
Personally, for instance, I don't need notifications from an app like Google Photos to pop up on my screen and grab my attention immediately. This is a simple yet supremely effective way to pick and choose exactly which types of alerts are allowed to interrupt you and demand your attention.

Once you get aodNotify initiated, head into its main settings screen - 'cause it's time for us make a handful of key modifications. This is a trusted tool, in other words, and it's perfectly safe to use. Just know that (a) aodNotify doesn't ask for any standard system permissions, including the ability to access the internet, so there's no realistic way it could do anything with your data even if it wanted to - and (b) the app comes from a known and reputable developer who's very up front about the software's privacy practices and its lack of shady behavior. The app will walk you through a series of steps to grant it the permissions it requires and get things up and running. (And take note, by the way: If you or someone you know has a non-Pixel Android phone, aodNotify has separate versions of the app available for select Samsung devices and OnePlus devices as well as a broader catch-all version that may work on certain other Android phone models.)
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To start, install the app on your Pixel - whichever Pixel model you're using - and then open 'er up. But it also has the easily overlooked ability to create its own custom always-on-display alternative that's far more helpful and less distracting than what the Pixel gives you by default. What aodNotify does, at its core, is provide you with a subtle pulsating light on your screen to let you know when any important notifications are pending.
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It's free, with an optional $5 upgrade for some of its more advanced features.

The secret to this saucy little Pixel improvement revolves around a clever little app called aodNotify. Part I: Your Pixel notification foundation
