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Help Answering the phone question

Hi all, Samsung J3 and I use to just swipe to answer the phone.
For some reason now I have to swipe, then press keypad and press 1.
Help please.....
 
Last edited:
Hi,
Remove sim card and insert sim card.

Go to settings >storage>cached data>clear cached data .

Go to settings>storage>apps/ appication manager> all> Dialer> force stop> clear data.

Go to settings>storage>apps/ appication manager> all>phone> force stop> clear data.

Go to settings>storage>apps/ appication manager> all>phone ( 2nd) > force stop> clear data.

Restart device.
 
Thanks for that.

My wife ended up going to the Sprint Store and found somehow we got on to being a Google subscriber. This then, when I swiped to answer the phone the message was "to answer press 1 or for them to leave a message press 2" .......... Sprint guy had to call the Sprint center and have them changed back to Sprint.

To answer "quickaldi" started happening last few days and who knows what I did - lol ....There are so many apps that are not, and will never be used .... can be very confusing.

That brings up a question that I've wanted to ask, if I rooted the phone does that get rid of unwanted apps?
Do I then just install what I want (need)?

Many thanks for your help,

Dave
 
Hi,
If you can " hard reset"/ reset in recovery mode the device
Then system apps remain and all other Apps and all files will be removed.
If you don't know Google password/ recovery password,
You will not be able to open the device.
 
Hi,
That's interesting, what google password, I only have an gmail password.
When would it have asked me for a password, see if I can work backwards and find it.
 
Hi,
That's interesting, what google password, I only have an gmail password.
When would it have asked me for a password, see if I can work backwards and find it.

That's the password. The Gmail account is your Google ID.

Rooting does not remove anything, it only grants you admin permissions so you can modify protected files. Many times people start removing system apps after rooting without understanding the underlying structure and end up with a phone that doesn't work well, or at all. I'd recommend proceeding very carefully if you intend to root.
 
Thanks for your post, You answered a few un-asked question I had. Rooting isn't at the top of my prioritys
right now but getting rid of the many many meaningless apps is.

So after rooting you still end up with all these meaningless apps? Going through all the apps is a bit of a joke, what on earth are they there for? I can see when loading a new piece of software that certain apps are loaded to make the program run but most don't make sense. How does anyone know if there phising or malware, spyware etc!

Do we just have to put up with this?

Many thanks for any suggestions,

Dave...
 
Many this was the incorrect way to phrase this question!

Going through all the apps is difficult, I understand when loading a new piece of software that certain apps are loaded to make the program run. How do we know the legitimate apps vs the ones that could be phising or malware, spyware etc!
 
So after rooting you still end up with all these meaningless apps? Going through all the apps is a bit of a joke, what on earth are they there for? I can see when loading a new piece of software that certain apps are loaded to make the program run but most don't make sense. How does anyone know if there phising or malware, spyware etc!

Sorry for missing this post last week. :(

Rooting is simply gaining administrative access to your device. Let me use that (tire old) car analogy here. It's like having a separate set of keys to drive a car and get under the hood. Imagine if the dealer only had the keys to get at the engine/mechanicals so you couldn't work on your own vehicle. Rooting is like getting that set of keys. It just gets you the ability to do something rather than actually doing anything.

As I said before, once you have root access, you have the ability to get at your system files which can allow you to modify your phone in ways that the manufacturer or carrier didn't intend. This can either be a good thing for you or very bad if you break something.

If you've never rooted your phone and have only installed apps from trusted sources like Google Play or Amazon's app store, there's little chance you've got anything that's phishing or malware. If you have rooted and/or installed apps from untrusted sources, then you could be at risk. It's highly unlikely that a Samsung (genuine) phone would come with any malware or phishing apps, but if you're seeing that sort of thing, it might be browser based. Clearing your browser cache and app data, and then restarting your phone often times will clear up that problem.

If you want to remove apps, a better way to proceed would be to use an app like Titanium Backup to freeze the apps in question to see if it affects your phone. You can always un-freeze them. If you remove a system app, you can't simply uninstall it to restore it, you'd have to reflash the factory firmware.

As far as identifying apps safe to delete, that's going to vary between phone model, Android version and carrier, so it would probably best if you list the ones you want to get rid of and we can let you know if it's safe or not.
 
Great post answering my questions, thank you.

I am going to root my phone but right now I going to learn more about the system first.

An immediate problem is I'm having, which got me into looking at all the installed apps is; every now and again the battery wasn't even lasting half a day. Each morning it would mention what it's updated, updated things I've never heard of. Most of the time I would be good for a day and a half when I forget to charge it over night. I'm using the phone as a phone, texting, facebook camera, checking weather and occasional browsing using chrome and am never on it for very long.

I was thinking there is something going on that I have no control over so my question is:

Is there a program that will list the apps being used over a period of a day and show how much power they are using. I'm looking for an app that is sucking my battery dry.

Again thank you and appreciated your post.

Dave...
 
All you really need to do is go to settings>battery to see a list of the top users. Things like Wifi and mobile radios are all lumped under Android System or Android OS, but if individual apps are there, you'll see them. There are times that an app's process gets 'stuck' causing a constant wakelock state which will drain your power rather quickly. A reboot of the phone is all that it takes to clear that up. If it continues, then we should look at individual processes more closely.

There are a lot of apps that are battery stats, but they are all reading the same statistics file. To get to the really granular information there, you're going to need root.
 
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