• Breaking News

    [Android][timeline][#f39c12]

    Friday, February 18, 2022

    Android Help Daily Superthread (Feb 18 2022) - Your daily thread for questions, device recommendations and general discussions!

    Android Help Daily Superthread (Feb 18 2022) - Your daily thread for questions, device recommendations and general discussions!


    Daily Superthread (Feb 18 2022) - Your daily thread for questions, device recommendations and general discussions!

    Posted: 18 Feb 2022 04:00 AM PST

    Note 1. Check MoronicMondayAndroid, which serves as a repository for our retired weekly threads. Just pick any thread and Ctrl-F your way to wisdom!

    Note 2. Join our IRC and Telegram chat-rooms! Please see our wiki for instructions.

    Please post your questions here. Feel free to use this thread for general questions/discussion as well.

    The /r/Android wiki now has a list of recommended phones and covers most areas, the links have been added below. Any suggestions or changes are welcome. Please contact us if you would like to help maintain this section.

    Entry level (most affordable devices costing under $250 (US)/ $325 (Canada)/ €200 (Europe)/ £200/ ₹12,500 (India)

    Midrange section, covering the $250-500(US)/$300-700(Canada)/€200-500/£200-450/₹12,500-30,000 segment

    Flagship section, containing the most expensive devices with the highest end specifications

    submitted by /u/curated_android
    [link] [comments]

    Shortwave is Google Inbox’s spiritual successor, created by a team of Ex-Googlers

    Posted: 18 Feb 2022 04:04 AM PST

    Google abandons plans for updatable NNAPI drivers in Android 13

    Posted: 17 Feb 2022 12:16 PM PST

    Material You dynamic theming is Android 12's biggest feature, and here's exactly how it works

    Posted: 17 Feb 2022 11:09 AM PST

    Google prepares to let everyone delete their Android advertising IDs

    Posted: 17 Feb 2022 03:19 PM PST

    AndroidCentral - Samsung Galaxy S22 Plus review: Avoiding the Ultra Note trap

    Posted: 17 Feb 2022 08:39 AM PST

    Techradar: Nothing just teased its first Android phone

    Posted: 17 Feb 2022 06:50 AM PST

    [Design Story] Behind the Design of the Galaxy S22 Series

    Posted: 17 Feb 2022 10:12 PM PST

    Initial reviews show the Samsung Galaxy S22 has worse battery compared to the Samsung Galaxy S21

    Posted: 18 Feb 2022 06:01 AM PST

    Xiaomi 11 Lite 5G NE bags Android 12-based MIUI 13 update - Gizmochina

    Posted: 17 Feb 2022 09:25 PM PST

    Galaxy Tab S8+ Review: Stuck In The Middle

    Posted: 17 Feb 2022 12:43 PM PST

    Samsung Galaxy S22 Ultra Real-World Test (Camera Comparison, Battery Test, & Vlog) - TheUnlockr

    Posted: 17 Feb 2022 09:21 AM PST

    Bringing you closer to what you love with new experiences in Windows 11

    Posted: 17 Feb 2022 10:24 AM PST

    Galaxy S22+ REVIEW | Samsung Did NOT Disappoint - Created By Ella

    Posted: 17 Feb 2022 11:07 AM PST

    Galaxy Tab S8 Ultra Review. Was I WRONG? | TechTablets

    Posted: 18 Feb 2022 02:27 AM PST

    Red Magic 7 and 7 Pro unveiled with 135W charging, UD camera, improved cooling (S8G1, integrated fan, 165Hz/120Hz AMOLED, from ¥4,000/$630 to ¥7500/$1183 for 18GB/1 TB)

    Posted: 17 Feb 2022 10:56 AM PST

    OnePlus Nord CE 2 5G debuts with Dimensity 900 and 65W charging

    Posted: 17 Feb 2022 06:33 AM PST

    Honor Magic 4: All we know so far about the upcoming premium smartphone

    Posted: 17 Feb 2022 08:06 AM PST

    Multiple Reddit/Twitter/YouTube apps? Here's a hack to return the app selection screen...

    Posted: 16 Feb 2022 02:59 PM PST

    In Android 12, Google decided users shouldn't be given a choice for which app to open links in. For example, every YouTube link leads to the YouTube app unless you download an alternative client like NewPipe, then fiddle around in Android's settings to allow NewPipe to accept every YouTube link. (And then YouTube no longer accepts links.)

    Luckily, there's an easy-ish solution: the open source UntrackMe app.

    (UntrackMe in action, intercepting a YouTube link)

    While UntrackMe was initially made to redirect YouTube, Twitter, and Reddit links to different websites, you can also keep the links as-is, which will cause it to prompt you for which browser to open a link in, mimicking the old Android prompts.

    You still have to fumble around in UntrackMe's Android settings to unlock this functionality, it's limited to built-in apps, and my phone can't intercept Google Maps or Instagram links for some reason... but it's better than nothing.

    submitted by /u/lo________________ol
    [link] [comments]

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