![]() ![]() You should see a notification that says “USB charging this device”. ![]() To do this swipe down on your tablet to bring up the quick settings menu. I still had to specify within the tablet that I wanted to transfer files from my PC. Its fine to check the “ Always allow from this computer” box here so as not to be bothered with this pop-up more than once.Īlthough MTP is enabled by default (at least it was on mine). Since this is hopefully the first time you’ve done this your Nexus 9 tablet will ask you to accept the unique RSA fingerprint for your computer. Now its time to connect your Nexus 9 tablet to your Windows machine via a micro USB cable. If you have you’ll need to follow the driver unistall process outlined in Step 1 and Step 2 on your NRT. If you’ve never attached your tablet to the Windows machine you can probably skip straight to Step 3. This will bring up a wizard that will download all of the correct drivers which will be needed to push/pull files to/from your tablet during the rooting process. Open up the Nexus Root Toolkit on your Windows machine and click on the “ Full Driver Installation Guide” button under the Initial Setup area. ![]() Download it and install it on a Windows machine. The latest version of NRT can be obtained using the above link. Admittedly I have know technical knowledge as to why I’m suggesting this, only that I tried and failed at this 3 or 4 times before finally succeeding and on the final try that worked the only thing I did differently was skip the account setup process.Īs rooting mobile devices in gernal is an expansive topic we’re going to limit the scope of this article to the method which worked for me and that is to use the Nexus Root Toolkit from WugFresh to unlock the bootloader and then to manually install SuperSU from TWRP. The idea is to have as close to a stock un-touched tablet to begin with. I’m starting off with a fresh tablet, just taken out of the packaging and during the initial setup process I skip the add account step and say no to all the prompts. Installing Kali Nethunter should be attempted at your own risk. ComponentĭISCLAIMER: Do not blame me if you brick your tablet. This is what they were at the time the article was published. The card used in this article is verified by the Kali NetHunter team and listed in their documentation as a supported device. The only real requirement is of course a supported Android device however this guide also makes use of the keyboard folio which should be considered a necessity if you plan to do any real work on the tablet as well as an OTG cable for plugging in an external WiFi card. However, I'd advise starting over and stopping at the first hiccup you see.Everything you need to begin installing Kali NetHunter can be purchased on Amazon. It's possible/likely that there were other entries in /etc/apt/source.list prior to running this command.Īt a minimum, you could try running apt-get update, which should get the latest mirror metadata (for the single entry you now have in /etc/apt/sources.list), and then try running apt update again. That singular > character causes /etc/apt/sources.list to get overwritten with only deb kali-rolling main non-free contrib. However, you've mentioned making some other changes, and it's also visible in the screenshot that you ran:Įcho "deb kali-rolling main non-free contrib" > /etc/apt/sources.list I.e., your local metadata for a file in the repository says that the size is "5," but by the time the file is downloaded, a mirror sync is in progress on the other end and the size is now "7". That could be what's happening (or what happened). ![]() The screenshot shows that files obtained from the repository don't match the expected size, and indicates a potential explanation: Mirror sync in progress?. ![]()
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