Thanks for posting this video - very helpful as I kept getting stuck in the connect command for my watch. Tried with the colon and it worked great. The amount of bloatware which comes with T-Mobile Samsung devices is crazy. AppSelector is a bloatware from T-Mobile which installs other bloatware without even asking - shouldn't this be illegal?
You can get rid of a lot of it, but there's some that's hard grained into the OS and will break normal function. Most of what is considered "bloat" are sponsored apps not related to the manufacturer like Netflix, Facebook, Instagram, etc. The same would apply for Windows with Candy Crush or Spotify being initiated on a clean install. Bloat never really signifies the manufacturer provided apps and programs. So, the main goal here is to remove the stuff that's not related to Samsung, but I also show how to remove some of the Samsung stuff if needed, you just have to test one app at a time and see if your phone still works after removing it as some might be dependent on the OS.
Hi bro . Can you remove Samsung health monitor app in gw4 with this trick or similar one ? The app can't be disabled or removed even with reset .
Thanks for posting this video - very helpful as I kept getting stuck in the connect command for my watch. Tried with the colon and it worked great.
The amount of bloatware which comes with T-Mobile Samsung devices is crazy. AppSelector is a bloatware from T-Mobile which installs other bloatware without even asking - shouldn't this be illegal?
0:56 What? Where ? How?
So what happens with deleted apps after one ui update? Do they reappear?
typing manually all the packages names, yes very smart way
What good is this if you cant get rid off all the samsung crap. The whole problem with samsung phones is the samsung bloatware including one ui.
You can get rid of a lot of it, but there's some that's hard grained into the OS and will break normal function. Most of what is considered "bloat" are sponsored apps not related to the manufacturer like Netflix, Facebook, Instagram, etc. The same would apply for Windows with Candy Crush or Spotify being initiated on a clean install.
Bloat never really signifies the manufacturer provided apps and programs. So, the main goal here is to remove the stuff that's not related to Samsung, but I also show how to remove some of the Samsung stuff if needed, you just have to test one app at a time and see if your phone still works after removing it as some might be dependent on the OS.