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

  • CalcProgrammer1@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    Unlockable bootloader, removable battery, headphone jack, being assembled with SCREWS rather than GLUE.

    • BigMoe@lemmy.zipOP
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      Love the first answer as, I have to get on my Linux soapbox here.

      I remember first using Linux (Ubuntu 9.10 for those curious). One of the big ideas behind it was ‘its your computer, do what you want’. That’s why you can have access to Root or the Super User. Since its open source, root can do what it wants.

      Android was initially built on Linux, but they have taken Root and turned it into a way to restrict users not just from sensitive things (like necessary system apps), but also from bloatware (looking at you Samsung). Years ago I had a phone that came with the NFL Network which I didn’t want. Could I remove it? Of course not, I would have to be Root to do that!.

      Sorry for the rant, but really, I should have access to anything on my phone if I want it. Give me a warning, make it so people can’t get to it ‘accidentally’, but then let it be on me.

      • foo@withachanceof.com
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        You can still buy Android phones that have manufacturer support for unlocking the bootloader. Once that’s done obtaining root is trivial. Pixel phones notably support this. Personally, I only buy phones I can unlock the bootloader on to show the demand for this feature. It doesn’t matter to me how great a phone is otherwise. Can’t unlock the bootloader? Not buying it.

        That said, I completely agree with you. We all pay for and own the hardware, but let the manufacturer dictate what software it can run. That’s like buying a car and letting the car company tell you what roads you’re allowed to drive your car on. I don’t really blame the average use for not giving a crap because end users will never care about this stuff as long as their basic needs are met. It’s a failure of the people in the software industry to stand up for the open systems that built everything we have today. Without that constant fight for openness companies are going to be more than happy to take advantage of a locked down system to create a competitive advantage. Hell, look at what Google is currently doing with WEI in Chrome. If they have their way, the web will become just as locked down as smartphones are now.

        Android was initially built on Linux

        For the record, it still is.

        • treadful@lemmy.zip
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          1 year ago

          Only problem is all the apps that won’t run in a rooted environment. I’m not sure why they should even know that information…

          • Sneexy@catgirl.pub
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            1 year ago

            there’s some projects that exist that try their best to hide root from specified apps to make them seem as if they aren’t running in a rooted environment of course, they can’t completely hide all traces but most of the time they’re usually actively updated to make most apps seem as if they really aren’t running in a rooted environment

      • minkshaman@lemmy.perthchat.org
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        Shits me off that rooting the phone immediately blocks most banking apps.

        After a few years of playing cat and mouse with the workarounds for safety net I finally said fuck it.

        If they’re going to force me to live with an unrooted phone, I might as well have shit that works with the rest of my families eco-system and go iPhone.

        • AdmiralShat@programming.dev
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          To be fair, there still is quite a bit that can be done using ADB and no root, much more than you’ll ever get with iPhone.

          But yeah, I agree my banking app is 100% of the reason I stopped rooting my phones.

          • minkshaman@lemmy.perthchat.org
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            1 year ago

            Yeah, but I mostly did it for ad blocking.

            I was able to strip ads out of games too, super effective.

            iOS does everything else, and I still have an android tablet

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        1 year ago

        Spot on, my daily driver is a PinePhone Pro with keyboard case. It ticks all the boxes. It also covers the “physical keyboard” feature which is a few comments down.

        It has its downsides, but it’s a full fledged Linux computer in my pocket. What’s not to love?

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        This isn’t an Android thing. First-party Google phones can do this. This is on other Android OEMs.

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      Fair phone seems to be doing it… except their last phone removed headphone jacks and introduced “fair ear buds” or some such… even the open company wants to increase sales.

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      Many midrange phones still have headphone jacks, and removable battery has to come back if they want to continue selling in the EU.

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      Sony phones still do the bootloader and headphone jacks at least. I’m pretty happy with mine.

    • krimsonbun@lemmy.ml
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      wait phones have non-unlockable bootloaders? I’ve never seen that before although you do have to do some annoying stuff on some to unlock them which isn’t necessary

      • CalcProgrammer1@lemmy.ml
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        Plenty of phones have unlockable bootloaders and it used to be pretty much an expected thing on Android phones until manufacturers and carriers started locking it down and being more Apple-like. You can’t run most custom ROMs without an unlocked bootloader as being able to run a custom kernel requires an unlocked bootloader. Being able to use non-Android Linux operating systems like postmarketOS also depend on unlocked bootloaders.

        On most it’s just a matter of toggling an option in developer settings and using fastboot to unlock. Some make it more difficult than that, others completely prevent unlocking (and thus become e-waste after the official software stops getting updated).

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    Removable battery is the big one. I had a phone where they only cost like $15, so I could take 2 of them on a trip and last a week w/o charging.

    • BigMoe@lemmy.zipOP
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      Removable batteries may come back since the European Union has mandated all smartphones have them by 2027

      I did see that, of all phones and manufacturers, the Kyocera DuraForce Pro 3 on Verizon actually has removable batteries (and an sd card slot).

    • Dr. Moose@lemmy.world
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      There’s definitely a business opportunity for hot swapable batteries. I really don’t understand why no one is exploiting this market. Construction, factory and all scale workers need phones and if they can hotswap battery they’ll gonna love that.

      • nobug-404@geddit.social
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        They make rugged phones and tablets for industrial setting with replaceable batteries. But they are way more expensive that consumer devices of the same spec.

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        Just curious, what situations do you find yourself in relatively frequently that a hot swappable batter would be more convenient?

        Nowadays w/ 15 SOT I don’t think I’ve actually needed one minus camping where I don’t really use my phone much anyways.

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          Being able to rip the battery out when the phone locks up. Needing to make sure it’s actually off and can’t be remotely powered on. When it’s 3 years old and the hardware is still well up to the task but the battery lasts 4 hours.

          • Sl00k@programming.dev
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            Being able to rip the battery out when the phone locks up

            How often does your phone lock up that that’s necessary? I used to have lockups a lot more but android is damn stable now, haven’t had one in years.

            Needing to make sure it’s actually off and can’t be remotely powered on

            Do you disconnect your PC’s PSU?

            When it’s 3 years old and the hardware is still well up to the task but the battery lasts 4 hours.

            Fair, but if you’re getting 4 hours SOT after 3 years, it’s just not a great phone. My current Note 10+ still pumping out 10 hours SOT and I’m a HEAVY user.

            Honestly in 2015 I’m totally on your side for this, but in the last few years I’ve never felt the need to hotswap batteries, and only slightly felt the need to replace it in general.

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        Samsung does produce the xcover series for construction/industrial use. I seriously considered one, the issue was it would have been a downgrade for me in CPU, display and doesn’t have dex

    • 𝒎𝒂𝒏𝒊𝒆𝒍@lemmy.ml
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      I don’t understand that argument, power banks are widely accessible nowadays, you can charge your phone without downtime, also can’t imagine charging this additional battery, like shutting the phone down jest to charge the second one? I’m all for user replaceable batteries tho in case of battery degradation and prolonging device’s life

    • coffinwood@feddit.de
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      The only phone I had to even consider changing the battery was a Windows phone in 2015 and the replacement battery was the same age (and degraded state) as the old one. I don’t get the need for quickly swappable batteries.

      • 8565@lemmy.quad442.com
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        I used to carry a backup battery so if I was away from a charger camping or so ething I could just pop a fresh battery in

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        The real key to making this work properly is standardized battery sizes. You know, like the AA and AAA standards we’ve had for one hundred years.

        • coffinwood@feddit.de
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          “Real” batteries would be too big because they need casing. Phone batteries on the other hand are fragile, because: no casing.

          As I said, there’s no need for quick-change batteries like in an xbox controller, because most people can go years on a single one.

          But a self-service battery change when it’s ruined should be a thing. Preferably without glued-in parts.

  • I_Has_A_Hat@lemmy.ml
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    IR Blasters!

    I feel like I’m the only one who used them or cares that they were quietly phased out of phones.

    You used to be able to use your phone as a universal remote. Being able to control my TV, sound system, ceiling fan, and lights all from my phone was so convenient! Plus if you were stuck in like a waiting room and they had ads or garbage like Fox News on, you could change the channel or turn it off completely. It was an incredibly useful feature to me, but I guess barely anyone else used since it was removed from phones without any complaints.

    Except me. I’m complaining!

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      Back in the day, I discovered I could i) print over IR to our office’s HP laser printer from my Psion organiser, ii) print control codes from the built-in OPL language to change the display message on the printer. I would occassionaly send messages like “insert coin”, “too much paper”, “grammatical error”, etc. when colleagues were printing.

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      Still had one on my previous phone - LG V20. Loved when people starter looking around confused when I started browsing the channels on the public TV on gas stations, waiting rooms, gym etc.

    • 𝚝𝚛𝚔@aussie.zone
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      Put me down for another complainer about the lack of IR blaster. I used my Huawei P30 as a remote for 3 different TVs, two different office ACs, and a workshop radio regularly. I also used it a lot when doing tech support for family for basic stuff like ruling out the remote not working on an AC for example, or accessing TV setup menus you can’t access with physical buttons on the TV and of course mums lost the remote again.

    • Wage_slave@lemmy.ml
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      Wing night at the pub took on a whole new danger. The IR blaster was a total selling point for me on a few devices.

    • Daqu@feddit.de
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      My Xiaomi still has one, but reviewers actually complained about that.

  • Selery@lemmy.world
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    I miss the notification lights. One of my first true smart phones was the original oneplus. It was fun setting up custom colors for different types of notifications and came in handy every now and then

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    IR blaster. You could have a universal remote app and control any tv from my palm PDA

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    Fingerprint sensor on the back of the phone. So you’d pick it up and your finger would naturally fall on the sensor, so that by the time you look at the screen, it’s unlocked.

    • BigMoe@lemmy.zipOP
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      Definitely miss the dedicated fingerprint reader. Had a metal case once that came with a fairly thick (tempered glass I think) screen protector. Everything worked great except the fingerprint reader.

      Removable batteries may come back since the European Union has mandated all smartphones have them by 2027

    • Sl00k@programming.dev
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      physical sim card trays

      Seems like a backwards move IMO. honestly haven’t needed a tray in ~6 years

      • Dizzy Devil Ducky@lemm.ee
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        That tray is important to me at least since my last couple phones used that same tray to also hold the SD card. I can’t speak for anyone else, but a phone without an SD card for extra storage is a huge NO from me, so that tray is an absolute make or break for what my next upgrade is gonna be.

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      Honestly? For all the bitching when Apple first removed it, I hadent and haven’t used wired headphones for a long while. I had Bluetooth headphones long before then.

      • HidingCat@kbin.social
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        I still don’t like them, audio gear should last, and Bluetooth earphones are the ultimate in disposable tech. Costs more, shorter lifespan; only good thing is that it’s a revenue driver for those producing them.

        • KairuByte@lemmy.world
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          I’ve owned three Bluetooth headsets in total. The first I lost, the second is now my wife’s, and the third I still use. I wouldn’t call them disposable, but I’ll agree they are easier to lose.

          Something a wired set of anything can’t give me is absolute freedom to move my head and walk away from my phone. I will never willingly go back to wired for anything other than gaming.

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            The batteries in them aren’t going to go past 4-5 years; I have headphones and earphones over 10 years old, with one pair about to reach the two decade mark.

            • KairuByte@lemmy.world
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              That is honestly impressive. I can confidently say I’ve only owned one wired headset for a decade, and it’s the one I use for gaming so it never leaves my office.

              Everything else has either broken, or been lost. Though I fully admit, serviceable wireless buds would be a thing of beauty. IIRC there are people out there actively working on the problem (other than the companies explicitly aiming for them to be a consumable forever.)

        • Dr. Moose@lemmy.world
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          In my experience wired gear doesn’t last as long as wireless. The cable is a major weakness and there’s no affordable way around it.

          • PoopingCough@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            Couldn’t disagree more. Plenty of wired headphones and iems come with detachable/ replaceable cables. On the other hand wireless earbuds can be difficult to keep track of and easy to lose if one happens to fall out. If you lose one, congrats you have to buy a whole new set because they don’t generally sell replacements and usually come paired from the factory meaning getting a second replacement wouldn’t work.

            I’ve got wired buds i bought ten years ago that are still kicking and wired headphones made in the late 80s that have only needed cup replacements. Wired headphones will cost half that of wireless for similar quality and if a cable is ever damaged and isn’t detachable it really isn’t difficult to solder in a new one.

            • Dizzy Devil Ducky@lemm.ee
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              1 year ago

              God I wish I could get a pair of wired headphones with detachable/replacement wires.

              Definitely something I really wanna invest in some day in the future since I have had pretty bad luck with the audio jacks breaking on me.

          • DrRatso@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            No affordable way around it? If you are approaching BT headphone cost, your headphones or buds will almost definitely come with a detacheable wire.

            Personally my on the go is PortaPro, they dont have detacheable cable, the wire is flimsy but are only 30 bucks and the repair on them is actually super easy, the part where the wires solder on is actually easily accessible.

          • feck_it@sh.itjust.works
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            I don’t know why you are downvoted. Wires are major breakpoint in many earphones. When i used a cabled earphones daily for hours as a student, one wouldn’t last me 6 months. I could not solder freely since they always broke near jack entry for some reason and i didn’t have cables around me all the time since i wasn’t an electrician. Finally last headphone i used had detachable cables. After that i used bluetooth all the way.

      • eco_game@discuss.tchncs.de
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        It’s probably a rarer use case, but I use the headphone jack on my S10 all the time to connect it to my stereo and get good audio quality, most cheaper bluetooth receivers only use SBC so the difference is quite noticeable. (Also because the S10 has a pretty good DAC).

      • jeffw@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        I think it came a bit too soon. I had a mid-tier (couple hundred bucks) pair of headphones, so it was annoying to me until they broke and I moved to Bluetooth (Sony WH-1000 gang)

      • DrRatso@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        I dont care about the jack, the lightning-3.5 for 10bucks is more than a-ok, that said fuck bluetooth headphones, apart from the “smart” features, sub 50$ cans can and will blow the audio quality out of the water for many of the “entry level” (quotes cause entry is still approaching 100 bucks) BT ones and when you match price it is no-contest.

        That said BT cans are still fine but after dabbling with hi-fi I can’t go back to BT.

      • cccc@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        I use them daily at work. Luckily I found a pair with a lightning connector. I also use cable in the car (it’s too old for Bluetooth) and it’s a pain not being able to charge and listen.

        • pterencephalon@lemmy.world
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          We have a Bluetooth adapter for our car audio and it’s great. Plugs into the aux jack and car power. Really handy not needing to plug in.

      • /home/pineapplelover@lemm.ee
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        I use IEMs when I’m on the go. It would be much better if I had the functionality of using that port instead of the charging port.

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        I really miss how the blackberry volume rocker buttons would seek media on a long press

        • bobs_monkey@lemm.ee
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          My oneplus does that when the screen is off. But you just reminded me how much I miss my blackberry curve, that thing was rad. One gripe was the trackball would get filthy, then they released the touch track thing.

      • BigMoe@lemmy.zipOP
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        What sucks is it would be easily doable.

        Before smartphones were big I had a Samsung Messager (I think) with a slide out keyboard). Why not? A slide out keyboard would be sweet, and then you could choose to enable the digital keyboard if you wanted.

        Wonder if they make a phone case with a keyboard (they certainly make the bluetooth keyboards for phones)

        Edit: did some looking. It looks like they used to make these in a way I was thinking, such as this one

        They don’t seem to make them that way now (at least not for phones). I did run into a phone that has a new-ish phone that has a physical keyboard

        • Shdwdrgn@mander.xyz
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          I’ve seen such keyboard, packaged neatly into a folding case. Problem is the keyboard doesn’t have enough weight to support the phone so it becomes awkward trying to hold the weight of the phone with your fingers while typing.

    • treadful@lemmy.zip
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      I do miss the tactile nature of it. However, I honestly don’t think I’d trade screen space for it again.

      • Erk@cdda.social
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        I could type almost three times as fast on a t9 as I can on a touch screen, and I’ve written an entire novel on a touch screen.

        The old ways are forgotten. They were not wrong.

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    1 year ago
    • iris scanner
    • Dedicated MicroSD card slot
    • 3.5mm headphone jack
    • Removable/user replacable battery
    • Metal backs
    • Front firing speakers
  • bearfootbees@lemmy.ca
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    1 year ago

    This may sound dumb… An old Samsung phone I had years ago, came with alarms that gradually faded in. The most memorable, started with the ocean, and the seagulls… Then there was a fog horn in the distance. Slowly the horn got closer, and closer… Until it was all you could hear, and your alarm was going off.

    I’ve looked everywhere for the sound file… It must be Locked away in a basement at Samsung somewhere.

    One day I’ll find it

  • threeduck@aussie.zone
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    1 year ago

    I miss my smart watch waking me up outside of detected REM sleep.

    On the Microsoft Band you could set a time window where the alarm would go off - say between 0700-0800. If you’re in REM sleep at 0700, the alarm stays off until you naturally rouse, or 0800.

    I’ve worked as a sleep scientist for 7 years, and the idea of not being woken out of REM is such a neat idea, and yet no other watch seems to do it.