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Title: How to Spoof Your Chromebook User Agent for Sites That Don’t Support Chrome OS
Author: Barnicoz Tech
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Not all browsers handle websites the same, and if they don’t support your operating system or browser, you could be denied access. Luckil...
Title image of a Chromebook laying closed on a white background
Not all browsers handle websites the same, and if they don’t support your operating system or browser, you could be denied access. Luckily, you can spoof the user agent on Chrome OS to make it look like you use a completely different system.
Websites identify incoming connections by their user agent—a line of text sent in the HTTPS header with the browser name, version, and operating system. The reason they do this is to determine how to render the page specific to your device. One of the more common uses is to differentiate the desktop view from a mobile layout. However, sometimes you might need to spoof the user agent to trick a site that claims it’s incompatible with your browser.

How to Change Your User Agent

To get started, open Chrome, click the three dots, and then select More Tools > Developer Tools. Alternatively, you can press Ctrl+Shift+I on the keyboard.
Click the three dots, point to More Tools, then click on Developer Tools
Click “Network Conditions,” located at the bottom of the Developer Tools pane.
Click the Network Conditions tab at the bottom of the Developer Tools pane
If you don’t see this option, click the menu icon, and then select More Tools > Network Conditions to enable it.
If you don't see the Network Conditions tab, click the menu icon, select More Tools, then Network Conditions to alternatively open it
Under the User Agent section, uncheck “Select Automatically.”
Uncheck the Select Automatically option
Chrome offers a long list of pre-configured user agent templates you can select from the drop-down menu.
A list of all the preconfigured user agents in Chrome
If there is a specific user agent you want to use that isn’t listed in the drop-down menu, you can copy and paste a custom one into the text field underneath.
Enter a custom user agent into the text field below the drop-down menu
Afterward—with the Developer Tool pane still open in the current tab—go to any website, and the user agent is set to the custom one you specified until you close Developer Tools.
Go to a website with the Developer Tools still open to view it using the specified user agent
You can even get a little creative with it!
Specified user agent indicating it's really just Chrome on Chrome OS
User agent spoofing is a temporary setting that stays active only while Developer Tools is open and in the current tab. After you close the Developer Tool, your user agent goes back to the default selection by Chrome.

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