Minecraft on chromebook without rooting document

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But if you have most of your stuff stored online, you can easily sign in with the same account afterwards and recover everything. On the HP Chromebook 14, I got up to 50 fps on fairly low settings on a server which I think is pretty impressive for a chromebook. Now that you're at the terminal, type the following command in: shell 5. It runs the fastest but looks very plain and vanilla. Next, you will be able to run commands with the sudo command. I will show you how to install the terminal, firefox, and the software centre. GalliumOS will start up and ask you for a username and password. This is your last chance to do so. It would be prudent to make sure any important files are backed up prior to making any changes to the rootfs.

I've had the Samsung Chromebook Plus for about 2 weeks now, and I love it! Chrome OS is pretty good at handling itself for notetaking with the stylus, and the gorgeous screen is great for high res stuff although Chrome OS is in desperate need of DPI scaling. It even runs Android apps out of the box! So far, I only have 2 major gripes about Chrome OS: -It cannot do multitasking on anything Android or Chrome app when in tablet mode buttons disappear, window drags are disabled even on the beta branch -Android cannot be rooted on the Chrome OS so I think. That second one is the one I'd like help with. Can you root the Android OS installed on the Chromebook? I'd love to know; I have a game called War Robots I want to play on it, but I can't manually turn down the graphical fidelity without using GLTools. Any help is appreciated! Yes, certainly you can root Android on Chrome OS. The rootfs of the Android container is read-only by default, so the method I've been using involves making a writeable copy of the Android rootfs. I have written a script to automate the above procedure, if you would like to try it out you can do so by entering the following into the Chrome OS shell then rebooting. It would be prudent to make sure any important files are backed up prior to making any changes to the rootfs. Quote: Originally Posted by Nolirum Yes, certainly you can root Android on Chrome OS. The rootfs of the Android container is read-only by default, so the method I've been using involves making a writeable copy of the Android rootfs. I have written a script to automate the above procedure, if you would like to try it out you can do so by entering the following into the Chrome OS shell then rebooting. It would be prudent to make sure any important files are backed up prior to making any changes to the rootfs. On a general basis, running scripts from random strangers on the Internet is a bad thing. But I'll take it! I've encountered an ID10T error though: I set the debugging password during setup, and I THOUGHT that was the sudo password to run your script. Problem is, that's not true, and I've no idea what it is. Tried Google Account password, no dice. Tried Chromebook PIN, no dice. Tried Debug Pass set in Setup, no dice. Tried password, no dice. Tried null password no input , no dice. What is the sudo password? Did I miss something? Yeah, this seems to be quite a common issue. Perhaps it would be more user-friendly if more information was available during the initial OOB setup, such as a link describing the 'debugging features' feature's features in a bit more depth. Anyway, if you go into a VT with e. Ctrl+Alt+F2, you should be able to log in there as the user 'root' with your debugging password, and then you can run the command chromeos-setdevpasswd to set a sudo password for chronos. Quote: Originally Posted by Nolirum Yeah, this seems to be quite a common issue. Perhaps it would be more user-friendly if more information was available during the initial OOB setup, such as a link describing the 'debugging features' feature's features in a bit more depth. Anyway, if you go into a VT with e. Ctrl+Alt+F2, you should be able to log in there as the user 'root' with your debugging password, and then you can run the command chromeos-setdevpasswd to set a sudo password for chronos. Quote: Originally Posted by Nolirum Yes, certainly you can root Android on Chrome OS. The rootfs of the Android container is read-only by default, so the method I've been using involves making a writeable copy of the Android rootfs. I have written a script to automate the above procedure, if you would like to try it out you can do so by entering the following into the Chrome OS shell then rebooting. It would be prudent to make sure any important files are backed up prior to making any changes to the rootfs.

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