For me its the ‘Knock Code’ that LG had on their phones (I really wish LG still made at least the V series phones)
Basically there was a four-square area and you set up a sequence of where you would tap to unlock the phone. That set of squares was only shown when you set up the code
Then, to unlock your phone, you would tap those areas in the sequence you set up (even with the screen off).
Fingerprint readers are nice, but I really do miss the knock code
Edit: did find this article with a way to do the knock code, but if done wrong, could brick your phone I guess.
Plus, article is from 2014. When I looked at XDA’s info on it (they also being the developers) it looks like development on it is over, but individual modules may or may not still be supported by their devs
I have a somewhat similar issue, but not because of rooting.
I want to use F-Droid for some of their apps, and be able to just download apk’s.
The problem is that my work uses ‘Microsoft Intune’ for email access and such. Turns out, if I try to install anything from F-Droid, I get a message like ‘Your Admin has blocked access’.
As you can imagine, this made my blood boil, but I actually use my work email and Teams (even though its not mandated to have it on your phone). The work around is to delete my work profile, install the apps, and then recreate, but that doesn’t account for updates.
Frustrating
So whatever you install on your personal profile is affecting your work profile? Does that Microsoft intune have admin access?
That I don’t know. I know pausing the profile doesn’t let me, and turning on USB debugging puts me out of compliance but doesn’t let me.
I think that Microsoft app has admin access to your phone. Otherwise it won’t be possible.
Think you are right.
All I see is the disable option.
I might just delete. If someone messages me when I’m at lunch, it can probably wait
If your work wants you to have mobile messaging/email then they should issue you a work device. I never put work stuff on my personal phone or computer. And I don’t put personal stuff on a work device. If I pay for a device I have full control of it.
If it’s possible, you could try talking to your IT department about this. Intune policies are configurable by the team using them so your IT department could allow your device as you want it if so. Hopefully they would understand the freedom to use your hardware as you see fit is worth the tradeoff of loosening their policies.