Linked by Thom Holwerda on Fri 5th Jun 2009 09:26 UTC, submitted by alcibiades
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Fully functional only after you provide a Google ID, that is. Until then it's just a brick.
True, but you don't actually need to use any google tools against that ID once you've provided
You need to root an Android phone the same way you need to jailbreak an iPhone if you actually want functionality on your terms. There's no free lunch with Google, or the providers.
All rooting does is gives you a small handful of additional apps and beta OS updates (some of which aren't even stable).
And though you might be locked to T-Mobile with the G1, that's no different to the network locking on the majorety of any other phones these days (smart or bog standard handsets)




Member since:
2005-07-13
Fully functional only after you provide a Google ID, that is. Until then it's just a brick.
You need to root an Android phone the same way you need to jailbreak an iPhone if you actually want functionality on your terms. There's no free lunch with Google, or the providers.