Calvin Wankhede / Android Authority
Fast food chains, restaurants and even grocery shops have been out of control over the years. Fortunately, not all hope is lost-if you are a loving shopkeeper, you can know that the best way to save real money is to check the loyalty program discount and limited time proposals. the only problem? Most of these offers require you to download each company app and examine them from time to time.
If installing a dozen separate apps seems like a privacy nightmare, I agree with full heart. But fortunately, I have found a way to use these apps without downsides – and all of this is thanks to a pixel feature that has been present since last October.
Hidden cost of savings
Calvin Wankhede / Android Authority
Company-specific apps such as Target, Valgrain, 7-Elavan, and Wendy offer great deals from least time to time, but I have found to have a headache with these apps. The first problem is storage and chaos on my phone. Even if I ignore the cost of storage, each icon app takes a visible place in the drawer and it is annoying to scroll most of the last dozens of unused apps each time.
While offers are often great, most loyal apps do not respect your time or privacy.
Then there is background activity. Most companies want you to install their app instead of a website so that they can sync data, secretly in information like reminder about the new menu items, or track their location and browsing habits in the background. It is not always so bad, of course, but multiplied into a handful of chains, it can add all the battery drain and noticeable growth in data use. Privacy is the second major concern. I have discontinued notifications and most permissions for these apps, but they can still potentially collect such information like I have logged in Google accounts to my phone.
For a long time, I limited myself to keep only one or two of these apps on my phone and assured myself that additional savings were not worth taking my data out of every company. Of course, this is not ideal-in this era of constantly increasing inflation, money saving is more than ever. So when I came to know that Pixel Private space facility I can give the best of both worlds, savings and privacy, I jumped on it.
How Pixel’s Personal Places fixes the problem
Rita L Khauri / Android Authority
Private location is a privacy-oriented feature that is introduced before Android 15 Last year. Although this is not exactly the pixel-exclusive feature, you will not find it on many other phones. Motorola and Samsung do not include it in their Android skin, for example, but both offer brands Safe folder As your own first-sided option. Asus supports it, however, as Sony does.
Nevertheless, when you enable private space, you get the one who is essentially a secondary user profile with your own certification, app list and even Google account. Whatever you install within the private space is heavy sandbox and isolated from the rest of your phone.
In addition to the privacy aspect, I think keeping my least used apps in private location also cuts dislocation. Until you unlock the section, you disappear from your main app drawer and find results. With all these benefits, it is easy to see how this setup can be priceless. Spamy shopping apps such as Starbucks, Croger, and even Temu can live in all private locations, visually outdoor and out of the brain until it is time to examine a deal.
Apps that I do not trust or want to run in the background go straight to the private place.
I am not claiming that the private place will magically resolve the anxiety of every privacy. After all, these apps still track your use as you use them, but it makes the overall experience more tolerant. I have determined the facility to automatically lock all its content to lock my phone, which means that the sessions are very short -lived.
The main drawback for convenience is that the apps cannot send information firmly to the private location. Once the place is locked, those apps sleep until you open it again. But for me, this is more profit than a problem. The entire point of inserting these apps is to protect them from maintaining data connections with alert or quietly in the background.
Rita L Khauri / Android Authority
Finally, I log in to a separate Google account in a private location-and I ensure that I only use it only for sign-up and loyalty programs. In this way, when I need to log in to fast-food or retail app, I can do it with this burner account instead of handing it to my main Gmail address. It gives me peace of mind that my primary inbox will not be filled with promotion, and if one of these companies essentially suffer from a data breech, I am not exposing the account on which I trust for everything else.
As on one side, I have also worked to duplicate some apps inside the private space, which I already use in my main profile. I use Google photos through my burner account, for example, so I can store scanned IDs, receipts and other documents quickly without joining with individual photos on my primary account. The entire private space setup is flexible enough that you do not need to limit yourself in terms of one use.
At the end of the day, I do not need to install a dozen separate apps every time to save a few rupees. But since the reality we live is the best way I have found to keep chaos and data harvesting under control, while still benefit from every final proposal.
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