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bmdixon
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Doing exactly what you are doing is probably the biggest chance of brikcingbricking your phone - experimenting without proper knowledge and understanding of how things work. Go into xda-developers and find your phone's forum. Then start reading - how to install a ROM and a Recovery, change kernels etc. etc. Read the threads and follow the steps exactly as they are shown and you won't be having any problems. All it takes is for you to mess up a single step, to brick your phone - may it be you download wrong file, not for your model or you type in wrong command etc. Still Android these days (not like back in 2010 for example) are quite resilient. It's not too difficult to recover from almost all kinds of bricks.

TLDR Read how other people did it before you on accredited sites like XDA-Developers and be carefullcareful.

Story time: I've been doing this (rooting, installing roms etc. - being power user) for 5-6 years now so I know my stuff. I started unlocking my LG G4, then rooting, then instalinginstalling recovery. What I did here was really stupid. Instead of installing a reoveryrecovery I booted into it - so iI had access to intit only once. But iI didn't notice right away. I installed my files, and the installer required a restart, and to boot back into recovery. But since I didn't install recovery the first time, as soomsoon as I restarted my phone iI literally fuckedmessed up. I went into semi-soft brick. No access to fastboot, couldn';tcouldn't hook up my phone to my PC to execute commands, and the phone was in bootloop, only going as far as the logo. Well iI panicked a bit, went into the forum and started reading for solutions. At the end, something written for totally different thing allowed me to push some commands, and salvage my phone.

Also on your comment: And in genelrageneral, don't root if you don't know what it is. Many people do root exactly for your reasons "people say its cool" iI rooted to install xposed and get some modules iI need.

Doing exactly what you are doing is probably the biggest chance of brikcing your phone - experimenting without proper knowledge and understanding of how things work. Go into xda-developers and find your phone's forum. Then start reading - how to install a ROM and a Recovery, change kernels etc. etc. Read the threads and follow the steps exactly as they are shown and you won't be having any problems. All it takes is for you to mess up a single step, to brick your phone - may it be you download wrong file, not for your model or you type in wrong command etc. Still Android these days (not like back in 2010 for example) are quite resilient. It's not too difficult to recover from almost all kinds of bricks.

TLDR Read how other people did it before you on accredited sites like XDA-Developers and be carefull.

Story time: I've been doing this (rooting, installing roms etc. - being power user) for 5-6 years now so I know my stuff. I started unlocking my LG G4, then rooting, then instaling recovery. What I did here was really stupid. Instead of installing a reovery I booted into it - so i had access to int only once. But i didn't notice right away. I installed my files, and the installer required a restart, and to boot back into recovery. But since I didn't install recovery the first time, as soom as I restarted my phone i literally fucked up. I went into semi-soft brick. No access to fastboot, couldn';t hook up my phone to my PC to execute commands, and the phone was in bootloop, only going as far as the logo. Well i panicked a bit, went into the forum and started reading for solutions. At the end, something written for totally different thing allowed me to push some commands, and salvage my phone.

Also on your comment: And in genelra, don't root if you don't know what it is. Many people do root exactly for your reasons "people say its cool" i rooted to install xposed and get some modules i need.

Doing exactly what you are doing is probably the biggest chance of bricking your phone - experimenting without proper knowledge and understanding of how things work. Go into xda-developers and find your phone's forum. Then start reading - how to install a ROM and a Recovery, change kernels etc. Read the threads and follow the steps exactly as they are shown and you won't be having any problems. All it takes is for you to mess up a single step, to brick your phone - may it be you download wrong file, not for your model or you type in wrong command etc. Still Android these days (not like back in 2010 for example) are quite resilient. It's not too difficult to recover from almost all kinds of bricks.

TLDR Read how other people did it before you on accredited sites like XDA-Developers and be careful.

Story time: I've been doing this (rooting, installing roms etc. - being power user) for 5-6 years now so I know my stuff. I started unlocking my LG G4, then rooting, then installing recovery. What I did here was really stupid. Instead of installing a recovery I booted into it - so I had access to it only once. But I didn't notice right away. I installed my files, and the installer required a restart, and to boot back into recovery. But since I didn't install recovery the first time, as soon as I restarted my phone I literally messed up. I went into semi-soft brick. No access to fastboot, couldn't hook up my phone to my PC to execute commands, and the phone was in bootloop, only going as far as the logo. Well I panicked a bit, went into the forum and started reading for solutions. At the end, something written for totally different thing allowed me to push some commands, and salvage my phone.

Also on your comment: And in general, don't root if you don't know what it is. Many people do root exactly for your reasons "people say its cool" I rooted to install xposed and get some modules I need.

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Doing exactly what you are doing is probably the biggest chance of brikcing your phone - experimenting without proper knowledge and understandingexperimenting without proper knowledge and understanding of how things work. Go into xda-developers and find your phone's forum. Then start reading - how to install a ROM and a Recovery, change kernels etc. etc. Read the threads and follow the steps exactly as they are shown and you won't be having any problems. All it takes is for you to mess up a single step, to brick your phone - may it be you download wrong file, not for your model or you type in wrong command etc. Still Android these days (not like back in 2010 for example) are quite resilient. It's not too difficult to recover from almost all kinds of bricks.

TLDR Read how other people did it before you on accredited sites like XDA-Developers and be carefull.TLDR Read how other people did it before you on accredited sites like XDA-Developers and be carefull.

Story time: I've been doing this (rooting, installing roms etc. - being power user) for 5-6 years now so I know my stuff. I started unlocking my LG G4, then rooting, then instaling recovery. What I did here was really stupid. Instead of installing a reovery I booted into it - so i had access to int only once. But i didn't notice right away. I installed my files, and the installer required a restart, and to boot back into recovery. But since I didn't install recovery the first time, as soom as I restarted my phone i literally fucked up. I went into semi-soft brick. No access to fastboot, couldn';t hook up my phone to my PC to execute commands, and the phone was in bootloop, only going as far as the logo. Well i panicked a bit, went into the forum and started reading for solutions. At the end, something written for totally different thing allowed me to push some commands, and salvage my phone.

Also on your comment: And in genelra, don't root if you don't know what it is. Many people do root exactly for your reasons "people say its cool" i rooted to install xposed and get some modules i need.

Doing exactly what you are doing is probably the biggest chance of brikcing your phone - experimenting without proper knowledge and understanding of how things work. Go into xda-developers and find your phone's forum. Then start reading - how to install a ROM and a Recovery, change kernels etc. etc. Read the threads and follow the steps exactly as they are shown and you won't be having any problems. All it takes is for you to mess up a single step, to brick your phone - may it be you download wrong file, not for your model or you type in wrong command etc. Still Android these days (not like back in 2010 for example) are quite resilient. It's not too difficult to recover from almost all kinds of bricks.

TLDR Read how other people did it before you on accredited sites like XDA-Developers and be carefull.

Story time: I've been doing this (rooting, installing roms etc. - being power user) for 5-6 years now so I know my stuff. I started unlocking my LG G4, then rooting, then instaling recovery. What I did here was really stupid. Instead of installing a reovery I booted into it - so i had access to int only once. But i didn't notice right away. I installed my files, and the installer required a restart, and to boot back into recovery. But since I didn't install recovery the first time, as soom as I restarted my phone i literally fucked up. I went into semi-soft brick. No access to fastboot, couldn';t hook up my phone to my PC to execute commands, and the phone was in bootloop, only going as far as the logo. Well i panicked a bit, went into the forum and started reading for solutions. At the end, something written for totally different thing allowed me to push some commands, and salvage my phone.

Also on your comment: And in genelra, don't root if you don't know what it is. Many people do root exactly for your reasons "people say its cool" i rooted to install xposed and get some modules i need.

Doing exactly what you are doing is probably the biggest chance of brikcing your phone - experimenting without proper knowledge and understanding of how things work. Go into xda-developers and find your phone's forum. Then start reading - how to install a ROM and a Recovery, change kernels etc. etc. Read the threads and follow the steps exactly as they are shown and you won't be having any problems. All it takes is for you to mess up a single step, to brick your phone - may it be you download wrong file, not for your model or you type in wrong command etc. Still Android these days (not like back in 2010 for example) are quite resilient. It's not too difficult to recover from almost all kinds of bricks.

TLDR Read how other people did it before you on accredited sites like XDA-Developers and be carefull.

Story time: I've been doing this (rooting, installing roms etc. - being power user) for 5-6 years now so I know my stuff. I started unlocking my LG G4, then rooting, then instaling recovery. What I did here was really stupid. Instead of installing a reovery I booted into it - so i had access to int only once. But i didn't notice right away. I installed my files, and the installer required a restart, and to boot back into recovery. But since I didn't install recovery the first time, as soom as I restarted my phone i literally fucked up. I went into semi-soft brick. No access to fastboot, couldn';t hook up my phone to my PC to execute commands, and the phone was in bootloop, only going as far as the logo. Well i panicked a bit, went into the forum and started reading for solutions. At the end, something written for totally different thing allowed me to push some commands, and salvage my phone.

Also on your comment: And in genelra, don't root if you don't know what it is. Many people do root exactly for your reasons "people say its cool" i rooted to install xposed and get some modules i need.

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Doing exactly what you are doing is probably the biggest chance of brikcing your phone - experimenting without proper knowledge and understanding of how things work. Go into xda-developers and find your phone's forum. Then start reading - how to install a ROM and a Recovery, change kernels etc. etc. Read the threads and follow the steps exactly as they are shown and you won't be having any problems. All it takes is for you to mess up a single step, to brick your phone - may it be you download wrong file, not for your model or you type in wrong command etc. Still Android these days (not like back in 2010 for example) are quite resilient. It's not too difficult to recover from almost all kinds of bricks.

TLDR Read how other people did it before you on accredited sites like XDA-Developers and be carefull.

Story time: I've been doing this (rooting, installing roms etc. - being power user) for 5-6 years now so I know my stuff. I started unlocking my LG G4, then rooting, then instaling recovery. What I did here was really stupid. Instead of installing a reovery I booted into it - so i had access to int only once. But i didn't notice right away. I installed my files, and the installer required a restart, and to boot back into recovery. But since I didn't install recovery the first time, as soom as I restarted my phone i literally fucked up. I went into semi-soft brick. No access to fastboot, couldn';t hook up my phone to my PC to execute commands, and the phone was in bootloop, only going as far as the logo. Well i panicked a bit, went into the forum and started reading for solutions. At the end, something written for totally different thing allowed me to push some commands, and salvage my phone.

Also on your comment: And in genelra, don't root if you don't know what it is. Many people do root exactly for your reasons "people say its cool" i rooted to install xposed and get some modules i need.

Doing exactly what you are doing is probably the biggest chance of brikcing your phone - experimenting without proper knowledge and understanding of how things work. Go into xda-developers and find your phone's forum. Then start reading - how to install a ROM and a Recovery, change kernels etc. etc. Read the threads and follow the steps exactly as they are shown and you won't be having any problems. All it takes is for you to mess up a single step, to brick your phone - may it be you download wrong file, not for your model or you type in wrong command etc. Still Android these days (not like back in 2010 for example) are quite resilient. It's not too difficult to recover from almost all kinds of bricks.

TLDR Read how other people did it before you on accredited sites like XDA-Developers and be carefull.

Doing exactly what you are doing is probably the biggest chance of brikcing your phone - experimenting without proper knowledge and understanding of how things work. Go into xda-developers and find your phone's forum. Then start reading - how to install a ROM and a Recovery, change kernels etc. etc. Read the threads and follow the steps exactly as they are shown and you won't be having any problems. All it takes is for you to mess up a single step, to brick your phone - may it be you download wrong file, not for your model or you type in wrong command etc. Still Android these days (not like back in 2010 for example) are quite resilient. It's not too difficult to recover from almost all kinds of bricks.

TLDR Read how other people did it before you on accredited sites like XDA-Developers and be carefull.

Story time: I've been doing this (rooting, installing roms etc. - being power user) for 5-6 years now so I know my stuff. I started unlocking my LG G4, then rooting, then instaling recovery. What I did here was really stupid. Instead of installing a reovery I booted into it - so i had access to int only once. But i didn't notice right away. I installed my files, and the installer required a restart, and to boot back into recovery. But since I didn't install recovery the first time, as soom as I restarted my phone i literally fucked up. I went into semi-soft brick. No access to fastboot, couldn';t hook up my phone to my PC to execute commands, and the phone was in bootloop, only going as far as the logo. Well i panicked a bit, went into the forum and started reading for solutions. At the end, something written for totally different thing allowed me to push some commands, and salvage my phone.

Also on your comment: And in genelra, don't root if you don't know what it is. Many people do root exactly for your reasons "people say its cool" i rooted to install xposed and get some modules i need.

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