I used unrevoked. I understand the opportunity for learning, however, I don't really care to take the extra time to root.
I'm in a different position than the standard Android user. As an adept linux user, I don't see what I need to "learn" in regard to adb shell. It's a shell. It has a help. It has command syntax. Execute desired commands with the right syntax. Whenever I had to modify file permissions, push / get files etc... I never had a problem. A tedious exercise doesn't really teach me much.
I've also learned the relevance and significance of bootloaders, the intention of a recovery and how it's manipulated to serve as a delivery vehicle for software, radio updates and their relevance to kernels.
I've rooted phones the "long" way in the past (and yes, every phone is different). I know one can claim a certain degree of competence after rooting their phone without using the 1click method.
I do think everyone should know how to perform basic troubleshooting. If they can't I don't think they should be rooting--let alone the 1click method. However, using the long method of rooting isn't the only way that one can learn about how their phone works. Using the long-method as a self-segregating process of separating people who shouldn't be rooting in the first place... is not a bad concept though. Just let me have my 1click method.
I'm in a different position than the standard Android user. As an adept linux user, I don't see what I need to "learn" in regard to adb shell. It's a shell. It has a help. It has command syntax. Execute desired commands with the right syntax. Whenever I had to modify file permissions, push / get files etc... I never had a problem. A tedious exercise doesn't really teach me much.
I've also learned the relevance and significance of bootloaders, the intention of a recovery and how it's manipulated to serve as a delivery vehicle for software, radio updates and their relevance to kernels.
I've rooted phones the "long" way in the past (and yes, every phone is different). I know one can claim a certain degree of competence after rooting their phone without using the 1click method.
I do think everyone should know how to perform basic troubleshooting. If they can't I don't think they should be rooting--let alone the 1click method. However, using the long method of rooting isn't the only way that one can learn about how their phone works. Using the long-method as a self-segregating process of separating people who shouldn't be rooting in the first place... is not a bad concept though. Just let me have my 1click method.
