[Q] Is there an official Bootloader Unlock on HTCdev? - myTouch 4G Q&A, Help & Troubleshooting

While checking HTCdev website
http://htcdev.com/bootloader/
I couldn't find myTouch 4g among the list of unlockable devices. Strange enough, I was able to find T-Mobile G2 which was released before the myTouch 4G. Does anyone have any idea about this? or if there is a way to officially unlock the bootloader while staying on the latest bootloader version?

There is no official unlock for MyTouch 4G, AFAIK.

Tuwayq said:
While checking HTCdev website
http://htcdev.com/bootloader/
I couldn't find myTouch 4g among the list of unlockable devices. Strange enough, I was able to find T-Mobile G2 which was released before the myTouch 4G. Does anyone have any idea about this? or if there is a way to officially unlock the bootloader while staying on the latest bootloader version?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Why would you want an official unlock..?
It permanantly voids your warranty ..
-Team MS
Sent from my HTC Glacier MIUI using xda premium

saranhai said:
Why would you want an official unlock..?
It permanantly voids your warranty ..
-Team MS
Sent from my HTC Glacier MIUI using xda premium
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
My warranty is already over. I've had the phone for more than a year now. Plus, with all due respect, T-mobile and HTC warranty suck!. When you send in your device, you get back an even worse one. I've had the experience of returning four devices (not bad screen related).

HTCdev.com if for any HTC device, released after September 2011.
If I helped, give thanks, if you please.
........Death before dishonor........
Team MS

Also even if you could officially unlock it you still wouldn't have true S-OFF you would have to manually flash (Through ADB) the boot.img of any ROM that is a different flavor of android.

Nicgraner said:
Also even if you could officially unlock it you still wouldn't have true S-OFF you would have to manually flash (Through ADB) the boot.img of any ROM that is a different flavor of android.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I thought I could flash the recovery partition (CWM or others) through fastboot after the unlock. Thanks for the heads up!

Tuwayq said:
I thought I could flash the recovery partition (CWM or others) through fastboot after the unlock. Thanks for the heads up!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You can write to the recovery partition, although that's not the boot partition which means any rom with a different kernel than the one you had will not boot...It's a pain in the ass, trust me.

Tuwayq said:
My warranty is already over. I've had the phone for more than a year now. Plus, with all due respect, T-mobile and HTC warranty suck!. When you send in your device, you get back an even worse one. I've had the experience of returning four devices (not bad screen related).
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
This is fact. The recent warranty exchange I have done with T-mobile came with corrosion on the sim chip pins. Not a happy camper here.

Related

Might be able to root through galaxy s method?

Since the galaxy s and nexus s have the same specs and both made by samsung the method of a flashable.zip to root and install busybox might new possible what are your thoughts?
Sent from my Samsung Nexus S
Maybe you could unlock the bootloader as well?
Sent from my Samsung Vibrant
Yup, I'd suggest fastboot oem unlock and then go ahead and flash whatever you like...
i like that idea ^^
Yea its gotta be the same one as the nexus one same kind of software
Sent from my Samsung Vibrant
No the Galaxy S 2.1 .zip method will not work. It doesn't work on 2.2 Vibrant leaks. SuperOneClick / rageagainstthecage does, however.
Either way, thanks to this not being HTC, we will have it rooted the day it comes out (or sooner).
You realize that the n1, an HTC phone, has a neat fastboot command to unlock the bootloader out of box, yeah? Funnily enough that tiny convenient feature is present in the ns.
Bad HTC for making it easy at the request of Google. And bad Samsung for doing the same!!
Anderdroid said:
No the Galaxy S 2.1 .zip method will not work. It doesn't work on 2.2 Vibrant leaks. SuperOneClick / rageagainstthecage does, however.
Either way, thanks to this not being HTC, we will have it rooted the day it comes out (or sooner).
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Sent from my Nexus One
swetland said:
Yup, I'd suggest fastboot oem unlock and then go ahead and flash whatever you like...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
quick question idk if you can answer it or if you know the answer to it but will this void the warranty like it did on the N1 and will it make a lock appear on splash1 like on the N1?
I wonder if the new method to root the nexus one without unlocking the bootloader would be able to work on the nexus S..
godsfilth said:
quick question idk if you can answer it or if you know the answer to it but will this void the warranty like it did on the N1 and will it make a lock appear on splash1 like on the N1?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
The warranty language is slightly different this time around (uses "may" instead of "will"). The unlocked icon displays when you have it unlocked. It goes away when you run fastboot oem lock -- at which point it is not flashable until you unlock it again.
I have high hopes that Samsung will be reasonable about hardware warranty service.
swetland said:
The warranty language is slightly different this time around (uses "may" instead of "will"). The unlocked icon displays when you have it unlocked. It goes away when you run fastboot oem lock -- at which point it is not flashable until you unlock it again.
I have high hopes that Samsung will be reasonable about hardware warranty service.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
So the fastboot oem lock command is available on retail Nexus S devices but not on the N1? Interesting... or did I misunderstand you? Also, what partitions do you mean are not flashable after locking it again? Just like it was before unlocking or even more locked?
swetland said:
The warranty language is slightly different this time around (uses "may" instead of "will"). The unlocked icon displays when you have it unlocked. It goes away when you run fastboot oem lock -- at which point it is not flashable until you unlock it again.
I have high hopes that Samsung will be reasonable about hardware warranty service.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
thanks thats good news i dont OC my phone or anything but i was hit by the dust under the screen issue on the N1 (resolved eventually) and am paranoid about it now
I have one more question will retail phone be lockable or is that only for you special google people with a s-off spl like the N1
@blunden the N1 had oem unlock as well but it said it WILL void your warranty which HTC used that wording a number of times to decline replacing peoples phones, though i know google folks tried to and mostly succeeded in getting HTC to reverse the decision on most phones
and yes he ment when re-locked you cant flash anything because you lose root privlages to flash through fastboot (i.e. fastboot flash clockwork-recovery.img to get a custom recovery and flash update.zip ROMs)
Picking up my nexus s tomorrow will report back
Sent from my SGH-T959 using XDA App
HTC fixed my phone three times with an unlocked bootloader. I hope Samsung is as generous.
swetland said:
The warranty language is slightly different this time around (uses "may" instead of "will"). The unlocked icon displays when you have it unlocked. It goes away when you run fastboot oem lock -- at which point it is not flashable until you unlock it again.
I have high hopes that Samsung will be reasonable about hardware warranty service.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You can confirm that fastboot oem lock works on retail Nexus S units? I know Google's internal Nexus Ones had that capability, but it was removed from the SPL in retail models.
Using SuperOneClick won't void your warranty (rageagainstthecage method). I heard it works. Confirm/Deny anybody?
mortzz said:
You can confirm that fastboot oem lock works on retail Nexus S units? I know Google's internal Nexus Ones had that capability, but it was removed from the SPL in retail models.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yes that is correct it does have that capability.
Hook it up to your PC then:
adb reboot-bootloader
Your bootloader will be unlocked.
mortzz said:
You can confirm that fastboot oem lock works on retail Nexus S units? I know Google's internal Nexus Ones had that capability, but it was removed from the SPL in retail models.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
i can confirm fastboot oem LOCK does work and it does say locked in the spl again yay
ignore....
*EDIT* NVM

Has anyone found news about 2.3 for us???

I wake up everyday looking for news about 2.3 getting released. I am on 2.2.1 so I lost the ability to root. So i hope this comes out soon and if anyone has any info please post.
Officially it should come out in "coming weeks" as this tweet suggests - http://twitter.com/googlenexus/status/16974464310845440.
But there's a way to root your 2.2.1 anyways. Follow this guide:
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showpost.php?p=8315805&postcount=2
KROMO50 said:
I wake up everyday looking for news about 2.3 getting released. I am on 2.2.1 so I lost the ability to root. So i hope this comes out soon and if anyone has any info please post.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
SuperOneClick works great if you still want root.
KROMO50 said:
I wake up everyday looking for news about 2.3 getting released. I am on 2.2.1 so I lost the ability to root. So i hope this comes out soon and if anyone has any info please post.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Just unlock your bootloader.
I have tried the super one click no luck
Other than unlocking, which is the preferred and safest way to do it. You could just follow the guide that was linked here. I did it for my friend just last week because he was afraid of the official way to root for some reason. It worked perfectly.
Yeah I did it the rageagainstthecage way.
Sent from my Nexus One using XDA App
nope but i read about 2.4 just google for:
google-ice-cream-android-2-4
cant post links
My sig says it all...
KROMO50 said:
I have tried the super one click no luck
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Odd, are you sure you have the latest Super One Click? It worked fine for me 2.2.1 N1 on T-Mobile.
KROMO50 said:
I have tried the super one click no luck
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Works fine for me. Did you get stuck at the looping problem after following the steps in the OP?
The way around that, as many of us have discovered, is to turn the phone off then run SuperOneClick and select 'root'. Turn the phone back on once 'waiting for device..' is shown in the program and then just leave it until it finishes.
Ensure USB debugging is enabled before you get started and that your PC has the required drivers installed. (Check Device Manager).
To be fair the Original Post needs updating as the instructions aren't very good without the above being mentioned.
DirkGently1 said:
SuperOneClick works great if you still want root.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Dumb question but, does that method allow you to install custom roms (e.g. CM7) without unlocking the bootloader, thus keeping the warranty?
frandavid100 said:
Dumb question but, does that method allow you to install custom roms (e.g. CM7) without unlocking the bootloader, thus keeping the warranty?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Using exploit to root allows you to get rooted device without unlocking the bootloader. However, I cannot tell you 'your warranty is kept' for certain(as long as bootloader is locked and you can revert to stock, I think it's okay).
frandavid100 said:
Dumb question but, does that method allow you to install custom roms (e.g. CM7) without unlocking the bootloader, thus keeping the warranty?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
This does not unlock the boot loader....... and, yes you can flash roms once rooted.
Good luck on that warrenty buisness.
LFact said:
However, I cannot tell you 'your warranty is kept' for certain(as long as bootloader is locked and you can revert to stock, I think it's okay).
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
If you do revert to stock there should be no way to tell you ever modified the rom, isn't that right?
frandavid100 said:
If you do revert to stock there should be no way to tell you ever modified the rom, isn't that right?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Unfortunately you can only relock the bootloader on Nexus S, according to a Google Android developer
rcknr said:
Officially it should come out in "coming weeks" as this tweet suggests - http://twitter.com/googlenexus/status/16974464310845440
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Is this "official" though? It's been 23 days since that post.
We'll get it, but I'm just bored of waiting. With so much anticipation, we'll probably be disappointed. Hope not.
Sent from my Nexus One using XDA App
hircus said:
Unfortunately you can only relock the bootloader on Nexus S, according to a Google Android developer
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
His question isn't about relocking the bootloader. But as long as you reflash the stock ROM and recovery, then I don't think there would be a way to tell without further examination. Regardless, HTC isn't too strict with the warranty claims, as many members on this forum have claimed warranty and sent back rooted phones to HTC. You should be fine.
andynx1 said:
Is this "official" though? It's been 23 days since that post.
We'll get it, but I'm just bored of waiting. With so much anticipation, we'll probably be disappointed. Hope not.
Sent from my Nexus One using XDA App
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
that's 3 weeks. "coming weeks" being a PR equivalent of more than a month, we should be waiting for gb another 2 weeks at least...
It's only 5% of GB, but you can have the keyboard from it. A definite improvement and works perfectly on my N1 with 2.2.1 (no root needed):
http://www.appbrain.com/app/keyboard-from-android-2-3/com.moo.android.inputmethod.latin.free

Who Has an Unlocked Bootloader?

Hey guys,
With All this Warranty talk, the people who unlocked your bootloader. Do you regret it? Was the warranty worth sacrificing for custom roms? I want to unlock it but at the same time I keep getting these paranoid thoughts that I'm gonna need the warranty later on. WTF. Any help?
You can install custom roms without unlock bootloader. I have evil nxsense rom installed in my N1 without unlock my bootloader.
Sent from my HTC Nexus One using XDA App
HTC honors the warranty even with the bootloader unlocked; I can't say that I've needed to make a claim myself, but that's the consensus from majority of members on this board. So, my advice is just go for it.
I had the same doubts as you, but you won't regret it
habs25 said:
HTC honors the warranty even with the bootloader unlocked; I can't say that I've needed to make a claim myself, but that's the consensus from majority of members on this board. So, my advice is just go for it.
I had the same doubts as you, but you won't regret it
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Agree with this. Although I've never had to make a claim either.
I unlocked mine as soon as I pulled it from the box back in January 2010. I have had no regrets about it at all. I have never needed warranty service, though I wouldn't hesitate to call HTC for a hardware related issue. If something went horribly wrong with a ROM flash or a radio upgrade, that would be my own fault and I would look into buying a new phone. But I wouldn't try to BS HTC to make them pay for my screw-up.
habs25 said:
HTC honors the warranty even with the bootloader unlocked; I can't say that I've needed to make a claim myself, but that's the consensus from majority of members on this board. So, my advice is just go for it.
I had the same doubts as you, but you won't regret it
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I have made two claims with my unlocked bootloader. Each has been hassle free and quick. Oh, and cost me nothing.
First, a few months ago for dust under the screen, repaired and sent back in 4 days.
Second, which was last week for power button issues. They received, repaired, and shipped back in one day. I got it back the next.
HTC is quietly brilliant.
thanks guys! i may actually unlock the baseband than.
is unlocking the baseband more beneficial than just doing a root without unlocking?
btw, so you guys think its better to safer to send it in and get it repaired if you have a unlocked baseband than the riskier "swap" (when they send u a new one and you send your old one in) method?
Wisefire said:
I have made two claims with my unlocked bootloader. Each has been hassle free and quick. Oh, and cost me nothing.
First, a few months ago for dust under the screen, repaired and sent back in 4 days.
Second, which was last week for power button issues. They received, repaired, and shipped back in one day. I got it back the next.
HTC is quietly brilliant.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
hey, did they send it back to you with a locked bootloader?
First time they relocked it.
Second time, they left it unlocked.
ROOT is fine
bambamboom said:
thanks guys! i may actually unlock the baseband than.
is unlocking the baseband more beneficial than just doing a root without unlocking?
btw, so you guys think its better to safer to send it in and get it repaired if you have a unlocked baseband than the riskier "swap" (when they send u a new one and you send your old one in) method?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I don't see any point in unlocking boot loader while you can root the phone and do whatever you want. the only thing you can't directly do is to flash a partition usion bootloader commands but you still can do it if you use "flash_img" command in ClockworkMod Recovery (on the adb shell). I install different roms and I am on CM7 now.
I unlocked mine without wanting to. I flashed modaco rom and it just unlocked my boot loader. but there is supposed to be a way of locking it again. it's somewhere on xda...
Sent from my Nexus One using XDA App
Yeah, I like posters that don't know what they post.
1) No ROM can unlock the bootloader. User has to do it and the system has to ask for permission.
2) Once unlocked, it can't be locked, only by HTC.
To the OP: I've unlocked my bootloader long before "non-unlocking" way has been found. Never cared for it since, didn't need the warranty, and it's going to expire soon anyway.
Yes mine unlocked, and I have no reason to regret it, as my phone is a freak that can be locked again.
Worth doing in my opinion, and even if I couldn't lock it again, I still wouldn't regret it.
bohlool said:
I don't see any point in unlocking boot loader while you can root the phone and do whatever you want. the only thing you can't directly do is to flash a partition usion bootloader commands but you still can do it if you use "flash_img" command in ClockworkMod Recovery (on the adb shell).
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Mine is locked, but there are 2 goods reasons to unlock the bootloader:
1. Once the bootloader is unlocked, you always have a rooted phone. The next ota won't relock it.
2. You have more options to fix a potentially bricked phone.
I'm thinking about doing it for these reasons, plus it seems like HTC still honour the warranty.
Sent from my Nexus One using XDA App
I unlocked my bootloader because the warranty was gone anyway. Put the nexus into the washing mashine . Somehow it survived (Bluetooth, radio and camera gone). It actually was pretty tough. after about 10minutes in the mashine (60°C) the screen was still having fun inside the mashine.
andynx1 said:
Mine is locked, but there are 2 goods reasons to unlock the bootloader:
1. Once the bootloader is unlocked, you always have a rooted phone. The next ota won't relock it.
2. You have more options to fix a potentially bricked phone.
I'm thinking about doing it for these reasons, plus it seems like HTC still honour the warranty.
Sent from my Nexus One using XDA App
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
1. Well, if you wanna update ota, you don't have reason to root your phone in the first place.
2. what more options exactly you have? simple, do not mess with HBOOT and Recovery partitions, and ur safe.
My opinion, use oneclickroot and don't risk it, cause HTC support behave deferentially now!
bohlool said:
1. Well, if you wanna update ota, you don't have reason to root your phone in the first place.
2. what more options exactly you have? simple, do not mess with HBOOT and Recovery partitions, and ur safe.
My opinion, use oneclickroot and don't risk it, cause HTC support behave deferentially now!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Obviously you have no idea what you are talking about.
Read my previous post, HTC has the best customer support & service I have ever received.
Wisefire said:
Obviously you have no idea what you are talking about.
Read my previous post, HTC has the best customer support & service I have ever received.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
No comment!

need help returning phone to customer care

Hello
I need to return my nexus s to Samsung care since speaker is not working ..its rooted and I have miui rom currently
Plz tell me what all things I should before giving
Thank you
ancilary said:
Hello
I need to return my nexus s to Samsung care since speaker is not working ..its rooted and I have miui rom currently
Plz tell me what all things I should before giving
Thank you
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Nope, you're pretty screwed. When unlocking the bootloader, the phone tells you that your warranty is now void.
The nexus S has a oem bootloader unlock. In other words, samsung will not hold the fact that bootloader is unlocked against you. You do need to get rid of miui and get back to stock. There is a thread showing how to do this and provides the files you need. I'll see if I can find it for you.
Sent from my Nexus S 4G
khartaras said:
Nope, you're pretty screwed. When unlocking the bootloader, the phone tells you that your warranty is now void.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
dude shut up if u dont know what your talking about ..
go back to stock,stock recovery isnt even neccessary to be honest i know alot of people in the customer care for samsung and google they dont even check they issue command via bootloader, lastly you go into fastboot mode and issue command fastboot oem lock
mak213 said:
dude shut up if u dont know what your talking about ..
go back to stock,stock recovery isnt even neccessary to be honest i know alot of people in the customer care for samsung and google they dont even check they issue command via bootloader, lastly you go into fastboot mode and issue command fastboot oem lock
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I said that because I was screwed over by Samsung.
I just use cwm to flash the latest ota rom then locked the bootloader and reboot.
no issues from samsung regarding voided warranty. Perhaps you had sent it in with the bootloader unlocked?
Just use rom managers stock 2.3.3 and flash it... then lock bootloader by the instructions provided a post up
Just a heads up... same thing happened to a guy and he sent it in.for a speaker that wasn't working ... he waited over a month to get his phone back rather then them sending him a new one or refurbished
Sent from my Nexus S using xda premium
khartaras said:
Nope, you're pretty screwed. When unlocking the bootloader, the phone tells you that your warranty is now void.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
lol. are you trolling?
just flash the original system images found in the development forum, i think they are a sticky
good luck! make sure the bootloader says locked, and there is no super user app and no custom recovery!!!
I used Stock Odin image that will restore everything rom, recovery...ect then just lock bootloader. Funny thing is i sent mine back all stock and bootloader locked few months ago and got back with bootloader unlocked.
Sent from my Google Nexus S using xda premium
demo23019 said:
I used Stock Odin image that will restore everything rom, recovery...ect then just lock bootloader. Funny thing is i sent mine back all stock and bootloader locked few months ago and got back with bootloader unlocked.
Sent from my Google Nexus S using xda premium
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
LMAO it was probably cyanogen himself, they did hire him you know

HTC Nexus 9 altenative

What happened to the rumours that HTC would release their own tablet?
I'd be tempted to wait a bit to see if they have somthing in the pipeline...
bluefoam said:
What happened to the rumours that HTC would release their own tablet?
I'd be tempted to wait a bit to see if they have somthing in the pipeline...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Not just yet, 6 months I recon?
When HTC does release it's own version of the Nexus 9, just like they released the HTC Desire after the Nexus One, it will most likely have a locked bootloader and require S-OFF hacked firmware.
Deltadroid said:
When HTC does release it's own version of the Nexus 9, just like they released the HTC Desire after the Nexus One, it will most likely have a locked bootloader and require S-OFF hacked firmware.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Doesnt HTC have that website where they give you an unlock code for all that though?
They didn't with the first HTC Desire in the beginning. I was merely speculating that they would do the same thing as they did in the past. What about the HTC One? Do the newer HTC devices allow the user to unlock the s-on ?
EniGmA1987 said:
Doesnt HTC have that website where they give you an unlock code for all that though?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
They do to unlock the bootloader but it's still s-on.
Sent from my Nexus 5 using XDA Free mobile app
Yes, it seems that HTC will allow you to unlock the bootloader with their newer devices, but you have to send in your unique device id so that your warranty will be voided. Also, it seems like the device is still s-on (which means you can't write to the system partition while the device is booted).
Deltadroid said:
Yes, it seems that HTC will allow you to unlock the bootloader with their newer devices, but you have to send in your unique device id so that your warranty will be voided. Also, it seems like the device is still s-on (which means you can't write to the system partition while the device is booted).
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Didn't mean to push the Thanks button, but enjoy the thanks anyway
It's a Nexus and the bootloader will be unlockable with "fastboot OEM unlock"
Message has been Baconized
I was referring to the HTC tablets that will be released after the nexus 9 is released. HTC will have their own tablets in a few months that are available in other sizes, but they will be s-on and you will lose warranty when unlocking the bootloader.
Edit: they will also not be stock android and have the latest version of Sense.
tablet
Yeah, It will have sense and as always it will be s-on. Not sure about the voiding warranty part though.
Deltadroid said:
I was referring to the HTC tablets that will be released after the nexus 9 is released. HTC will have their own tablets in a few months that are available in other sizes, but they will be s-on and you will lose warranty when unlocking the bootloader.
Edit: they will also not be stock android and have the latest version of Sense.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Sorry, misread you mate
armytricks said:
Yeah, It will have sense and as always it will be s-on. Not sure about the voiding warranty part though.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
The Tegra 3 (the HTC One X) never got s-off, no one was ever able to do it, so that might be the same with the K1
Message has been Baconized
I'm not exactly sure what HTC's bootloader unlocking policy is, but if you have to send them your specific device ID via email before unlocking your device, my guess is that they use that info to keep a database of who unlocks what for a reason. Most other manufacturers also require specific device information in order to give you that unlock code for your device and the price is the warranty.
Edit: Samsung, for example, does not require an unlock code via email. Samsung devices just set a bit in the bootloader that marks the device as being flashed with third party software. Luckily, Chainfire found a way to unset the marked bit so we could still flash the device back to stock to send it in for repairs. But, there is no way around email unlock codes. They will know then for sure what you did and void the warranty.

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