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That's weird. I had the s21u and it got covered in microscratches but I haven't had any on my s23u. I've been pretty impressed by how much more resilient the screen has been
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# ? May 2, 2024 15:00 |
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# ? Jun 5, 2024 07:48 |
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bull3964 posted:Nothing seems to be doing some far more interesting stuff. The 2(a) seems like a legit great little device and it's a shame it's not officially being sold in the US. I got a Nothing Phone (2a) two weeks ago to replace the Nokia G50 I had before, and it's amazing how much better this phone is. Speedy, responsive and looks good, and the cameras are quite nice. The glyphs are kind of a gimmick but they don't detract from what's overall a great device. Shame it somehow manages to attract dust and fingerprints though. Obligatory sample photos:
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# ? May 2, 2024 18:54 |
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i want to complain about google maps, and i'm not sure it's an android specific thing, but that's where i think most people wind up using maps anyway i drive to work every day and sometimes take different side streets depending on the day/traffic/situations. i live in los angeles so it's always a guess as to what the gently caress is going to be going on any given day. anyway, google maps will usually tell me to go down the same streets with a few variations, but i've come to learn that some streets are actually better/faster than what is suggested. so if maps tells me to take street A but i wind up taking street B bc i remember that A has a weird traffic light situation, then my ETA will jump down by like 5 minutes. other times, maps will show me street C as an additional option with the tooltip of "5 minutes faster" or something similar. i'm having a hard time understanding why google maps would not just always prioritize whatever route is going to be the absolute fastest. if it can't predict that street B will be 5 minutes faster before i actually take that route, then that's somewhat more acceptable. but still, if it knows it's faster after i turn down that street, then it stands to reason it would have already known? at the very least if it is going to show me a faster route on the map, it shouldn't make it optional, it should just make that the route. i suppose you'd have to factor in variability by the minute as new data is gathered? but it's gotten to the point where i don't even really follow the suggested route anymore and have learned better than the algorithm which way is going to be best.
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# ? May 2, 2024 19:10 |
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Have you deselected "Prefer fuel-efficient routes" in the navigation settings?
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# ? May 2, 2024 19:49 |
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bull3964 posted:Have you deselected "Prefer fuel-efficient routes" in the navigation settings? yeah. i originally had that selected but have since unselected it.
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# ? May 2, 2024 19:52 |
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I just got an email from Google saying they're automatically opting me in to device tracking. I'm pretty opposed to any kind of tracking even if it's encrypted and meant to find a lost device, and doubly so when it involves automatically being opted IN. Despite turning off the tracking on my phone, the web portal still locates it immediately. It even lists the phone as having "Find My Device turned off", which is just How the hell do you actually opt out of this?
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# ? May 3, 2024 00:49 |
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ShoogaSlim posted:i want to complain about google maps, and i'm not sure it's an android specific thing, but that's where i think most people wind up using maps anyway I just use tom tom which can be janky to setup and run but it avoids all traffic great
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# ? May 3, 2024 00:54 |
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gently caress it I'm a filthy phone toucher I went and upgraded to the S24 Ultra. the trade in offer for the S22U was too good to pass up. transferring the e-sim with T-Mobile was pretty painless too
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# ? May 3, 2024 01:11 |
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Scam Likely posted:I just got an email from Google saying they're automatically opting me in to device tracking. I'm pretty opposed to any kind of tracking even if it's encrypted and meant to find a lost device, and doubly so when it involves automatically being opted IN. how the hell do you use a Google Pixel and are suddenly worried about being tracked lmao
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# ? May 3, 2024 01:34 |
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Scam Likely posted:I just got an email from Google saying they're automatically opting me in to device tracking. I'm pretty opposed to any kind of tracking even if it's encrypted and meant to find a lost device, and doubly so when it involves automatically being opted IN. There are two different things happening here. Your phone location is tracked via GPS/wifi triangulation, this has been a feature for years. The new Find My Device is reporting observed Bluetooth devices, particularly so there's data on 'dumb' devices like a tag in a backpack. You can turn off the Bluetooth reporting, but I don't know if it's possible to turn off the phone location reporting. It sucks that everyone is being opted into a potentially privacy shattering system by default, but Find My Device needs a critical mass of data to actually become useful and it does have incredible potential for helping track down lost or stolen items. If Google didn't opt people in, everyone would continue to complain about how Apple's tracker tag ecosystem is so much better.
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# ? May 3, 2024 01:48 |
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The only way to opt out of being tracked is is in your imagination
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# ? May 3, 2024 02:11 |
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this is probably a stupid question but i used samsung messages up until getting the S24U and now i'm being ushered into using google messages again, which i don't think i've used since i had a Pixel is there any way to force it to use the system default larger notification popups? the little mini banners are a little annoying to me, and i know i can tap the arrow next to it to have it show the regular notification, but if there's a way to just have that be the default it would be great e: never mind i am stupid. i just had to change notification style from simple to detailed in system settings rather than looking for it in the app settings barnold fucked around with this message at 04:30 on May 3, 2024 |
# ? May 3, 2024 04:20 |
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Jiro posted:I've been looking at upgrading but also wanting to keep a headphone jack and expandable memory since I listen to and keep gigs and gigs worth of podcast episodes on my phone to listen to when I'm traveling out in the sticks/on a plane etc. Jiro posted:I've never really trusted saving Data to the cloud, Apple or otherwise. I like keeping that poo poo with me, and have no problem letting those images along with apps that I want to carry over eat up the phone space and keep audio media on a removable micro sd. Makes more sense to compromise with an external USB C microSD reader like this instead of compromising the device by restricting your options to the number of devices which still have a slot. While there are downsides to not having it integrated into the device (i.e. you'll need a splitter to charge at the same time), the upside is that an external reader can more readily hotswap cards. So grab one of these cases and you'll be wielding TB's of media like liquid extensions of your body Scam Likely posted:
https://support.google.com/android/answer/14796936 From what I can tell the "Find your Offline Devices" part is the actual new thing being rolled out, the "Find Devices" setting works exactly as it did before this new rollout (i.e. it just disables the ability to ping, remote wipe and lock the device). Do you have Location History/Maps timeline switched off? I assume its being pulled from there, especially since IIRC they recently made a song and dance about a new ability of making that become device only in Google Maps.
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# ? May 3, 2024 05:00 |
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ShoogaSlim posted:i want to complain about google maps, and i'm not sure it's an android specific thing, but that's where i think most people wind up using maps anyway I vaguely recall some neighborhoods pushing back against Waze routing people through them. Maybe these faster routes are intentionally removed/de-emphasized at the request of residents? https://www.popularmechanics.com/home/a21212/how-homeowners-fighting-waze/
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# ? May 3, 2024 05:13 |
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Here are the levels.quote:Off: Your device’s encrypted recent locations won't be stored and your Android device won’t participate in the network. What happens when you turn off offline finding. "Without network" is how find my device used to work if you had it turned on at all. The reason why they have two different levels (high traffic and high/low traffic) is due to aggregation. Everything is encrypted and secure, but the "high traffic" option (which is the default) adds an extra layer of anonymity since it has to be aggregate pings. quote:With aggregation, the Find My Device network waits until multiple Android devices have detected a lost item. Find My Device then shows the owner of the lost item a center point calculated from the multiple location reports. So, you leave your bag in a coffee shop. Someone walking down the sidewalk picks it up. The barista picks it up, other patrons pick it up, some people next door pick it up. When you search for it, you get the centered aggregate position. By doing the aggregation, you aren't getting the location data of any one person so the privacy burden is lessened. The low traffic area ones mean that you could get a ping for your device from a single encounter (or, your device could ping someone else's lost item when your phone is the only one around). Because there's not enough people for aggregation, your phone only has its location to report where it pinged the lost item. Thus, a location given to the person of the lost item is more exact to your actual location when you encountered the tracker. The data is still encrypted and that person has no way of finding out anything about the device that pinged it, but it has less anonymity so that's why its not the default. Obviously, the levels are framed around the precision that tracks your device because it's a two way road. You aren't allowed to say you want your device/trackers to be found in low traffic areas while not participating in low traffic reporting yourself. As to what's being shown in the example above, I believe that's a nuance. When off, your phone will not STORE AND UPLOAD the locations it's been when it's online. However, if your phone is on and connected to a network, find my device will contact it through the network connection and ask it where it is. I don't think you can turn that off short of not signing into your account. However, if your phone is off, or disconnected from any internet, I don't think it will know where it was last seen. Basically, if off you can still get realtime location of your phone as long as it can communicate with the network. It just won't be able to report where it last was before it was turned off/disconnected. I am not 100% sure of all this, but I believe that's what's going on here. Keep in mind that any LEO can go to a judge and potentially get a subpoena for tower records to get your location even if your phone has GPS burned off of its motherboard. You have a cell phone, you can be tracked. bull3964 fucked around with this message at 05:44 on May 3, 2024 |
# ? May 3, 2024 05:35 |
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So if everything is encrypted, why does it matter if it's aggregated? Well, low traffic (especially a single ping) COULD be abused. Say someone lives out in the middle of nowhere and they have the low traffic sitting on. Someone could remotely tell if they were home by hiding a tracker along their driveway or near the house (too close though and it would set off warnings about a foreign tracker). If the person let their phone behind when they planted the tracker, then they would know as soon as the location updated to the planted location that someone got home. I'm sure there are other creative ways to abuse the low traffic setting, but that's why it isn't default.
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# ? May 3, 2024 06:06 |
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also you should be forced to take part, because the more devices that are enrolled in this the better chance of people finding their lost items. you have a cell phone, you're being tracked, this is a stupid line to draw
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# ? May 3, 2024 07:41 |
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If you want to murder someone leave your phone at home, otherwise I don't care about tracking
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# ? May 3, 2024 08:05 |
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Any guides to decrapify a Samsung phone? Mainly the Samsung's own stuff, especially things that randomly throw notifications. I'm trying to prepare a new A15 for my mother who has never used a smartphone before and I don't want any confusing stuff to randomly appear.
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# ? May 3, 2024 20:55 |
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Might sound patronizing, but you can turn on the Samsung “Easy Mode” in the settings and then restrict apps other than the ones she actually wants to use. Doesn’t really do what you’re asking, but it definitely makes it simpler for a first time user.
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# ? May 3, 2024 21:23 |
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Your mind will be blown when you learn your location has already used for years to anonymously create traffic data for Google Maps
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# ? May 3, 2024 21:25 |
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At this point the war over data privacy is lost and imho it's better to shrug and accept that someone is gonna track everything you're doing, rather than fight the windmills, jump through all the hoops to avoid being tracked and still have someone track everything you're doing. There's just no tangible benefit.
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# ? May 4, 2024 04:42 |
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It's not black and white. You can spread your services around, or use some privacy focused tools where it's most convenient, etc. An easy one is to switch away from Gmail, or stop using Chrome.
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# ? May 4, 2024 12:06 |
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Branch Nvidian posted:Might sound patronizing, but you can turn on the Samsung “Easy Mode” in the settings and then restrict apps other than the ones she actually wants to use. Doesn’t really do what you’re asking, but it definitely makes it simpler for a first time user. Don't know Samsung, but a very important thing on my mom's phone was to remove as much stuff as possible from the pull down menu. She'd be constantly turning off Wi-Fi or going into Airplane Mode while fumbling around.
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# ? May 4, 2024 18:38 |
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Yeah, I did that, but I wish I could remove the big IoT button below the quick settings as well.
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# ? May 4, 2024 19:04 |
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Weird thing my parents do with their phones is without meaning to or understanding what happened, dragging icons onto and all around the home page, even dragging them off to new pages which confuses them even more, and that's when you get a call from the other's phone asking why "my buttons went away".
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# ? May 4, 2024 23:43 |
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Is there a way to disable the "Your battery is currently being protected blah blah blah" notifications? It comes back every couple of hours after I swipe it away.
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# ? May 5, 2024 01:26 |
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Quixzlizx posted:Is there a way to disable the "Your battery is currently being protected blah blah blah" notifications? It comes back every couple of hours after I swipe it away. What is kind of phone? I've never seen anything like this on a Pixel.
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# ? May 5, 2024 02:10 |
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hooah posted:What is kind of phone? I've never seen anything like this on a Pixel. Pixel 6a. Maybe you don't keep your phone plugged in all the time? It's when Android keeps the battery capped at 80% once the phone has been plugged in for long enough. Which is fine, I just don't want the constant notification showing up.
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# ? May 5, 2024 03:06 |
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Quixzlizx posted:Pixel 6a. Maybe you don't keep your phone plugged in all the time? It's when Android keeps the battery capped at 80% once the phone has been plugged in for long enough. Which is fine, I just don't want the constant notification showing up. Huh. Yeah, I usually charge wirelessly, but it often appears (or claims to be) full.
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# ? May 5, 2024 03:08 |
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withoutclass posted:It's not black and white. You can spread your services around, or use some privacy focused tools where it's most convenient, etc. An easy one is to switch away from Gmail, or stop using Chrome. Yeah exactly what I was saying. Switching email is a huge hassle for absolutely no tangible benefit. Same for switching browser (all my passwords are stored in the cross platform chrome password manager)
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# ? May 5, 2024 05:03 |
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Google has recently implemented a change where, when paying with Google Pay at an NFC terminal, I have to confirm payment via fingerprint which I find quite annoying. I remember that the facial unlock on the Pixel 8 is considered fingerprint equivalent, can anyone confirm that and that you don't need the fingerprint to pay at a NFC terminal? I'm in Europe, in case region matters at all.
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# ? May 7, 2024 11:46 |
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I am in europe and use google pay all the time. Once in a while it makes me enter my phone pin but that is it. Though I've never set up face or fingerprint stuff so I guess the PIN is all it can ask me for.
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# ? May 7, 2024 12:30 |
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Found a solution to Google Assistant not adding items to the shopping list (an issue impacting me, my wife, and seemingly a handful of people on the internet) Instead of saying "Hey Google, add eggs to my shopping list" Say "Hey Google, add eggs to my shopping list in Google Keep" It's crazy that Google hasn't fixed this in nearly a year but I was so relieved to find a solution!!
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# ? May 7, 2024 14:09 |
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Pixel 8a is official. https://store.google.com/product/pixel_8a?hl=en-US $499 and you get $100 Google Store credit ($100 gift card from Amazon and Best Buy). 120hz display with 2000nits peak brightness. Same cameras as the 7a. Looks to be feature parity with the Pixel 8. Textured plastic back! Still, it's price is tough compared to a discounted Pixel 8 that has all around better cameras.
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# ? May 7, 2024 17:31 |
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If you use Google Fi looks like you can preorder the 8a and get $200 off which seems pretty great to me.
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# ? May 7, 2024 17:57 |
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Yeah, with the right discounts it's a no-brainer. It's just that the Pixel 8 is frequently down to $549 in a lot of regions and $50 for better cameras and slimmer bezels are likely worth it for a bunch of people. But I view the plastic back of the 8a as a major pro. Should be easier to replace the battery in the long run and less likely to shatter. Being textured should keep fingerprints and hairline scratches at bay.
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# ? May 7, 2024 18:42 |
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Where does the 8 usually drop to $549? Strange that the trade-in value for my S21 towards the 8a is $186 but for the 8 it's only $90.
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# ? May 7, 2024 21:08 |
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Too bad I can't combine the $100 gc from Amazon with the 6a trade-in value from Google; $240 is pretty tempting.
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# ? May 7, 2024 21:22 |
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# ? Jun 5, 2024 07:48 |
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Is there any reason I shouldn't get the OP tablet? Eyeing the Pixel too. The OP has good discounts + a free keyboard case which is appealing to me. I'm not in a hurry and can hold off a while. My use-case is that my company owner is filtering all work device traffic now and I may want some personal device to use at the office, larger than a phone. But I'll see if I can live with just my phone first.
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# ? May 7, 2024 21:35 |