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I just want to know the actual difference between android dev phone, android nomral phone and android rooted phone.

Can we not buy dev phone from a physical shop or from some where else except android marketplace?

Can we buy android rooted phone? If yes then from where ?

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2 Answers 2

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A developer phone can only be bought from Google, if you are a registered developer. The Android source tree contains (almost) all source code needed to re-build and flash the phone.

A normal phone is what you can buy in a shop.

A rooted phone is a normal phone that someone has gained root access to. Root access does not necessarily mean that you can re-build the software, although there are some community-driven projects that will help you do that, for example CyanogenMod.

You can't buy a rooted phone, instead you buy a "normal" phone and root it yourself. Have a look at XDA Developer's forum for some guidelines.

The one exception is the Samsung Nexus S that you can buy as a "normal" phone, unlock the boot loader and then build software for using the Android open source project. I assume the Galaxy Nexus will give you the same possibility, but I haven't tried it myself yet.

If you are developing apps, you do not need root access. You can just use any normal Android phone for that. But if you are developing some platform features, you need a rooted phone or a developer phone. Or you can get one of the many developer boards available, like the Beagleboard and the Pandaboards. These boards will not look like a phone, but they are superb for platform development.

Basically, it all boils down to what you are going to use it for.

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  • But I read somewhere that if you want to use features like accelerometer, compass, bluetooth etc, you need a phone. But in normal phone, there are restrictions like you can not use file explorer to see the directory structure or you can not run hierarchy viewer.
    – Vikas
    Dec 8, 2011 at 14:49
  • Basically, it all boils down to what you are going it for. >> I will not buy phone for each application i will develop or i am developing. So I am asking from a general application point of view.
    – Vikas
    Dec 8, 2011 at 14:52
  • Strictly speaking, to use a compass, accelerometer or any other hardware peripheral, you will need a device with those peripherals. The ST-Ericsson Snowball board is another good one. But if you are doing app development you should probably get a phone.
    – Robert
    Dec 9, 2011 at 7:35
  • The file explorer and the hierarchy viewer can be used on any phone, but you can only see files/views for the application you are developing (debuggable=true). The file explorer can also show all unsecure file systems, such as sd-card and usb storage.
    – Robert
    Dec 9, 2011 at 7:38
  • If you only are going to get one phone for all your app development, then I recommend a Galaxy Nexus. That will give you all the hardware features you need. Just keep in mind that you do need to test your apps on other versions of Android and on different screen sizes. You can use the Android emulator for that, if you haven't got access to other phones. The emulator will not give you exactly the same performance as a realt phone, but it is good enough for most situations. You can easily set up an automated test environment to run your app on numerous emulator configurations.
    – Robert
    Dec 9, 2011 at 7:47
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You can develop software on almost every android phone but there are some differences.

Dev phone has unlocked bootloader, and will allow you to flash new OS images easily. (but you can unlock bootloader on other phones too, almost every bootloader out there was already hacked, and some phones are unlocked as well)

Phone coming from carrier will contain a ton of crappy carrier branded software, and you will be unable to remove it (but you can root phone, unlock bootloader and flash another OS image voiding all the warranty in process), and there could be some restrictions like "you bad boy do not uses VoiIP - we like to sell you minutes) - but you can also develop software with it

Rooted phone is the same phone, but OS is hacked to allow you root access (there is a linux below the covers) - some applications need this, but it is not really portable. You can develop software with it, but some things working with rooted phone may be unavailable to real users in field.

Conclusion: if you like to see what most users in field are experiencing, stick to standard phone without alterations.

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  • But I read somewhere that if you want to use features like accelerometer, compass, bluetooth etc, you need a phone. But in normal phone, there are restrictions like you can not use file explorer to see the directory structure or you can not run hierarchy viewer.
    – Vikas
    Dec 8, 2011 at 14:48
  • Not exaclty. You can simulate hardware with emulator, but this will be PITA - so real phone is preferable (not to speak about emulator speed, which is kind of slow). You can see file hierarchy in normal phones, but not private files. In order ti see them you will need root access. Normal phones are enough for most development tasks Dec 8, 2011 at 14:51

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