
Tapping into Developer mode with Android 4.4. James Martin/CNET
Rooting is the Android equivalent of
jailbreaking, a means of unlocking the operating system so you can
install unapproved (by Google) apps, update the OS, replace the
firmware, overclock (or underclock) the processor, customize just about
anything, and so on.
Of course, for the average user, rooting
sounds like — and can be — a scary process. After all, “rooting” around
in your smartphone’s core software might seem like a recipe for
disaster. One wrong move and you could end up with bricked handset.
Thankfully, there’s a new Windows utility that makes rooting a one-click affair: Kingo Android Root. It’s free, and based on my initial tests with a Virgin Mobile Supreme, it works like a charm. (Be sure to check the compatibility list
before you proceed, keeping in mind that although the Supreme wasn’t on
it, the utility had no problem with it.) Here’s how to get started.
Step one: Download and install Kingo Android Root.

Screenshot by Rick Broida/CNET
Step two: Enable USB
debugging mode on your phone. If it’s running Android 4.0 or 4.1, tap
Settings, Developer Options, then tick the box for “USB debugging.” (You
may need to switch “Developer options” to On before you can do so.) On
Android 4.2, tap Settings, About Phone, Developer Options, and then tick
USB debugging.” Then tap OK to approve the setting change.
On Android 4.3 and later (and some
versions of 4.2), tap Settings, About Phone, then scroll down to Build
Number. Tap it seven times, at which point you should see the message,
“You are now a developer!”
Step three: Run Android
Root on your PC, then connect your phone via its USB sync cable. After a
moment, the former should show a connection to the latter.


Step four: Click Root,
then sit back and wait while the utility does its thing. The
aforementioned Supreme took all of about two minutes, including the
automated reboot at the end.
And that’s all there is to it. If you
decide you want to reverse the process, just run Android Root again,
connect your phone, then click Remove Root.
Hit the comments to share your favorite tricks for a rooted Android phone.
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