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It kept failing the first few times but I finally got it successful. Although i got the new ROM I still can not do anything without it freezing up or rebooting itself.
This leaves me to believe that it is a hardware malfunction. Its like it under clocked to 200 MHz and freezes up when you click on something. I will be taking it in tonight for a replacement, i no longer have root so im sure they wont say anything. It also deactivated itself?
I don't know what it could be but if I were you I would just take it back to be on the safe side that way there is no question about a hardware issue. Good luck!!
It looks more intimidating than it actually is -- all you're doing is a firmware flash, like you might any other device. It will restore you to a new-in-box software state with the most recent version for the D2.
Sorry for the double post, I'm 5 drinks deep and had a long day at work.
That's not true. I downloaded "Root Explorer" yesterday before flashing with the full SBF, and when I was done flashing, "Root Explorer" still remained on the phone.
I, too, thought it would restore it to default, but it didn't.
I don't know what it could be but if I were you I would just take it back to be on the safe side that way there is no question about a hardware issue. Good luck!!
It looks more intimidating than it actually is -- all you're doing is a firmware flash, like you might any other device. It will restore you to a new-in-box software state with the most recent version for the D2.
Sorry for the double post, I'm 5 drinks deep and had a long day at work.
That's not true. I downloaded "Root Explorer" yesterday before flashing with the full SBF, and when I was done flashing, "Root Explorer" still remained on the phone.
I, too, thought it would restore it to default, but it didn't.
All of the new generation SBF files preserve user data now to make it easier for both end users ad for the employees who have to flash the phones so they don't have to worry about backing up anything before a flash or restoring it back afterward.
All you have to do is wipe data and cache in recovery to accomplish the same thing as the older SBF files which wiped everything by default.
It was done intentionally to make the process of updating firmware more painless...it's a good thing!
All of the new generation SBF files preserve user data now to make it easier for both end users ad for the employees who have to flash the phones so they don't have to worry about backing up anything before a flash or restoring it back afterward.
All you have to do is wipe data and cache in recovery to accomplish the same thing as the older SBF files which wiped everything by default.
It was done intentionally to make the process of updating firmware more painless...it's a good thing!
You are correct. I did an SBF flash, and data wipe, which made it practically new. Plus, it's nice having all these automated root/unroot commands. (A HUGE thanks to those developers!)