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No problem.Forgot about the knox, I think I'll leave it be for now, just got it today and don't want to risk the warranty. But thanks again for the links.
Forgot about the knox, I think I'll leave it be for now, just got it today and don't want to risk the warranty. But thanks again for the links.
I guess I'll just enjoy not having all that carrier bloat.
Disable the app and then hide the icon.
Not to hijack the thread, but also with Samsung pay, your card information is never actually used. For security reasons and to avoid issues with chipped cards, Samsung Pay actually issues you a different card number, so your actual information is never out there. They periodically change the card number, which is an added bonus.I said several years ago that rooting would become less and less important, and more and more of a pain. I bought the original Motorola Droid in October 2009, and by December it was rooted with a custom ROM on it. I've rooted and ROMmed almost every Android device I've owned... not because I didn't like the stock interface or features, but because there were features I wanted that only a custom ROM could provide. However, Android has grown up a lot in the last few years, and many of the features I used to get with a ROM are now stock. I use online banking and mobile payments DAILY: rooting these days would reduce my phone's capabilities, not increase them.
Besides, it's worth staying stock just to set up Samsung Pay at a store with a credit card terminal, and the cashier says "oh, sorry... we're not set up for mobile payments"... and I hold the phone to the terminal, make the payment and the receipt spits out. And I get to say "Samsung Pay - Apple can't do that"
PRICELESS
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Nothing to disable or hide, the device is unlocked direct from Samsung.Disable the app and then hide the icon.
I have also been rooting since the Droid back in the day and can see exactly what you mean. LOL on the Apple can't do that.I said several years ago that rooting would become less and less important, and more and more of a pain. I bought the original Motorola Droid in October 2009, and by December it was rooted with a custom ROM on it. I've rooted and ROMmed almost every Android device I've owned... not because I didn't like the stock interface or features, but because there were features I wanted that only a custom ROM could provide. However, Android has grown up a lot in the last few years, and many of the features I used to get with a ROM are now stock. I use online banking and mobile payments DAILY: rooting these days would reduce my phone's capabilities, not increase them.
Besides, it's worth staying stock just to set up Samsung Pay at a store with a credit card terminal, and the cashier says "oh, sorry... we're not set up for mobile payments"... and I hold the phone to the terminal, make the payment and the receipt spits out. And I get to say "Samsung Pay - Apple can't do that"
PRICELESS
![]()
Not to hijack the thread, but also with Samsung pay, your card information is never actually used. For security reasons and to avoid issues with chipped cards, Samsung Pay actually issues you a different card number, so your actual information is never out there. They periodically change the card number, which is an added bonus.
BigRedGonzo
All set upI think you'll find Samsung Pay faster and more secure than a credit card transaction - especially the chip cards, which are slow as molasses. Samsung Pay uses tokenization, so your actual credit card number is never used. Plus it flips out the cashiers... extra points!
Just tried it out today, the cashier was like huh? How did you do that LOL.I think you'll find Samsung Pay faster and more secure than a credit card transaction - especially the chip cards, which are slow as molasses. Samsung Pay uses tokenization, so your actual credit card number is never used. Plus it flips out the cashiers... extra points!
If I root a device and then modify a system file and then unroot the device, will my changes stay?