i didn't mean the phrase phone hacker to imply hurting anyone- it's your phone!
i meant it in the sense of being a technological risk taker to a higher degree than the average person;
I don't think anyone thought you meant hackers hurt people, just that hacking in general was bad or risky.
Spend some time at lifehacker.com and look at what they offer. I'd say a hacker is one who hacks, or cobbles together, various items in ways not seen before or in unusual ways to accomplish a task. It might be innovative or it might be commonplace. Sometimes it is a bandaid, like trying to use duct tape to patch a leaky hose.
Those that rooted saw possibilities. The true hackers here are those who rooted their phones first. Those who worked (hacked) their way through the steps that are so clearly outlined for anyone willing to take the time to read through them. They definitely took a bigger risk than those that follow them.
Like you I still have not rooted but I also know it is just a matter of time. I've watched here as many had uneventful upgrades done and seen a few yank their hair out too.
I don't need wifi tethering but my cpu running at 800mhz does interest me. I can try it out and if impressed keep it. If not my phone can go back how it is today.
I think I disagree that most here have rooted vs not though. There are 37,000 members on this forum. (Poll anyone?) So, no, I don't think you are the only person. I do think the more active posters here have rooted though. They've read the steps on rooting, they understood them, and the risk was deemed acceptable...or nonexistent even.
To borrow a signature, for anyone on the fence...take 30 minutes, read through these steps, and decide if its doable. Then, ask yourself what will you gain. Then decide if the gain is worth it:
- Learn how to root and install Bugless Beast from start to finish.
- Please read before asking about SetCPU!
- CPU temperature test results (overclocked/stock)
So far I haven't rooted so it must not be, but I'm curious enough that I'll do it eventually just to see how green the grass really is: