Most personal electronics, be it game consoles, PCs, or smartphones, have advanced developer options which, as the name implies, are used by hardware and software developers to help them properly ...
The brand new Samsung Galaxy S5 is packed full of advanced features, controls, fingerprint sensors for security and more but there’s a few more options that Google chooses to hide from the average ...
Google hid the Developer Options from users since Android 4.2 and while there are actually options you advanced users can use when it’s enabled, for average users, those options are a bunch of useless ...
With Android 4.2 Jelly Bean Google hid the Developer Options menu so average smartphone and tablet users wouldn’t accidentally cause any problems on their device. While most normal settings can be ...
All Android devices feature a Developer Options menu that lets you tune and debug application performance. Here's a quick tutorial on how to enable it. When you found the Build Number option, tap on ...
As usual with new devices, it’s time to show you how to do all kinds of things. Like enabling Developer options on the HTC One M8. Ever since Android 4.2 was released, Google decided to hide the ...
You may not realize it, but there are actually dozens of settings for your Google Pixel 2 or 2 XL that are hidden. Most of them are advanced settings that normal users wouldn’t want to touch (much ...
Whether you’re a developer looking to test out your application on Android Auto or to run an app that hasn’t been released on the Play Store, you’ll need to enable Developer settings. Google hides the ...
Samsung’s brand-new Galaxy S10 arrived Friday, and I have little doubt that many day-one buyers spent all weekend fiddling with a smartphone that “comes the closest to making all those dollars worth ...
Now, let’s see how to enable Developer Mode in Microsoft Outlook using the Registry Editor. Windows Registry is a hierarchical database of the Windows operating system. You can disable some features ...
When Google released Android 4.2.2 with the Nexus 4 back in late 2012, one of the “features” of that version of Jelly Bean was hiding the Developer Options. Which a lot of people weren’t happy about.