Once I overclock the phone, say to 800MHz, is it possible to go back to the factory default setting or the original settings without the overclocking ???
And will the performance be the same once I go back to the original way..
Yes, you can easily go back to settings without overclocking. And your performance should be the same unless you've burned up your N900 or something, which hasn't happened to anyone yet.
However, Nokia has said that overclocking voids the warranty, which is a consideration.
Do plenty of research before overclocking. Nokia will know because the EEPROM in the chip will state that for x-period of time it ran with a core frequency of, say, 800Mhz and not the stock 600Mhz. Nokia will know and they have the tools to find out.
In answer to all of your questions, I would have to ask that before you ask too many you gather all the research data that you can. Start in the overclocking thread, and then check the overclocking Wiki. Read, understand, digest and then make the decision which way to go. After that, bear in mind that either custom kernel you download will not allow the recently released fCamera to run properly, and they need to be uninstalled.
If you uninstall incorrectly, your phone will be bricked, requiring re-flashing. Do not go down this road unless you are comformtable with it.
Very true Switch_ . I am currently very happy with the default speed of phone & just got a little tempted reading all the threads on overclocking.. So I stay on with the default settings as I have already paid for an extended warranty too.. Tnx
Thnx geneven.. Once I overclock using custom kernel, then how to go back to the default settings..
And once I go back to the default settings & take my phone to Nokia, they wouldnt know right that the phone was overclocked?/
You read the overclocking docs and they give you a simple way to get back to the standard kernel.
You can use the custom kernel without overclocking -- when you install it you aren't overclocking. Until you tell it something like kernel-config limits 500 850 it isn't overclocking. Then if you stop telling it that, it isn't overclocking any more.
But it isn't 100% sure that going back to the standard kernel would make it impossible to tell that the phone has been overclocked. Some people claim that there are ways for Nokia to tell.
I have read that the N900 is ALREADY overclocked, by Nokia, so it would seem to me that they CAN'T tell that WE overclocked it.
My bet is that if you go back to the standard kernel they can't tell.
I think that you are on your honor not to be demanding a lot of support from Nokia if you have problems that might have been caused by overclocking. However, I have seen no such problems.
Do plenty of research before overclocking. Nokia will know because the EEPROM in the chip will state that for x-period of time it ran with a core frequency of, say, 800Mhz and not the stock 600Mhz. Nokia will know and they have the tools to find out.
In answer to all of your questions, I would have to ask that before you ask too many you gather all the research data that you can. Start in the overclocking thread, and then check the overclocking Wiki. Read, understand, digest and then make the decision which way to go. After that, bear in mind that either custom kernel you download will not allow the recently released fCamera to run properly, and they need to be uninstalled.
If you uninstall incorrectly, your phone will be bricked, requiring re-flashing. Do not go down this road unless you are comformtable with it.
This is interesting. Since you say that Nokia can tell, can you estimate how many support requests have been denied by Nokia because the phone has been overclocked? My personal estimate: zero.
I have not seen one single posting claiming that Nokia has rejected a support request due to overclocking, have you? After all, most support requests are about things like a broken usb port, which overclocking doesn't affect.
Thanks , so nothing is restricted after the overclock, except for voiding warranty?
and last question:
If I use the "Enhanced Linux Kernel for power users" from the System catagory in the app manager is it completely reversible? Can I return the N900 to its stock state without any side effects (exempt CPU damage)?
Thanks , so nothing is restricted after the overclock, except for voiding warranty?
and last question:
If I use the "Enhanced Linux Kernel for power users" from the System catagory in the app manager is it completely reversible? Can I return the N900 to its stock state without any side effects (exempt CPU damage)?
Yes, after overclocking you can go completely back to not overclocking, with no restrictions except for being out of warranty, and no sideffects I've ever heard about.