• After 15+ years, we've made a big change: Android Forums is now Early Bird Club. Learn more here.

Root Rooted HTC Desire 2.1 + foyo update?

Goonis311

Lurker
Dec 14, 2010
3
0
Sorry Froyo Update is what I meant.

I have a rooted (using Unrevoked 3) HTC Desire 2.1. Should I be concerned with any issues upgrading to Froyo 2.2? I would be using the US Cell official 2.2 upgrade. I just want to make sure that I don't mess it up.

I would like to thank everyone that posts on this website. I have done a lot of reading on my phone and if I should root or not. The contributors are very patience with us "noobs" and do a great job of telling us how to do things. The help is much appreciated.
 
Which update are you talking about using,is it an RUU or an 'over the air' update?

The RUU will work but will return the phone to unrooted (albeit 2.2) stock. As far as I know the 'over the air' option should never be used on a rooted phone as it will cause all sorts of problems.

edited to remove potentially wrong info based on my lack of knowledge of CDMA.
 
Upvote 0
Which update are you talking about using,is it an RUU or an 'over the air' update?

The RUU will work but will return the phone to unrooted (albeit 2.2) stock. As far as I know the 'over the air' option should never be used on a rooted phone as it will cause all sorts of problems.

As you are rooted you can flash any custom ROM you want, there are plenty of 'nearly stock' 2.2 ROM's which are very reliable, for example LeeDroid 2.3d which is basically just 2.2 with sense for rooted phones.
I would be updating using US Cell's 2.2 (Froyo) update. When you say over the air, do you mean the legit ones release by the carrier? If that is what you meant, then yes that is the one I was going to use. I figured the worst case scenario, I would Unroot with Unrevoked 3, download Froyo and then reroot. I have read up on alt ROMs but I was worried about bricking my phone. I think I can do it but I was just playing it safe. Thoughts?
 
Upvote 0
Upvote 0
I would be updating using US Cell's 2.2 (Froyo) update. When you say over the air, do you mean the legit ones release by the carrier? If that is what you meant, then yes that is the one I was going to use. I figured the worst case scenario, I would Unroot with Unrevoked 3, download Froyo and then reroot. I have read up on alt ROMs but I was worried about bricking my phone. I think I can do it but I was just playing it safe. Thoughts?
"Over the air" would be an update downloaded to the phone via a wireless network. If your phone announces to you that an OS update is available, that's an OTA, and you do not want to accept it if you are rooted.

The US Cellular update you download onto your PC is the RUU (ROM Update Utility). You use this by connecting the phone to the PC (Windows only) and running the program. This will completely overwrite the software on your phone, unrooting you in the process. This is safe to use on a rooted phone, but I would expect it to wipe the phone as well, so back up any important data first.
 
Upvote 0
I would be updating using US Cell's 2.2 (Froyo) update. When you say over the air, do you mean the legit ones release by the carrier? If that is what you meant, then yes that is the one I was going to use. I figured the worst case scenario, I would Unroot with Unrevoked 3, download Froyo and then reroot. I have read up on alt ROMs but I was worried about bricking my phone. I think I can do it but I was just playing it safe. Thoughts?

Over the air is a part-update (not full release) delivered directly to te phone rather than download and installed via a PC. OTA will probably break things. If you run an RUU and run it from PC it will be fine, but will wipe your phone
 
Upvote 0
I read you post @ XDA and I will consider using it. My only problem is that I may brick my phone. I am having some force close issues and I am worried I would make it worse. Thoughts?
Take a recovery backup (nandroid) before flashing, and if it doesn't work then you can simply restore from the nandroid backup and be back where you started.

Note: the one caveat is that I don't know what Eddy's put in here. If it's just the ROM then the above statement should be true. If there's a radio update in there as well then it is slightly riskier, as a nandroid can't undo that if it goes wrong.

If you are unsure, the RUU is the safest way to update, though you lose root in the process. scubab over in the main HTC Desire forum reports having used this on a rooted phone with no problems (like other posters here, I'm GSM so can't test this upgrade myself).
 
Upvote 0

BEST TECH IN 2023

We've been tracking upcoming products and ranking the best tech since 2007. Thanks for trusting our opinion: we get rewarded through affiliate links that earn us a commission and we invite you to learn more about us.

Smartphones