We have made it super easy to delete Omer Count account and/or app.
Table of Contents:
Things to note before removing Omer Count:
Generally, here are your options if you need your account deleted:
Option 1: Reach out to Omer Count via Justuseapp. Get all Contact details →
Option 2: Visit the Omer Count website directly Here →
Option 3: Contact Omer Count Support/ Customer Service:
Option 4: Check Omer Count's Privacy/TOS/Support channels below for their Data-deletion/request policy then contact them:
*Pro-tip: Once you visit any of the links above, Use your browser "Find on page" to find "@". It immediately shows the neccessary emails.
How to Delete Omer Count from your iPhone or Android.
To delete Omer Count from your iPhone, Follow these steps:
Method 2:
Go to Settings and click on General then click on "iPhone Storage". You will then scroll down to see the list of all the apps installed on your iPhone. Tap on the app you want to uninstall and delete the app.
For iOS 11 and above:
Go into your Settings and click on "General" and then click on iPhone Storage. You will see the option "Offload Unused Apps". Right next to it is the "Enable" option. Click on the "Enable" option and this will offload the apps that you don't use.
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This app will help you count the Omer from Passover to Shavuot by keeping track of the count and giving you the blessing and the Hebrew for each day's count. New for this year, it will also help you count the seven weeks from Tisha B'Av to Rosh Hashanah. For each day of the Omer (and similarly for the days leading up to Rosh Hashanah), it will also show you which quality was connected by the Kabbalists with that day, and it will give you a quote related to that quality, along with links to find out more about counting and what it means. What is the Omer? Exactly seven weeks fall between Passover and Shavuot, marking the transition from the redemption in Egypt to the revelation at Sinai. This period is called the Omer, and it also corresponds to the time between the barley harvest and the wheat harvest in ancient Israel. (An omer is a measure of grain, like a bushel.) Each night during the 49 days of this seven week period, the count of the days is recited with a blessing--this ritual...