I come from the webOS world where everything was developer friendly, only thing you needed to worry about was patches and kernels during a OTA update... so thus brings me here.
I know this has likly been answered somewhere. I've done some searching and I can't really find a stright up simple answer. Most people reference having really played with the phone. I'm simple..
I have a Nexus S 4G on sprint, and I did the root guide to gain root access. I have installed a few apps that require root, IE; Remove Ads, File Manager, Tether App. Nothing fancy. My boot loader is still unlocked and as far as I know, I never made the clockwork recovery mod stick (didn't mind reflashing it each time).
So at this point when google/sprint releases a update for this phone. Will I need to A. Lock Bootloader, B. Unroot? C. Reset my phone to Stock using related guides on xda-developers.
Again I haven't installed any fancy kernals, roms, overclocks etc. Just a few root apps.
And finally, once a update would be applied OTA, would I need to re-root and would said method be identical to how it was done before.
Thanks for the quick answers
I know this has likly been answered somewhere. I've done some searching and I can't really find a stright up simple answer. Most people reference having really played with the phone. I'm simple..
I have a Nexus S 4G on sprint, and I did the root guide to gain root access. I have installed a few apps that require root, IE; Remove Ads, File Manager, Tether App. Nothing fancy. My boot loader is still unlocked and as far as I know, I never made the clockwork recovery mod stick (didn't mind reflashing it each time).
So at this point when google/sprint releases a update for this phone. Will I need to A. Lock Bootloader, B. Unroot? C. Reset my phone to Stock using related guides on xda-developers.
Again I haven't installed any fancy kernals, roms, overclocks etc. Just a few root apps.
And finally, once a update would be applied OTA, would I need to re-root and would said method be identical to how it was done before.
Thanks for the quick answers