Tap the Settings icon from your home screen or app drawer.
Swipe up to scroll down to the bottom of the page.
Tap the General management tab.
Hit Reset.
Hit Factory data reset.
Scroll down to the bottom of the page.
Hit the blue Reset button.
Enter your device PIN and tap Next.
Tap Delete all.
Your phone will reboot and you'll have to go through the setup process again before you're able to restore your data.
And also there is another method you can use:
__Factory reset via recovery mode__
If your phone is on, power it off.
Hold down the Power and Volume down buttons. Instead of booting up normally, you'll see "Start" in an arrow pointed at the power button. Here you use the Volume buttons to scroll and the Power button to select an option.
Press the Volume down button until you've highlighted Recovery mode.
Press the Power Button to start recovery mode.
When your phone reloads, you should see a screen that says "No command" with an Android robot in distress. Press and hold the power and volume up buttons together to load the recovery mode.
Using the Volume buttons to scroll through the menu, highlight Wipe data/factory reset.
Press the Power button to select.
Highlight and select Yes to confirm the reset.
Once the reset is complete, you will be bounced back to the same recovery mode menu. Press the Power button to select Reboot system now.
Your phone will power on and be reset to its factory settings. Your phone will reboot and you'll have to go through the setup process again before you're able to restore your data
A custom recovery is a third-party recovery environment. Flashing this recovery environment onto your device replaces the default, stock recovery environment with a third-party, customized recovery environment. This is a bit like flashing a custom ROM like CyanogenMod - but, instead of replacing your device's Android operating system, it replaces the recovery environment.
A custom recovery environment will do the same things as the stock Android recovery. However, it will also have additional features. Custom recoveries often have the ability to create and restore device backups. Custom recoveries allow you to install custom ROMs. ClockworkMod even offers a "ROM Manager" app that allows you to access many of these features from a running Android system - this app requires a custom recovery installed to function.
*Popular Custom Recoveries*
ClockworkMod Recovery (CWM) can create and restore NANDroid backups - backups of an Android device's entire file system. ClockworkMod offers a ROM manager with a file browser that allows you to easily browse for and install custom ROMs via ClockworkMod Recovery and manage and restore backups. It also has other advanced features that will be useful if you're installing and dealing with custom ROMs.
Team Win Recovery Project (TWRP) is a touch-based recovery environment. Unlike other recovery environments - including Android's default stock recovery, which needs to be controlled with the device's volume and power buttons - this recovery environment has a touch-based interface you can use by tapping your fingers on on-screen buttons. TWRP even supports themes. Like CWM, TWRP offers ROM installation and backup features the stock recovery environment doesn't.
CWM and TWRP are the two most popular custom recoveries, but other custom recoveries may be available for some devices.
USB debugging must be enabled in order to perform actions on your phone from your computer. This guide takes a look at how to enable USB debugging on Android with broken black screen using a couple of different ways.- Part 1. Enable USB Debugging on Android with Black Screen Using ADB Command- Part 2. Enable USB Debugging on Android with Broken Screen Using OTG Cable and Mouse- Part 3. How to Recover Lost Data from Android with Black Screen**Part 1. Enable USB Debugging on Android with Black Screen Using ADB Command**One of the ways to enable USB debugging on your Android phone with a black screen is to use an ADB command. There is a command that you can use with ADB toolkit and that should help turn on the USB debugging option on your phone.The following describes how to enable USB debugging on Android with black screen through computer.- Download theADB toolkitfor your computer and extract its contents to a folder.- ADB requires you have USB debugging enabled on your phone. Since your phone has a black screen, reboot your phone into recovery mode to accomplish this. Press the Volume Down and Power buttons at the same time to enter recovery mode.- Connect your phone to your computer, open a Command Prompt window in the ADB folder, and type the following command.adb devices- You should see your device listed there. Run the following commands one by one.adb shellmount datamount system- Use the following command to pull the persist.sys.usb.config file from your phone to the PC.adb pull /data/property/persist.sys.usb.config C:\Users\\Desktop/build.prop" /system/- Reboot your device using the following command.adb rebootYou are all set. Your phone will boot up with USB debugging enabled.**Part 2. Enable USB Debugging on Android with Broken Screen Using OTG Cable and Mouse**If your phone has support for OTG, then you can actually plug a computer mouse into your phone and use it to navigate around on your device. This way, even if your phone has a dysfunctional black screen, you can still perform various actions on your phone. The following shows how to enable USB debugging on Android with a black screen using a mouse.- Connect your mouse to your Android phone using the OTG. Make sure your phone supports the OTG feature.- You will probably need to mirror your phone's screen to your computer, if you cannot see anything on your phone.- Use the mouse to head into Settings > About phone > Developer options and tap on the Build number 7 times to enable the Developer Options.- Back to About phone section and you should find the USB debugging option. Click on the option to turn it on.USB debugging is now enabled on your device.
First difference is the extenion of file
ios -- . ipa
android --. apk
and second difference is iOS apps run on Objective-C / Swift, while Android apps run on Java
Try looking in Motion gestures or somewhere else inside Advance Settings inside the Settings app or in the display settings, if you find nothing then most likely your phone does not support smart stay.
Through this interface SIM 1 or SIM 2 call
settings, such as IP dialing, fixed dialing, voice mail,
speed dialing, call forwarding, SMS reject a call,
call forwarding, call barring, call waiting feature set
https://www.google.com/search?q=mobicel+call+settings
Use Samsung's Dual Audio Feature
Go to Settings > Connections > Bluetooth. In Android Pie, tap Advanced. ... Turn on the Dual Audio toggle switch. To use Dual Audio, pair the phone with two speakers, two headphones, or one of each, and audio will stream to both.Feb. 4, 2021
Please check this link for the best android file transfer: https://www.androidauthority.com/android-apps-to-transfer-files-from-android-to-pc-600659/Hope this will help.