this has an older version of Android (started with 4.0 and upgraded to 5.0) and security updates weren't a huge focus years ago, there are many ways to root this phone. The easiest way I found was to use KingoRoot. You simply plug in your phone, click root, and then after about 10 minutes, you're rooted.
  2. Unlocking the bootloader
    If you want to run any custom ROMs, or simply flash a recovery image such as TWRP or CWM, you need to unlock the bootloader. As this phone is through Verizon, I was at the end of my adventure. Verizon and AT&T are known to not allow you to do much other than just root the phone. Modifying the firmware isn't allowed unless you install specific firmware from them.

So I have a rooted S4, but sadly no custom ROMs.

Since rooting isn't that difficult, I tried my G4. Also on Verizon. Can you guess the result? No root. I found one option on xda-developers, but it required too many different files and commands. Since I have this phone on contract, I'd rather not brick it until I can get an upgrade.

Here's a picture of my cat to brighten up this guide.
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