I don't think you can. On the other hand, if you register a Google account, use a secondary user on your phone to login, install the app and activate the Chromecast, I think you can subsequently use it without the Google account. Delete the secondary user once you're done with the setup. You wouldn't have given Google any useful data and you'd have cost them some.
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Oh that's smart. Would it essentially be just a miracast dongle thing?
Well I don't know what OP is planning to use it as, but desktop VLC can cast to Chromecast on the LAN for example.
Mostly this.
Miracast is a separate, older protocol from what Chromecast uses.
Imagine how much more convenient the world would be if the Chromecast protocol was open source
The newer version is: https://w3c.github.io/openscreenprotocol/
I used to be on that team at Google and when I left they were working on an open source implementation of it.
That's awesome if they're implementing it.
My Google home and Chromecast at the moment are necessary evils because when I sit down to watch something I don't want to have to worry about whether it'll work with x or y, whether I'm getting good bitrate etc
Would however be really cool if I was able to cast my screen, cast YouTube etc from my Linux laptop
Have been able to do it in the past using chrome but I already need to keep two browsers installed don't want a third
Less ewaste too. Less profits for google though...
If it's actually possible when my Chromecast stops being usable I'm putting Linux on it and using it to run some light weight projects (someone mentioned you can Linux them)
(someone mentioned you can Linux them)
Source?
In that line, is there an open standards, no Google required answer to the Chromecast?