Hello, I was wondering about how to root my tablet, it is a 10.1" onn surf walmart tablet, I wanted to root it, but all the guides I could find are either outdated, or the wrong model (or both!) and I’m kinda at my wits end.I have OEM unlocking and usb debugging, so i can root it i believe.

I wonder if there is any software or app that can dump the ROM file? because I can’t seem to find any archive of the model, and like i said, the ones people talk about are the wrong type and i don’t wanna risk breaking anything.

thank you.

  • @[email protected]OP
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    810 months ago

    I’m very sorry, i’m not very smart, why do i need a superuser app? what does it do in the process? also thank you for responding so quickly, i always appreciate help.

    • nomad
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      710 months ago

      Supersu is like sudo for Linux or run as administrator for windows if you know it. If you try operations your phone wouldn’t allow due to lack off privileges it will promt you if you want it to enforce that via root.

    • @thantik
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      10 months ago

      If you aren’t very smart, you should probably not be rooting. What exactly are you trying to accomplish with rooting that you can’t do otherwise?

      If you’re trying to disable applications, you can do that with ADB. If you’re trying to delete them; know that they live in the system partition and will not free up any space.

      • @[email protected]OP
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        310 months ago

        to be honest, i’m not sure, just because i can doesn’t mean that I should. I suppose I just wanted to be able to remove bloat and get a add blocker.

        • @shigutso
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          810 months ago

          If you want to remove bloat, you can use this software. It doesn’t require root. Just be careful to not disable important system apps otherwise you can make your tablet unusable and will have to find a way to go to recovery and factory reset.

          https://github.com/Universal-Debloater-Alliance/universal-android-debloater-next-generation

          I used it on a friend’s cheap Chinese phone and it removed a lot of stuff. The phone was much better after that, but of course, be extra careful to not remove important stuff.

          Good luck!

        • @thantik
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          10 months ago

          Anything you think is bloat, can be uninstalled, and then disabled. Root isn’t required for this, and deleting apps via root doesn’t gain you anything because the apps are installed in the system partition and not any of the user partitions. Android has this capability built in.

          Switch to Firefox and set it as your default browser for the device and install the uBlock origin addon for it (you can install this from within the firefox app). It won’t get rid of all ads, but will work while you’re browsing any web pages.

          If you’re not technically minded, or don’t have some sort of linux/command line experience, you’re likely to just brick your device irreparably.

          You can also probably block ads by changing your DNS provider manually in the settings to something like dns.adguard.com - which will basically do the same thing a PiHole on your local network would. It’ll essentially null-route your requests to the ad servers.

          • @[email protected]OP
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            410 months ago

            oh i see. I am slightly tech inclined, but im just not phone smart if that makes sense. I always make sure to install ublock on my firefox’s (mobile, pc). and what should I use to remove the stock apps?. and while my browser is ad-free, I was wondering if i could block in-app ads? and thank you for informing me about everything!.

            • @thantik
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              10 months ago

              You can just go into the uninstall screen to uninstall and then disable preinstalled applications. Disabling them causes Android to hibernate them, essentially - meaning they don’t ever fire up on their own again, and since they’re installed in the system partition, you don’t necessarily lose any space by them being there, because you don’t gain any space back by removing them.

              There are multiple ad-blocker apps that use your phone…as a VPN loopback, which can then intercept and block ads for the whole device. I don’t know of a particular one to suggest, as I run my own adblocked network from home and rely on a similar, but ultimately different method.