Tuesday, May 17, 2011

Rooting the Droid X

So last night I finally got around to rooting my Droid X phone.  As expected, it was generally uneventful.  I used SuperOneClick to root the phone, which proved to be pretty easy.

The hardest thing was installing the drivers for the phone on my Windows 7 64-bit system.  I used the version of SuperOneClick that included drivers, and that worked out fine.  I had to manually install several drivers for all of the related devices that showed up as not installed under Device Manager in Windows 7.  Once that was done, I ran SuperOneClick, clicked the "Root" button, and I was done.

So now what?  I've rooted my phone.  Big deal.  Well, that's pretty much the case.  Unlike jail-breaking your iPhone, the things that you can do after rooting your Android phone are pretty much uninteresting, in my opinion.  Jail-breaking your iPhone unlocks a lot of capabilities because Apple has locked so many things down in the first place.  But because the Android platform is by nature a bit more flexible and open, there are very few things that can't be done with an Android phone already.

The biggest thing I did was uninstall a bunch of the "crapware" that comes already installed on a lot of Android phones.  On my Verizon Droid X, I uninstalled the Skype Mobile app (regular Skype now supports both 3G and Wifi calls, so no need for a "special" version), Madden NFL 2011, NFS Shift (another game), City ID (an annoying pop-up app), the Blockbuster app (never used it), VZ Navigator (I use Google Maps), and I think a couple of others.  None of these apps can be uninstalled without rooting your phone.  They probably recovered very little space on the phone, but it made me feel better that they're gone.

I installed droid VNC server, which is kind of cool.  It lets me control my phone from my PC.  I also installed Titanium Backup (free version).  I haven't dug very deep into this one yet, other than to use it to uninstall all the crapware I mentioned above.  It comes HIGHLY recommended from a lot of sites.

I also installed ShootMe, which lets me take screen captures of what's on the phone, something you can't do without rooting your phone.  That is kind of handy.


That's really it so far.  I'm sure there is more out there, but I haven't had time to uncover everything yet.  Stay tuned.  I'll post more if I uncover anything truly earth-shattering.

I will say that I am interested in trying the CyanogenMod custom ROM.  Sadly, it is not yet available and (won't be for some time) for the Droid X, according to @cvps, one of the guys working on Cyanogen.  Hopefully it will happen eventually, as it looks very interesting.  I want me some Gingerbread!

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