92CelicaHalfTrac wrote:
clutchsmoke wrote:
m4ff3w wrote:
92CelicaHalfTrac wrote:
m4ff3w wrote:
The correct answer is to head over to xda-developers.com and find the instructions to root/unlock boot loader and flash a new ROM on it. Get rid of the crappy stuff that Sprint and Samsung add on. Vanillla Android is great. I've been running vanilla android since the G1.
I realize that this is a potential "solution," but i can't wrap my brain around having to modify my expensive smart phone to have it actually somewhat work while i pay Sprint $1800 a year for the "privilege" of using their horribly slow and spotty network. Rooting my phone won't help the network issues, and for the stupid money this crap costs, i shouldn't have to touch it. It should just work, and i should receive a level of service that ensures that i'll be taken care of in the event that something doesn't work.
While I agree, sadly that just isn't the way things work. If the phones worked OK before the update, Sprint/Samsung's crap broke it. Getting rid of their crap should fix it. The phone will run faster, have better battery life, and whatever issues you are currently experiencing should go away.
I was going to suggest the same thing. It's GRM where people modify their stuff to make it work better. Not just cars, but gadgets and such. Rooting is at least worth a try. The other thing to consider is that Sprint is trying to upgrade their towers in a lot of areas to LTE. I had some kinda annoying issues towards the end of summer when they were upgrading near me.
I don't really enjoy working on anything. Including cars. A phone to me is a tool, not a toy. I don't modify my sockets, i just buy the right socket the first time.
The whole LTE thing is another point of issue with me. The salesperson that talked me into this berkeleying phone ASSURED me that it would be compatible with the new network, and well damn, it even has "4G" in the name! Shows "4G" every time it boots up!
Yeah, well... this berkeleyer doesn't even have a berkeleying LTE antenna in it, and the only 4G it'll pick up anywhere is WiMax, which is... dead, never been in my area, and never will.
I don't even get consistent 3G at my home, and i haven't since i started service with them in March.
Well, gee, you bought a small computer for your pocket based on what the salesperson said? dafuqwrongwitu? Sales people make sales, rarely do they really care if it actually meets the customer's needs.
With that said, computers always need to be altered and tailored to meet the user's needs. Just a simple fact of life. I would start with backing up your data, applications, etc. to a PC, etc. Then perform a factory reset using a freshly downloaded official ROM image from Sprint for your phone. Before loading your data, try to see if this improves your issues. If it does, load your data and applications, etc. then retest to see if the issues return. If so then you've got something corrupt in your data or applications that are berking things up.
If after a factory reset and flash, you still have problems, try a plain jain Android ROM for your model phone/carrier from one of the sites mentioned, it can't hurt at this point and see if your signal issues go away. It might, since it likely will not have the berked drivers that are probably causing your issues.
One thing to take away from this: There's a reason so many people love iPhones and the like. 9 times out of 10 they just work. Apple controls the hardware and the software so they make sure they work together well. The carriers can't screw it up with their own junk software. Android can be just as good as Apple's iOS, except that Google let the carriers and handset makers control the hardware specs and software included. Going back to a more or less pure version of Android solves a lot of issues, however research must be done on the hardware you buy before you buy it to ensure you don't get berked with a POS that doesn't have the proper internal antennae, slow processors, etc.
A couple of examples: The wife bought me a brand new Linksys router for Christmas one year, it was supposed to be a nice, top of the link SOHO unit. The firmware included sucked, it was buggy as heck and limited the hardware capabilities, needed to be reset all the time, etc. The Linksys forums were filled with vitriol over the lack of reliability and Linksys kept releasing more and more updates to try and solve the issue.
During my search for solutions to the problems, I found an Open Source firmware, DD-WRT, that came highly recomended. When I installed DD-WRT, it just worked out of the box. The connections have been more consistent, the device only needs to be reset when I reset the DSL modem (because they can't write software either). I didn't want to dick with the router, but it was either that or try returning it to play Russian Roulette with another device, so I figured I'd try the Open Source firmware before returning it.
I wanted another tablet, to play with data logging with MegaSquirt and travel with, etc. So I didn't want another iDevice. In researching the 'Droid tablets I found that the cheap ones were cheap for a reason. Eventually I found a deal on a refurbished Nook Color for $75. Updating the firmware enabled the bluetooth capability and loaded a full version of Android 4.0. Now I can connect it to my MegaSquirt, run TunerStudio's MSDash app and use an external Bluetooth connected GPS (that is much more accurate than the internal ones) and if it gets destroyed, stolen or lost, then I'm out $75 instead of 2 to 3 times more.