![]() Only my screens turn off (after my defined period of motion inactivity, cancelable by further motion, timeout resets. I tried different launchers, but they don’t seem to help - and in fact, the Smartthings/Sharptools icons get messed up in, for example, the Go the CPU, WiFi and Bluetooth always on part, I would use my method. password-protected for particular apps, such as Smartthings.I want the network and bluetooth awake and running at all times. I want the CPU awake and running at all times. In my use case, I wanted to have the trigger be completely external to the Android like a motion detector in the room to trigger turning the wall-mounted dashboard screens on (wake), etc (for exactly what your title here says).Īnyway, how is your solution working out? Any progress reports? Some app on Android device parses SmartThings notificationsĪpp on Android sends command to wake Android device screen or other task on the Android device SmartThings sends notification to Android device as usual Z-Wave/Zigbee connected motion sensor detects motion I wanted to see it specifically discussed in one place. I have seen this discussed in a lot of threads, and there are different pieces and parts of the concept all over the place. Now it all works like it did before (helped also by using the new API for scanning local cell phone towers).How To Send Sensor Triggers to Android and Have Android React Projects & Stories ![]() Use the 3 dots in the top right for Preferences>Monitor>Use Reliable Alarms under the “General” section (it’s the 4th one there) and then change it to “Never.” If you change it to “When Off” then it will show the alarm on your lockscreen for a split second while your display turns on. Then I saw this Alarm icon showing without setting an alarm thread in a discussion forum, and found:įor me it was Tasker, I just found it. I always saw this on the lock screen (except the time and alarm were centred-I had to fake this): Screenshot of alarm on lock screen I made the Display Off Monitoring > All Clocks Seconds settings longer, but that didn’t help. I turned off Moto’s Peek Display (where it briefly shows you a clock when you lift the phone) but that didn’t do it. But it wasn’t registering when I was at home. I have it set so that when I leave home the wifi and Bluetooth go off and it goes into vibrate mode, and when I come back the networking comes up, it rings, and it speaks text messages and email From: and Subject: lines. The one problem I had was with Tasker (one of the handful of non-free software packages I use on my phone). And with Peter’s instructions on mounting the phone over SSH yet another thing will get easier. It can run two days without needing a charge, even if I watch video and listen to music! It doesn’t take thirty seconds for a web page to load! Turns out all those apps I thought were really slow are actually pretty fast. Given what I was coming from, any decent new phone would be a huge improvement, and sure enough, it is. Various reviews (including Peter Rukavina’s) said the Moto G7 Play was a very good low-price Android phone. And then it started shutting off randomly for no reason. And then it started shutting off when I tried to use the camera. Then the battery started getting really bad, to the point where I could watch the percentage tick steadily down while I was catching up on the news. Last year LineageOS stopped supporting the phone. In 2015 the operating system was out of date so I put CyanogenMod on it, and later LineageOS, both free and open Android variants. My previous phone was a Samsung Galaxy S3 I bought in September 2012 (I remember I got it the day after Andrew Sookrah’s incredible In Fear We Trust Nuit Blanche event at the Arts and Letters Club). I got a new phone last week: a Moto G7 Play.
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