@baatliwala@lemmy.world to Android@lemdro.idEnglish • 21 hours agoGoogle is preparing to let you run Linux apps on Android, just like Chrome OSwww.androidauthority.comexternal-linkmessage-square21fedilinkarrow-up1132arrow-down14cross-posted to: google@lemdro.idlinux@programming.devlinux@lemmy.ml
arrow-up1128arrow-down1external-linkGoogle is preparing to let you run Linux apps on Android, just like Chrome OSwww.androidauthority.com@baatliwala@lemmy.world to Android@lemdro.idEnglish • 21 hours agomessage-square21fedilinkcross-posted to: google@lemdro.idlinux@programming.devlinux@lemmy.ml
minus-squareDerinlinkfedilinkEnglish12•14 hours agoTry Termux, it’s great. While it doesn’t get you sudo, it does get you a package manager and a decent amount of programs. I use it and rclone to sync my cell phone’s photos to a S3 bucket.
minus-squareAce! _SL/SlinkfedilinkEnglish4•6 hours agoYou can totally use sudo if you’re rooted. Using su also allows you to acces your native shell instead of Termuxs
minus-squareDerinlinkfedilinkEnglish1•1 hour agoYou’re totally right, but I wasn’t assuming they had a rooted phone. Is there any difference between the native shell and Termux’s? I just installed fish and chsh’ed it to default: after syncing over all my dotfiles it looks and acts as expected.
Try Termux, it’s great.
While it doesn’t get you sudo, it does get you a package manager and a decent amount of programs.
I use it and rclone to sync my cell phone’s photos to a S3 bucket.
You can totally use sudo if you’re rooted. Using su also allows you to acces your native shell instead of Termuxs
You’re totally right, but I wasn’t assuming they had a rooted phone.
Is there any difference between the native shell and Termux’s? I just installed fish and chsh’ed it to default: after syncing over all my dotfiles it looks and acts as expected.