If you are here it is because you probably have a liking for Android, perhaps a little more than the average smartphone user. And while Android is a great platform, and offers infinite possibilities for users and developers to do just about anything, sometimes what we want to do is conditioned by Android itself. Because the OS is certainly not perfect, and sometimes the deliberate design decisions or the obnoxious little bugs or glitches can ruin part of the amazing experience that our phones and tablets otherwise provide us.
Sometimes the OS doesn’t want to do what it should do. Sometimes it was not designed to do what it should do. Sometimes Google itself didn’t know how to make it do what it should do. Luckily, because of the previously mentioned “infinite possibilities”, the great developer community of Android has set out to fix Google’s mistakes and shortcomings in the form of various types of mods or tweaks. Some require rooting, some require flashing, and some just simply require you to download an app. Here we’ll take a look at 5 things you can do to fix today’s problems and make them a thing of the past.
PlayPermissionsExposed
This module fixes that by making the Playstore show all of the apps’ permissions, and have you manually update the apps with new permissions. If you care about your data’s security or your system’s integrity, you might want to have this on your side to be extra careful for malware is on the rise.
Credit to GermainZ
Push Notifications Fixer
With this app you can change the heartbeat interval, to ensure all your notifications arrive instantly. It has no effect on battery life and it does not run in the background.
Credit to andQlimax
Xposed Media Scanner Optimizer
This module optimizes the media scanner by making it a foreground service so that the user can monitor it. A notification will also present the user with how long the scan took once it is over. You can also tell the scanner to only scan specific file types, or have it run on a mode where only certain directories are scanned. Finally, you can also prevent it from scanning automatically and you can trigger it whenever you want.
Credit to thomashofmann
ActivityForceNewTask
With this module, a separate instance is created for the launched activity’s app. It seems like the more logical approach, but it was not the way Google designed it to be. The module features a quick toggle that will make the changes effective immediately, and there is also a blacklist and whitelist to filter activities.
Credit to GermainZ
NoMapTips
Not only does this module help you get rid of that (and possibly prevent a nasty car crash), but the way the module is made makes it immune to breaking with subsequent Maps updates. So you can activate it and forget it’s there, and you most likely will. This is definitely one of my most missed modules and another tweak added to the list of reasons for considering downgrading back to Kitkat.
Credit to Kevin M
That’s it guys, Hopefully some of these tweaks will help you fix problems you have, or get rid of unnecessary annoyances. And if they don’t help you today, I suggest you keep them in the back of your head for the day they might become useful (particularly the Push Notification Fixer app).
Soure: xda fo
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