To any android developer, user or fan, getting Android device rooted is always the first step to go. Once rooted, we will be able to get the most of Android device including removing bloatware or pre-installed apps, customizing the appearance by changing fonts or installing custom ROMs, making it faster than before. Many tools are available to help you root Android device, but few of them are actually easy and fast, at least not easy and fast enough as Kingo one-click root.

In most cases, tethering is blocked and removed from Android phones. This is because carriers want you to buy a separate plan and pay for more data to be able to use tethering. Avoid overspending, root your device today and make it a mobile hotspot!


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Their service is the best and worth every pennyThey will root your phone, even if it takes a tech hours of trial and errorI have an obscure brand Android and they managed to root it, sure it costs and maybe you could do it yourself, but if you are not that savvy why take a chance on bricking it when One Click Root will not fail you

Through this, I leave in public my great satisfaction to have hired One Click Root services. The whole team came together to help me and especially coach Navneet.It's a lot of work rooting in a Moto Z Play that comes from China, but in the end, it worked out.I fearlessly recommend their service! #Keep it up

Wow! What service! I had a phone which took the help of a technician. It did take awhile. But he got my old Galaxy S5 rooted.. Verison does everything to prevent rooting. But with extremely professional help, it got done. I work in the computer industry; for the last 30 years. I know good tech service, and these guys do it.

This I believe is the 4th time I have utilized this service. Each time it has been a good experience. Just recently had a flash done by them on my Samsung 8 plus because the Software update of Oreo would not install. It took the Tech a little time, but, he was successful and did a very good job. I would recommend this place for rooting and flashing of your phone. The tech that did my flash first name John, from the Philippines, was very professional, understanding, took me through it step by step and his english skills were very commendable. This tech name John is a valuable asset to Click One Root and I hope they realize this. Thank you John you did an excellent job. Ron the one with the Samsung S8 Plus. JOB WELL DONE SIR!!!!!!!

dont know where to write this but this seems like as good a place as any!!!!just wanted to give MADD PROPS to BRYAN who rooted my S8PLUS.... IDE BEEN AT IT FOR 2 DAYS AND EVEN SOFT BRICKED MY PHONE .... i was able to finally bring it back to stock when i through in the towel ands paid the dough ....... and this cat came in and made it look like childs play!!!!.....my hats off to ya bud ....SERIOUSLY.....NICE WORK ?

Legal Disclaimer: Root is an advanced technique within Android. This technique gives you permissions to perform actions on your device that are not otherwise possible. These abilities allow you and your installed apps to perform actions on your device that can prove detrimental to your device. Although rooting is not illegal to perform on your own device, it can and will void the warranty on your device. Should something go wrong, it is your own responsibility, so proceed with caution. If you install OneClickRoot service software onto a phone device which you do not own, we will fully cooperate with law officials to the fullest extent possible. All trademarks on this site are property of their respective owners. Mentioned trademarks are used solely for the purpose of describing Smartphone and carrier compatibility for our mobile phone rooting service.

Not long ago, rooting an Android device was a slightly tedious task that required downloading software onto a PC, connecting the mobile phone to it and hoping for the best. Now, although the process on some devices is still a bit of a pain, on most devices the process is fast and easy, thanks to apps like One Click Root.

This application can perform the operation really quickly. All you have to do is download the application to your phone and scan your device to see if it can be rooted. It is compatible with any Android device from 2.1 onwards and also with the major brands on the market.

The advantages of being rooted, or a SuperUser, are related to accessing those operating system functions that are certainly there, but which cannot be seen by all users. For example, wouldn't you like to be able to delete those pre-installed apps that you never use, those they call bloatware? Well, you can do it if you are rooted. These and other functions, like accessing applications that require your being rooted, are just some of the advantages offered by this option.

I have a Samsung galaxy tab A and I couldn't find many guides on how to root android tablets I was hoping to ask this subreddit if there are ways to root my android tablet. I've heard in the past that those 1 click root installers can't be trusted.

This is very tedious and time-consuming.

Does anyone know how to make this process more efficient?

My ideal case would be that the TBrowser opens the .root file automatically when I double click it in the Ubuntu file explorer.

Does anyone know what I could do to open the TBrowser by double clicking on a .root file?

What I did notice, the nightly release opens up RBrowser rather than TBrowser, which is unfortunate because the HTTP server RBrowser utilises is killed instantly and means that the web browser opens with nothing to connect to. Is this something that upstream is aware of/has a solution to? It works as expected when invoked in the terminal properly and only fails if set to open with double clicks.

I could not find out how to do it via the GUI, but I added the line to the mimeaps.list and now the TBrowser actually launches when I double click on a .root file!

This is what I was asking for!

Thank you very much @jalopezg and @petrstepanov

The information given is sparse - and actions requiring root permissions cannot be done using Dolphin. It may have been possible in the past but as KDE is moving towards wayland they are slowly removing options which are considered unsafe for the general stability of the operating system.

But as you say you have used ext4 - then it is root owned - and the tried and tested approach to change that is to open a terminal and mount the device then chown or chmod using sudo.

And i dont know if that has something to do with the problem, but when i try to execute dolphin (the file manager) as root via command (sudo dolphin) it says "Executing Dolphin with sudo is not possible due to unfixable security vulnerabilities."

Plasma does not like when you try to run root actions in a GUI. Actually linux in general does not like this behavior thus the warning. You will need to do some research as to how to properly use the terminal with elevated privileges to make these types of file system changes.

What happened just before it stopped working?

Did you perform an system update, installed a package, got a computer hang, etc.?

For a bit of debugging, you could run Dolphin from terminal and then try to open as root within Dolphin like you did before. Maybe something will post in the terminal.

As far as I know it has been this way for quite some time. Unless you were running your system as root which is also a terrible idea. It would help if we knew what you were trying to accomplish then we can give you better advice. Here is an example of how to move a file in a terminal with elevated privileges...

You have a file named xyz(for this let us say it is in Documents (this is case sensitive) and you want to move it to /usr/share/themes which a normal user can not do since /usr/ is in root.

You need to open a terminal.

then change directory to Documents.

cd Documents

Once there you can issue ls to check the file name and spelling before you move/copy it.

now while still in Documents type su to elevate your user rights.

Now to move/copy the file to the new location.

cp -r xyz /usr/share/themes

It will not give a confirmation only a warning if you get it wrong.

Now move to the dirctory where you have moved the file.

cd /usr/share/themes

again check to see it is there.

ls

That's it you may have to log out and in again after it is case by case.

Years ago, it was easy to root any device. You installed KingRoot, KingoRoot, or a similar app. You hit the large "Root" button, and let the app do the rest. After 5 minutes or so, a green "Root Succeeded!" prompt would pop up. You could choose to keep the root app; or you could uninstall it and install a clean root manager app like SuperSU or Superuser.

I had this question a few months ago, and I found this answer through some research, so I thought to share my research in this site by answering my question, considering the fake information online. (For example, the official KingoRoot site says that it can root Android Oreo which is completely wrong information) ff782bc1db

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