Alarmoid

This app from the days of Android 2 is not ikely to work on your modern Pixel phone. All the same, here are the features in Alarmoid, an ambitious offering from a time before there was an Alarm Clock built into the OS. Enjoy this explanation of the design and screens.

There was an Alarmoid home screen widget showing a shortcut to the drop-down list on this Timer Tab screen. Use it to silence Android with two touches.

Timer Tab

The default tab selected when you open Alarmoid shows the Timer. It is used to start a single period of quiet time. You choose the time that sound will restart using the clock widget or the drop-down list, then you press the "Start Quiet Time" button and your Android applications will not bother you for a while.

You can uncheck the top option and go quiet without a specific time to restart notification sounds on your phone.

Scheduler Tab

There is a schedule of quiet time and sound start times, organized by day from Sunday to Saturday. Set up as many as you like or disable them in the Preferences panel.

When you touch an entry in the Scheduler tab, the Alarmoid editor panel pops up so you can remove it from the schedule, change the time or the type to make the Alarmoid schedule match your own. And, open the Alarmoid menu to set up as many entries in the Scheduler as you like.

Preferences PanelSet up as many daily times as you need or disable all of them in the Preferences panel. Notice there are a lot of features listed here. You can have quiet time end with a noise or with a vibration, you can set the application background, you can silence all applications and media in addition to the phone's ring and notification sounds.

Phone Setup Tab

The last tab, on the right, is used to setup the Phone. You can pick a Contact group and allow those numbers to call through during Quiet Time, you can have the phone vibrate or be silent. You can also let it ring, silencing only the notifications from Android.