ANDROID ROOTING GUIDE

As of the writing of this guide, approximately 80% of the world’s population owns their own cellphone. Out of those, 1.08 billion are smartphones. If you’re reading this guide, chances are you either took a wrong turn on Google or you’re one of the proud legions of users that have incorporated their phones into nearly every aspect of their day-to-day life.
You probably shopped around quite a while trying to find the best deal, perhaps read some reviews, quizzed your friends about which model they thought was best, and at some point amidst all that, you must have stumbled with the term “Rooting” and quickly dismissed it as some tech mumbo-jumbo; who has time to mess around with a perfectly good smartphone that can already handle everything you throw at it?
As time goes on, however, newer and more demanding apps along with Android OS updates leave you with a “need” to update your phone. You might want to stop, however, and take a moment to consider the not-so-complicated choice of getting the most out of your beloved phone by “Rooting” it – before trading it in for a sexier, younger model.
Rooting will essentially allow you to tap into your phone’s full potential by giving you complete, unrestricted access to all its settings: the kind of things manufactures don’t want you messing around with in case you end up causing permanent harm to it. But if you actively sought out this guide, we’re confident you’re the kind of user that can handle that bit of extra responsibility.
The possibilities that rooting opens up are almost endless – you’ll be able to block annoying ads within your apps, boost your phone’s flimsy sound, enable free Wi-Fi tethering despite your carrier’s limitations, and (the best part) keep your OS up to date regardless of whether the latest versions of Android have been officially released for your phone. You can even test out user-builds, designed for enhanced performance.
Throughout this guide we’ll mainly be using the term phone, but as you surely know there’
s a wide variety of Android devices available (tablets, e-readers, netbooks, watches, consoles, etc). Given how motivated the community behind the OS is, if it exists, it can – likely – be rooted. If not, wait a week.
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