• is my phone ON or is it OFF?

    From bad sector@forgetski@INVALID.net to comp.mobile.android on Wed Apr 24 18:55:24 2024
    From Newsgroup: comp.mobile.android

    The net is full of people having issues with phones they only thought
    were OFF. My android Zflip is even worse that a simple conventional
    design. Most times I turn it OFF/ON to be sure, there being no obvious, bulletproof, always in your face, indication which should be a prerequisite.


    --- Synchronet 3.20a-Linux NewsLink 1.114
  • From Andy Burns@usenet@andyburns.uk to comp.mobile.android on Thu Apr 25 08:26:16 2024
    From Newsgroup: comp.mobile.android

    bad sector wrote:

    The net is full of people having issues with phones they only thought
    were OFF.

    If you press the power button* and the screen comes on in under one
    second the phone wasn't OFF, it was just ASLEEP.


    [*] or any other action such as lifting it up, or touching the screen,
    or poking the fingerprint reader.
    --- Synchronet 3.20a-Linux NewsLink 1.114
  • From Jeff Layman@Jeff@invalid.invalid to comp.mobile.android on Thu Apr 25 09:47:17 2024
    From Newsgroup: comp.mobile.android

    On 25/04/2024 08:26, Andy Burns wrote:
    bad sector wrote:

    The net is full of people having issues with phones they only thought
    were OFF.

    If you press the power button* and the screen comes on in under one
    second the phone wasn't OFF, it was just ASLEEP.

    I think that's a too inactive term! It's checking with the cell towers regularly, waiting to see if there are any messages or emails. It's
    sending location data, also possibly using bluetooth and/or Wi-Fi to see what's going on nearby, and who knows what else. I would say it's just
    "got its eyes closed" while doing what it's been told to do. :-)

    [*] or any other action such as lifting it up, or touching the screen,
    or poking the fingerprint reader.

    The lifting it up thing is interesting. I wonder if that's done with an accelerometer? If so, it would be checking that too.
    --
    Jeff

    --- Synchronet 3.20a-Linux NewsLink 1.114
  • From Andy Burns@usenet@andyburns.uk to comp.mobile.android on Thu Apr 25 10:27:13 2024
    From Newsgroup: comp.mobile.android

    Jeff Layman wrote:

    Andy Burns wrote:

    any other action such as lifting it up, or touching the screen,
    or poking the fingerprint reader.

    The lifting it up thing is interesting. I wonder if that's done with an accelerometer? If so, it would be checking that too.

    Most likely, though mine probably uses a magnetometer too, as it can do different things depending if it's face-up or face-down.

    With the enhanced "find my device" service, for newer phones being
    turned OFF will no longer mean really OFF, bluetooth (and UWB?) will
    still be active ...


    --- Synchronet 3.20a-Linux NewsLink 1.114
  • From Nick Cine@nickcine@is.invalid to comp.mobile.android on Thu Apr 25 03:29:58 2024
    From Newsgroup: comp.mobile.android

    On Thu, 25 Apr 2024 09:47:17 +0100, Jeff Layman wrote:

    [*] or any other action such as lifting it up, or touching the screen,
    or poking the fingerprint reader.

    The lifting it up thing is interesting. I wonder if that's done with an accelerometer? If so, it would be checking that too.

    A few more comments, but I don't know much about this topic.

    1. Even if a phone is "off", when you plug in a charger, "something
    happens", so is it really off? I don't know, but how does it charge?

    2. The government has, in the past, secretly modified gangster's phones
    such that they looked to be off, but were secretly still transmitting.

    3. The iPhone, I believe, is never off, which, I'm told, is how the FindMy
    sensing works for stolen phones.

    How does any of that work? I don't know.
    --- Synchronet 3.20a-Linux NewsLink 1.114
  • From knuttle@keith_nuttle@yahoo.com to comp.mobile.android on Thu Apr 25 07:00:55 2024
    From Newsgroup: comp.mobile.android

    On 04/25/2024 5:27 AM, Andy Burns wrote:
    Jeff Layman wrote:

    Andy Burns wrote:

    any other action such as lifting it up, or touching the screen,
    or poking the fingerprint reader.

    The lifting it up thing is interesting. I wonder if that's done with
    an accelerometer? If so, it would be checking that too.

    Most likely, though mine probably uses a magnetometer too, as it can do different things depending if it's face-up or face-down.

    With the enhanced "find my device" service, for newer phones being
    turned OFF will no longer mean really OFF, bluetooth (and UWB?) will
    still be active ...


    I don't have a lot of experience with cell phones, but mine can be
    turned off. To turn it off complete you press and hold the power key
    until a screen comes up that gives a couple of options. On is to turn
    of the cell phone. When you press the power button, it goes through
    the complete start up routine that it went through when purchased.
    --- Synchronet 3.20a-Linux NewsLink 1.114
  • From =?UTF-8?B?YmFk8J+SvXNlY3Rvcg==?=@forgetski@_INVALID.net to comp.mobile.android on Thu Apr 25 07:00:42 2024
    From Newsgroup: comp.mobile.android

    On 4/25/24 03:26, Andy Burns wrote:
    bad sector wrote:

    The net is full of people having issues with phones they only thought
    were OFF.

    If you press the power button* and the screen comes on in under one
    second the phone wasn't OFF, it was just ASLEEP.


    [*] or any other action such as lifting it up, or touching the screen,
    or poking the fingerprint reader.

    Sorry, I meant a call and not being powered or not. The little phone
    icon is green or red or whatever. It should always be visible when the
    unit is powered and should either be grayscale with a red bold X on it
    when on-hook or be bright red showing a flashing lifted hook when
    off-hook. The entire OS is full of ambiguities and lack of positive
    fedback as far as I'm concerned. The test should be giving the phone to someone who has never used one and asking what the current state is,
    THAT's how intuitive and *unmistakable* it needs to be!


    --- Synchronet 3.20a-Linux NewsLink 1.114
  • From =?UTF-8?B?YmFk8J+SvXNlY3Rvcg==?=@forgetski@_INVALID.net to comp.mobile.android on Thu Apr 25 07:00:53 2024
    From Newsgroup: comp.mobile.android

    On 4/25/24 05:29, Nick Cine wrote:
    On Thu, 25 Apr 2024 09:47:17 +0100, Jeff Layman wrote:

    [*] or any other action such as lifting it up, or touching the screen,
    or poking the fingerprint reader.

    The lifting it up thing is interesting. I wonder if that's done with an
    accelerometer? If so, it would be checking that too.

    A few more comments, but I don't know much about this topic.

    1. Even if a phone is "off", when you plug in a charger, "something
    happens", so is it really off? I don't know, but how does it charge?

    2. The government has, in the past, secretly modified gangster's phones
    such that they looked to be off, but were secretly still transmitting.

    3. The iPhone, I believe, is never off, which, I'm told, is how the FindMy
    sensing works for stolen phones.

    How does any of that work? I don't know.

    For one thing the battery should be removable with one hand,
    blindfolded, in 3 seconds or less.


    --- Synchronet 3.20a-Linux NewsLink 1.114
  • From Jeff Layman@Jeff@invalid.invalid to comp.mobile.android on Thu Apr 25 12:32:46 2024
    From Newsgroup: comp.mobile.android

    On 25/04/2024 10:29, Nick Cine wrote:
    On Thu, 25 Apr 2024 09:47:17 +0100, Jeff Layman wrote:

    [*] or any other action such as lifting it up, or touching the screen,
    or poking the fingerprint reader.

    The lifting it up thing is interesting. I wonder if that's done with an
    accelerometer? If so, it would be checking that too.

    A few more comments, but I don't know much about this topic.

    1. Even if a phone is "off", when you plug in a charger, "something
    happens", so is it really off? I don't know, but how does it charge?

    The charging circuitry is within the battery itself. It controls the
    rate of charge and, in particular, monitors the temperature of the
    cell(s). If it gets too high it will stop the charging. Note though,
    that the connection from the phone's charger socket (lightning, USB, or whatever) goes through some of the phone's circuitry, so the phone knows
    the state of charge of its battery. That way its % charge can be
    displayed on the phone's screen, and battery-usage apps can let you know what's being used and how long the phone might last before recharging is essential.

    2. The government has, in the past, secretly modified gangster's phones
    such that they looked to be off, but were secretly still transmitting.

    What makes you think that was in the past and only affected crim's
    phones?! ;-)

    3. The iPhone, I believe, is never off, which, I'm told, is how the FindMy
    sensing works for stolen phones.

    I don't know about iPhones, but with my Xiaomi Android phone I can
    supposedly switch off "Find my phone". However, I'm not in control of
    the OS and really have little idea of what it does in the background.
    And even if you do work it all out, the next time an OS update appears
    you could be back at square one again!

    You can only be sure that a phone is truly off by removing its battery,
    and that is becoming less likely every time a new model comes out. If
    you power down "completely" by, for example, giving a long press on the
    power switch, then you still have to accept the Manufacturer's word that
    the phone is "off" as there's no way of testing it AFAIAA.

    How does any of that work? I don't know.
    --
    Jeff

    --- Synchronet 3.20a-Linux NewsLink 1.114
  • From Carlos E.R.@robin_listas@es.invalid to comp.mobile.android on Thu Apr 25 15:13:40 2024
    From Newsgroup: comp.mobile.android

    On 2024-04-25 11:29, Nick Cine wrote:
    On Thu, 25 Apr 2024 09:47:17 +0100, Jeff Layman wrote:

    [*] or any other action such as lifting it up, or touching the screen,
    or poking the fingerprint reader.

    The lifting it up thing is interesting. I wonder if that's done with an
    accelerometer? If so, it would be checking that too.

    A few more comments, but I don't know much about this topic.

    1. Even if a phone is "off", when you plug in a charger, "something
    happens", so is it really off? I don't know, but how does it charge?

    But the operating system is not running, radios are off. This can be
    known because when you press the power button it takes some time before
    the phone responds. It is booting.

    What exact circuitry is on when the charger is connected is up to
    speculation.


    2. The government has, in the past, secretly modified gangster's phones
    such that they looked to be off, but were secretly still transmitting.

    Hum. Dubitable.

    For one thing, the battery is spent soon if it is transmitting. A
    question of hours.



    3. The iPhone, I believe, is never off, which, I'm told, is how the FindMy
    sensing works for stolen phones.

    How does any of that work? I don't know.
    --
    Cheers, Carlos.

    --- Synchronet 3.20a-Linux NewsLink 1.114
  • From Frank Slootweg@this@ddress.is.invalid to comp.mobile.android on Thu Apr 25 13:55:21 2024
    From Newsgroup: comp.mobile.android

    Jeff Layman <Jeff@invalid.invalid> wrote:
    [...]

    The charging circuitry is within the battery itself. It controls the
    rate of charge and, in particular, monitors the temperature of the
    cell(s). If it gets too high it will stop the charging. Note though,
    that the connection from the phone's charger socket (lightning, USB, or whatever) goes through some of the phone's circuitry, so the phone knows
    the state of charge of its battery. That way its % charge can be
    displayed on the phone's screen, and battery-usage apps can let you know what's being used and how long the phone might last before recharging is essential.

    The fact that the phone is charging and how full its battery is, is
    also displayed/displayable when the phone is switched 'off'.

    Ergo, the phone is never really off. It's either awake or sleeping
    during normal use or in cold standby when the user switched it 'off'.

    [...]
    --- Synchronet 3.20a-Linux NewsLink 1.114
  • From micky@NONONOmisc07@fmguy.com to comp.mobile.android on Thu Apr 25 21:27:46 2024
    From Newsgroup: comp.mobile.android

    In comp.mobile.android, on Thu, 25 Apr 2024 08:26:16 +0100, Andy Burns <usenet@andyburns.uk> wrote:

    bad sector wrote:

    The net is full of people having issues with phones they only thought
    were OFF.

    If you press the power button* and the screen comes on in under one
    second the phone wasn't OFF, it was just ASLEEP.

    I thought if the screen comes on in under a second that means the screen
    has been blackened, and everything else was/is ON. It runs down the
    battery a lot faster than sleeping should.


    [*] or any other action such as lifting it up, or touching the screen,
    or poking the fingerprint reader.
    --- Synchronet 3.20a-Linux NewsLink 1.114
  • From micky@NONONOmisc07@fmguy.com to comp.mobile.android on Thu Apr 25 21:28:34 2024
    From Newsgroup: comp.mobile.android

    In comp.mobile.android, on Thu, 25 Apr 2024 07:00:53 -0400, bad?sector <forgetski@_INVALID.net> wrote:

    On 4/25/24 05:29, Nick Cine wrote:
    On Thu, 25 Apr 2024 09:47:17 +0100, Jeff Layman wrote:

    [*] or any other action such as lifting it up, or touching the screen, >>>> or poking the fingerprint reader.

    The lifting it up thing is interesting. I wonder if that's done with an
    accelerometer? If so, it would be checking that too.

    A few more comments, but I don't know much about this topic.

    1. Even if a phone is "off", when you plug in a charger, "something
    happens", so is it really off? I don't know, but how does it charge?

    2. The government has, in the past, secretly modified gangster's phones
    such that they looked to be off, but were secretly still transmitting. >>
    3. The iPhone, I believe, is never off, which, I'm told, is how the FindMy >> sensing works for stolen phones.

    How does any of that work? I don't know.

    For one thing the battery should be removable with one hand,
    blindfolded, in 3 seconds or less.

    Wyatt Earp could do that but I can't.
    --- Synchronet 3.20a-Linux NewsLink 1.114
  • From micky@NONONOmisc07@fmguy.com to comp.mobile.android on Thu Apr 25 21:32:07 2024
    From Newsgroup: comp.mobile.android

    In comp.mobile.android, on Thu, 25 Apr 2024 15:13:40 +0200, "Carlos
    E.R." <robin_listas@es.invalid> wrote:

    On 2024-04-25 11:29, Nick Cine wrote:
    On Thu, 25 Apr 2024 09:47:17 +0100, Jeff Layman wrote:

    [*] or any other action such as lifting it up, or touching the screen, >>>> or poking the fingerprint reader.

    The lifting it up thing is interesting. I wonder if that's done with an
    accelerometer? If so, it would be checking that too.

    A few more comments, but I don't know much about this topic.

    1. Even if a phone is "off", when you plug in a charger, "something
    happens", so is it really off? I don't know, but how does it charge?

    But the operating system is not running, radios are off. This can be
    known because when you press the power button it takes some time before
    the phone responds. It is booting.

    Doesn't whether it boots or not depend on what made the screen black?

    Did the OP ever say how his screen got into the situation it's in?

    If the screen times out, the radios were still be running, I presume the
    OS is running, the phone will ring if someone calls. HOw is that "off"?
    What exact circuitry is on when the charger is connected is up to >speculation.


    2. The government has, in the past, secretly modified gangster's phones
    such that they looked to be off, but were secretly still transmitting.

    Hum. Dubitable.

    For one thing, the battery is spent soon if it is transmitting. A
    question of hours.

    Right. Unless the phone is truly Off.



    3. The iPhone, I believe, is never off, which, I'm told, is how the FindMy >> sensing works for stolen phones.

    How does any of that work? I don't know.
    --- Synchronet 3.20a-Linux NewsLink 1.114
  • From =?UTF-8?Q?J=C3=B6rg_Lorenz?=@hugybear@gmx.net to comp.mobile.android on Fri Apr 26 03:41:44 2024
    From Newsgroup: comp.mobile.android

    Am 25.04.24 um 11:29 schrieb Nick Cine:
    On Thu, 25 Apr 2024 09:47:17 +0100, Jeff Layman wrote:

    [*] or any other action such as lifting it up, or touching the screen,
    or poking the fingerprint reader.

    The lifting it up thing is interesting. I wonder if that's done with an
    accelerometer? If so, it would be checking that too.

    A few more comments, but I don't know much about this topic.

    Then you better shut up.

    1. Even if a phone is "off", when you plug in a charger, "something
    happens", so is it really off? I don't know, but how does it charge?

    Do you still live in the 80s of the last century? Charging electronics
    is seperate from the OS.

    2. The government has, in the past, secretly modified gangster's phones
    such that they looked to be off, but were secretly still transmitting.

    They call her SIRI and her boy friend is Google.

    3. The iPhone, I believe, is never off, which, I'm told, is how the FindMy
    sensing works for stolen phones.

    Simple mind. Why are you writing here? Are you bored?

    How does any of that work? I don't know.

    Obviously.
    --
    "Gutta cavat lapidem." (Ovid)

    --- Synchronet 3.20a-Linux NewsLink 1.114
  • From =?UTF-8?Q?J=C3=B6rg_Lorenz?=@hugybear@gmx.net to comp.mobile.android on Fri Apr 26 08:18:26 2024
    From Newsgroup: comp.mobile.android

    On 25.04.24 15:55, Frank Slootweg wrote:
    Jeff Layman <Jeff@invalid.invalid> wrote:
    [...]

    The charging circuitry is within the battery itself. It controls the
    rate of charge and, in particular, monitors the temperature of the
    cell(s). If it gets too high it will stop the charging. Note though,
    that the connection from the phone's charger socket (lightning, USB, or
    whatever) goes through some of the phone's circuitry, so the phone knows
    the state of charge of its battery. That way its % charge can be
    displayed on the phone's screen, and battery-usage apps can let you know
    what's being used and how long the phone might last before recharging is
    essential.

    The fact that the phone is charging and how full its battery is, is
    also displayed/displayable when the phone is switched 'off'.

    Ergo, the phone is never really off. It's either awake or sleeping
    during normal use or in cold standby when the user switched it 'off'.

    Bullshit!
    The OS is not booted when the Android is turned off.
    --
    "Alea icacta est." (Julius Caesar)
    --- Synchronet 3.20a-Linux NewsLink 1.114
  • From Andy Burns@usenet@andyburns.uk to comp.mobile.android on Fri Apr 26 07:53:21 2024
    From Newsgroup: comp.mobile.android

    micky wrote:

    Andy Burns wrote:

    If you press the power button* and the screen comes on in under one
    second the phone wasn't OFF, it was just ASLEEP.

    I thought if the screen comes on in under a second that means the screen
    has been blackened, and everything else was/is ON. It runs down the
    battery a lot faster than sleeping should.

    That's what I mean, if you can "wake-up" the phone, in under a second,
    it never was "off" to begin with ...

    --- Synchronet 3.20a-Linux NewsLink 1.114
  • From =?UTF-8?Q?J=C3=B6rg_Lorenz?=@hugybear@gmx.net to comp.mobile.android on Fri Apr 26 08:58:02 2024
    From Newsgroup: comp.mobile.android

    On 26.04.24 08:53, Andy Burns wrote:
    micky wrote:

    Andy Burns wrote:

    If you press the power button* and the screen comes on in under one
    second the phone wasn't OFF, it was just ASLEEP.

    I thought if the screen comes on in under a second that means the screen
    has been blackened, and everything else was/is ON. It runs down the
    battery a lot faster than sleeping should.

    That's what I mean, if you can "wake-up" the phone, in under a second,
    it never was "off" to begin with ...

    It is just stand-by and fully functional.
    --
    "Alea icacta est." (Julius Caesar)
    --- Synchronet 3.20a-Linux NewsLink 1.114
  • From s|b@me@privacy.invalid to comp.mobile.android on Fri Apr 26 15:09:11 2024
    From Newsgroup: comp.mobile.android

    On Wed, 24 Apr 2024 18:55:24 -0400, bad sector wrote:

    The net is full of people having issues with phones they only thought
    were OFF. My android Zflip is even worse that a simple conventional
    design. Most times I turn it OFF/ON to be sure, there being no obvious, bulletproof, always in your face, indication which should be a prerequisite.

    Snowden would take out the battery to be sure. <g>
    --
    s|b
    --- Synchronet 3.20a-Linux NewsLink 1.114
  • From The Real Bev@bashley101@gmail.com to comp.mobile.android on Fri Apr 26 09:02:23 2024
    From Newsgroup: comp.mobile.android

    On 4/26/24 6:09 AM, s|b wrote:
    On Wed, 24 Apr 2024 18:55:24 -0400, bad sector wrote:

    The net is full of people having issues with phones they only thought
    were OFF. My android Zflip is even worse that a simple conventional
    design. Most times I turn it OFF/ON to be sure, there being no obvious,
    bulletproof, always in your face, indication which should be a prerequisite.

    Snowden would take out the battery to be sure. <g>

    I wonder if any of the phone companies offer spy-friendly cyanide-in-the-tooth-type features in their advertising...
    --
    Cheers, Bev
    It only takes 2 men to tile a bathroom
    if you slice them thinly enough.
    --- Synchronet 3.20a-Linux NewsLink 1.114
  • From bad sector@forgetski@_INVALID.net to comp.mobile.android on Fri Apr 26 16:53:56 2024
    From Newsgroup: comp.mobile.android

    On 4/25/24 21:28, micky wrote:
    In comp.mobile.android, on Thu, 25 Apr 2024 07:00:53 -0400, bad?sector <forgetski@_INVALID.net> wrote:

    On 4/25/24 05:29, Nick Cine wrote:
    On Thu, 25 Apr 2024 09:47:17 +0100, Jeff Layman wrote:

    [*] or any other action such as lifting it up, or touching the screen, >>>>> or poking the fingerprint reader.

    The lifting it up thing is interesting. I wonder if that's done with an >>>> accelerometer? If so, it would be checking that too.

    A few more comments, but I don't know much about this topic.

    1. Even if a phone is "off", when you plug in a charger, "something
    happens", so is it really off? I don't know, but how does it charge? >>>
    2. The government has, in the past, secretly modified gangster's phones
    such that they looked to be off, but were secretly still transmitting. >>>
    3. The iPhone, I believe, is never off, which, I'm told, is how the FindMy >>> sensing works for stolen phones.

    How does any of that work? I don't know.

    For one thing the battery should be removable with one hand,
    blindfolded, in 3 seconds or less.

    Wyatt Earp could do that but I can't.

    Regulations require it for oxygen masks, if enough people demand it the
    same lawmakers can just as easily require it for cell phones as well.


    --- Synchronet 3.20a-Linux NewsLink 1.114
  • From =?UTF-8?B?YmFk8J+SvXNlY3Rvcg==?=@forgetski@_INVALID.net to comp.mobile.android on Fri Apr 26 22:09:35 2024
    From Newsgroup: comp.mobile.android

    On 4/26/24 09:09, s|b wrote:
    On Wed, 24 Apr 2024 18:55:24 -0400, bad sector wrote:

    The net is full of people having issues with phones they only thought
    were OFF. My android Zflip is even worse that a simple conventional
    design. Most times I turn it OFF/ON to be sure, there being no obvious,
    bulletproof, always in your face, indication which should be a prerequisite.

    Snowden would take out the battery to be sure. <g>

    It's like built-in wifi, first thing I do is cut it's wires and use a
    usb transceiver instead for actual physical control (after sticking gum
    on the camera lens and mic pinholes). The first thing we have to do to
    big bro is stomp on his balls, else the scum of the earth will want a
    *7/24 streaming colonoscopy* from everyone.




    --- Synchronet 3.20a-Linux NewsLink 1.114
  • From Theo@theom+news@chiark.greenend.org.uk to comp.mobile.android on Sat Apr 27 10:16:52 2024
    From Newsgroup: comp.mobile.android

    Jörg Lorenz <hugybear@gmx.net> wrote:
    On 25.04.24 15:55, Frank Slootweg wrote:
    Jeff Layman <Jeff@invalid.invalid> wrote:
    [...]

    The charging circuitry is within the battery itself. It controls the
    rate of charge and, in particular, monitors the temperature of the
    cell(s). If it gets too high it will stop the charging. Note though,
    that the connection from the phone's charger socket (lightning, USB, or >> whatever) goes through some of the phone's circuitry, so the phone knows >> the state of charge of its battery. That way its % charge can be
    displayed on the phone's screen, and battery-usage apps can let you know >> what's being used and how long the phone might last before recharging is >> essential.

    The fact that the phone is charging and how full its battery is, is
    also displayed/displayable when the phone is switched 'off'.

    Ergo, the phone is never really off. It's either awake or sleeping
    during normal use or in cold standby when the user switched it 'off'.

    Bullshit!
    The OS is not booted when the Android is turned off.

    AIUI it is, kind of. When you plug in the charger with the phone off, the phone starts. The bootloader then launches the Android kernel with the flag androidboot.mode=charger

    Instead of doing the full Android boot, that causes the kernel to launch a charger UI application that shows your battery percentage on the screen or
    an animation (which comes from files on your OS partition). The charger app doesn't allow you to otherwise interact with the phone and other services
    like the radios aren't running, but the SoC is booted and running software. The SoC is also doing standard power management, ie the charging process
    here likely looks very similar to charging when the phone is turned on
    (because it is, in essence).

    The full OS services are not running, but the Android kernel and the charger app is.

    Theo
    (usual caveats: my understanding may be out of date, different vendors may
    do their own thing, etc)
    --- Synchronet 3.20a-Linux NewsLink 1.114
  • From Newyana2@mayayana@invalid.nospam to comp.mobile.android on Sat Apr 27 08:23:20 2024
    From Newsgroup: comp.mobile.android

    On 4/24/2024 6:55 PM, bad sector wrote:
    The net is full of people having issues with phones they only thought
    were OFF. My android Zflip is even worse that a simple conventional
    design. Most times I turn it OFF/ON to be sure, there being no obvious, bulletproof, always in your face, indication which should be a
    prerequisite.



    Frankly I don't understand all this confusion. I have an Android
    TCL Tracfone. If I press the power button it goes black but
    can receive calls. I've turned off the screen. If I hold the power
    button I get 3 options. One is to power off. I select that. It says
    it's shutting down. I can then leave the phone in my glove
    compartment for about 3 months without losing juice, and I'm
    not being tracked. If I don't power down then I am tracked and
    I think the battery lasts maybe 2 days. (I've only tried it once,
    by accident. I never leave the power on except when making a call.)

    To turn it on again I have to hold down the power button until it
    vibrates, then wait for a Win98-style boot process.

    Maybe it's different on some cellphones, or on iPhones? From the
    posts here it sounds like all Androids work the same way that mine
    does.
    --- Synchronet 3.20a-Linux NewsLink 1.114
  • From bad sector@forgetski@_INVALID.net to comp.mobile.android on Sun Apr 28 07:48:09 2024
    From Newsgroup: comp.mobile.android

    On 4/27/24 08:23, Newyana2 wrote:
    On 4/24/2024 6:55 PM, bad sector wrote:
    The net is full of people having issues with phones they only thought
    were OFF. My android Zflip is even worse that a simple conventional
    design. Most times I turn it OFF/ON to be sure, there being no
    obvious, bulletproof, always in your face, indication which should be
    a prerequisite.

     Frankly I don't understand all this confusion. I have an Android
    TCL Tracfone. If I press the power button it goes black but
    can receive calls. I've turned off the screen. If I hold the power
    button I get 3 options. One is to power off. I select that. It says
    it's shutting down. I can then leave the phone in my glove
    compartment for about 3 months without losing juice, and I'm
    not being tracked. If I don't power down then I am tracked and
    I think the battery lasts maybe 2 days. (I've only tried it once,
    by accident. I never leave the power on except when making a call.)

      To turn it on again I have to hold down the power button until it vibrates, then wait for a Win98-style boot process.

      Maybe it's different on some cellphones, or on iPhones? From the
    posts here it sounds like all Androids work the same way that mine
    does.

    You may not understand it but the fact remains that there *is* a lot of confusion and my take on it is that the reason for the confusion is
    shitty design. There have been and continue occurring thousands of live
    mic or phone incidents EVEN with well designed idiot-proof LOW-TECH
    devices. Digital crap should have either a hard on/off switch that does nothing else AND an easily removable battery. My flexphone has half a
    dozen ways to be turned off and even when I will know them all by heart
    they WILL NOT suffice. Having to trust that the OS has turned the mic or itself off is not the answer; it's a bit like democracy where it isn't
    the right or the wrong of the issue that decides but the will of the
    user (illustration: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6S5q4bF6lac).
    --
    Oh Lord of the Keyrings on high, have I got bad news for you: the word
    trust is nowhere to be found in my security dictionary.


    --- Synchronet 3.20a-Linux NewsLink 1.114
  • From Newyana2@mayayana@invalid.nospam to comp.mobile.android on Sun Apr 28 08:56:05 2024
    From Newsgroup: comp.mobile.android

    On 4/28/2024 7:48 AM, bad sector wrote:


    You may not understand it but the fact remains that there *is* a lot of confusion and my take on it is that the reason for the confusion is
    shitty design. There have been and continue occurring thousands of live
    mic or phone incidents EVEN with well designed idiot-proof LOW-TECH
    devices. Digital crap should have either a hard on/off switch that does nothing else AND an easily removable battery. My flexphone has half a
    dozen ways to be turned off and even when I will know them all by heart
    they WILL NOT suffice. Having to trust that the OS has turned the mic or itself off is not the answer

    I can understand the frustration. One reason that I don't normally
    use a cellphone is because they're natural spyware devices. A second
    reason is the complexity and lockdown. Both Google and Apple are
    controlling their phones in ways that should be illegal. It's like buying
    a toaster that only toasts Wonder Bread and calls home to report your
    toasting operation... and that can't be disabled. Every time I turn my cellphone on now I get a regular flurry of warnings that I should
    enable Google something or other. That started when I accidentally
    allowed it to update. It's a madhouse of commercial sleaze.

    Another issue relating to your trouble is simply that no one really
    wants to turn their cellphone off. So it's designed to require some effort. Turned off, you can't get calls. I only turn mine on when I want to
    make a call, and the battery charge lasts for months. But I don't know
    anyone else who does that. Everyone I know leaves it on constantly,
    letting it "sleep" when it's left idle. But cellphones don't actually
    sleep.
    Getting a call requires constant pings of nearby towers. So the cellphone
    is always on. It's just the screen lights that go out.

    Given that scenario, having the mic turned on, or other such
    intrusions, are a security issue, not an on/off issue, under typical
    usage conditions.

    The ZFlip lists several methods to turn it off. But the first and
    primary one is what people have been saying: "The easiest way
    to turn off the Samsung Galaxy Z Flip 5 is to press and hold the
    side and volume down buttons for about 3-5 seconds. When the
    power settings show up, select Power off."

    https://www.androidauthority.com/how-to-turn-off-samsung-galaxy-z-flip-5-3350350/

    That's exactly how my TCL works. Though I only need to hold
    the lower right button, whatever that's called. There's no ambiguity.
    So the question is, do you REALLY want to turn it off? If so then you
    can do that and not worry about the mic, but you won't receive
    calls.
    --- Synchronet 3.20a-Linux NewsLink 1.114
  • From =?UTF-8?Q?J=C3=B6rg_Lorenz?=@hugybear@gmx.net to comp.mobile.android on Sun Apr 28 16:00:08 2024
    From Newsgroup: comp.mobile.android

    On 28.04.24 14:56, Newyana2 wrote:
    On 4/28/2024 7:48 AM, bad sector wrote:


    You may not understand it but the fact remains that there *is* a lot of
    confusion and my take on it is that the reason for the confusion is
    shitty design. There have been and continue occurring thousands of live
    mic or phone incidents EVEN with well designed idiot-proof LOW-TECH
    devices. Digital crap should have either a hard on/off switch that does
    nothing else AND an easily removable battery. My flexphone has half a
    dozen ways to be turned off and even when I will know them all by heart
    they WILL NOT suffice. Having to trust that the OS has turned the mic or
    itself off is not the answer

    I can understand the frustration. One reason that I don't normally
    use a cellphone is because they're natural spyware devices. A second
    reason is the complexity and lockdown.

    Why are you writing in this group?
    You are lacking any credibility. And you try to spread conspiracy
    theories of the worst kind like the thread starter.
    --
    "Alea iacta est." (Julius Caesar)
    --- Synchronet 3.20a-Linux NewsLink 1.114
  • From =?UTF-8?Q?J=C3=B6rg_Lorenz?=@hugybear@gmx.net to comp.mobile.android on Sun Apr 28 16:06:15 2024
    From Newsgroup: comp.mobile.android

    On 27.04.24 11:16, Theo wrote:
    Jörg Lorenz <hugybear@gmx.net> wrote:
    Bullshit!
    The OS is not booted when the Android is turned off.

    AIUI it is, kind of.

    Even not a kind of.
    --
    "Alea iacta est." (Julius Caesar)
    --- Synchronet 3.20a-Linux NewsLink 1.114
  • From Newyana2@mayayana@invalid.nospam to comp.mobile.android on Sun Apr 28 12:21:06 2024
    From Newsgroup: comp.mobile.android

    On 4/28/2024 10:00 AM, Jrg Lorenz wrote:

    Why are you writing in this group?
    You are lacking any credibility. And you try to spread conspiracy
    theories of the worst kind like the thread starter.


    No point in shooting the messenger. If you use
    a cellphone turned on then you ARE being tracked.
    Many of the apps can't be removed. Downloading of
    updates can't be stopped as far as I know. What functions
    can be controlled are very difficult to find. So it would
    take a great deal of expertise to really control a cellphone.

    This is not about conspiracy theories. There are two major
    cellphone OS makers. Google and Apple. Both tightly
    control the product. Both have long histories of greed and
    dishonesty. Google is primarily an advertising
    and data collection company. Many cellphone apps make
    money by selling personal data, because no one wants to
    pay for apps.

    So before posting hysterical accusations,
    maybe read up on the facts for yourself. But I can see
    from your other posts that you like to argue and insult
    people, so maybe you really don't want to know facts.
    Facts can be a very pesky obstacle to indignant dogma. :)




    --- Synchronet 3.20a-Linux NewsLink 1.114
  • From =?UTF-8?Q?J=C3=B6rg_Lorenz?=@hugybear@gmx.net to comp.mobile.android on Sun Apr 28 18:46:57 2024
    From Newsgroup: comp.mobile.android

    On 28.04.24 18:21, Newyana2 wrote:
    On 4/28/2024 10:00 AM, Jörg Lorenz wrote:

    Why are you writing in this group?
    You are lacking any credibility. And you try to spread conspiracy
    theories of the worst kind like the thread starter.


    No point in shooting the messenger. If you use
    a cellphone turned on then you ARE being tracked.

    How do you think your service provider could bill you otherwise correctly?

    Many of the apps can't be removed. Downloading of
    updates can't be stopped as far as I know. What functions

    Sure they can be stopped.

    can be controlled are very difficult to find. So it would
    take a great deal of expertise to really control a cellphone.

    You better do not use one.

    This is not about conspiracy theories. There are two major
    cellphone OS makers. Google and Apple. Both tightly
    control the product. Both have long histories of greed and
    dishonesty. Google is primarily an advertising
    and data collection company. Many cellphone apps make
    money by selling personal data, because no one wants to
    pay for apps.

    Do you have material news or something that is not known for at least 20
    years?

    So before posting hysterical accusations,
    maybe read up on the facts for yourself. But I can see
    from your other posts that you like to argue and insult
    people, so maybe you really don't want to know facts.
    Facts can be a very pesky obstacle to indignant dogma. :)

    *You* are dogmatic. You state you have no knowledge about smartphones
    which I have to admit is obvious. Why are you posting such trivial
    things which are at least partially wrong in a technical group?
    --
    "Alea iacta est." (Julius Caesar)
    --- Synchronet 3.20a-Linux NewsLink 1.114
  • From Newyana2@mayayana@invalid.nospam to comp.mobile.android on Sun Apr 28 15:40:54 2024
    From Newsgroup: comp.mobile.android

    On 4/28/2024 12:46 PM, Jrg Lorenz wrote:

    *You* are dogmatic. You state you have no knowledge about smartphones
    which I have to admit is obvious. Why are you posting such trivial
    things which are at least partially wrong in a technical group?

    As I thought. You're bitter and just want to argue.
    I'm sorry that life is not oging well for you, but no one
    benefits from an insult contest.
    --- Synchronet 3.20a-Linux NewsLink 1.114
  • From =?UTF-8?Q?J=C3=B6rg_Lorenz?=@hugybear@gmx.net to comp.mobile.android on Sun Apr 28 22:01:30 2024
    From Newsgroup: comp.mobile.android

    On 28.04.24 21:40, Newyana2 wrote:
    On 4/28/2024 12:46 PM, Jörg Lorenz wrote:

    *You* are dogmatic. You state you have no knowledge about smartphones
    which I have to admit is obvious. Why are you posting such trivial
    things which are at least partially wrong in a technical group?

    As I thought. You're bitter and just want to argue.
    I'm sorry that life is not oging well for you, but no one
    benefits from an insult contest.

    You are contributing nothing of value. Sorry, dear. I do not insult you.
    I tell you the "truth" and plain facts. And for years you are telling
    the same trivial things.
    --
    "Alea iacta est." (Julius Caesar)
    --- Synchronet 3.20a-Linux NewsLink 1.114
  • From bad sector@forgetski@_INVALID.net to comp.mobile.android on Sun Apr 28 16:37:18 2024
    From Newsgroup: comp.mobile.android

    On 4/28/24 08:57, Newyana2 wrote:
    On 4/28/2024 7:48 AM, bad sector wrote:


    You may not understand it but the fact remains that there *is* a lot
    of confusion and my take on it is that the reason for the confusion is
    shitty design. There have been and continue occurring thousands of
    live mic or phone incidents EVEN with well designed idiot-proof
    LOW-TECH devices. Digital crap should have either a hard on/off switch
    that does nothing else AND an easily removable battery. My flexphone
    has half a dozen ways to be turned off and even when I will know them
    all by heart they WILL NOT suffice. Having to trust that the OS has
    turned the mic or itself off is not the answer

       I can understand the frustration. One reason that I don't normally
    use a cellphone is because they're natural spyware devices. A second
    reason is the complexity and lockdown. Both Google and Apple are
    controlling their phones in ways that should be illegal. It's like buying
    a toaster that only toasts Wonder Bread and calls home to report your toasting operation... and that can't be disabled. Every time I turn my cellphone on now I get a regular flurry of warnings that I should
    enable Google something or other. That started when I accidentally
    allowed it to update. It's a madhouse of commercial sleaze.

      Another issue relating to your trouble is simply that no one really
    wants to turn their cellphone off. So it's designed to require some effort. Turned off, you can't get calls. I only turn mine on when I want to
    make a call, and the battery charge lasts for months. But I don't know
    anyone else who does that. Everyone I know leaves it on constantly,
     letting it "sleep" when it's left idle. But cellphones don't actually sleep.
    Getting a call requires constant pings of nearby towers. So the cellphone
    is always on. It's just the screen lights that go out.

      Given that scenario, having the mic turned on, or other such
    intrusions, are a security issue, not an on/off issue, under typical
    usage conditions.

      The ZFlip lists several methods to turn it off. But the first and
    primary one is what people have been saying: "The easiest way
    to turn off the Samsung Galaxy Z Flip 5 is to press and hold the
    side and volume down buttons for about 3-5 seconds. When the
    power settings show up, select Power off."

    https://www.androidauthority.com/how-to-turn-off-samsung-galaxy-z-flip-5-3350350/

    I know how to turn it off, for a number of reasons I finally settled on
    the 3-step sequence beginning with sliding down the home page to the notifications page. The entire OS sucks, being incoherent from A to Z.


     That's exactly how my TCL works. Though I only need to hold
    the lower right button, whatever that's called. There's no ambiguity.
    So the question is, do you REALLY want to turn it off? If so then you
    can do that and not worry about the mic, but you won't receive
    calls.

    Not concerned about not receiving any calls, I've had enough spam
    in the few months since I bought this zFlip5 to warrant just asking
    callers to send me either a texto or an email. I'm actually looking for
    a way to get my provider to not forward any voice messages at all
    BEGINNING with their own fucking voice-mail or texto spam. Anyway, not
    to diverge into futile tergiversation what interest me is not only ease
    of turning off, a hard OFF switch and one-hand battery removal but
    EQUALLY instant and unmistakable feedback confirming whenever the unit
    is powered but in fact OFF.







    --- Synchronet 3.20a-Linux NewsLink 1.114
  • From bad sector@forgetski@_INVALID.net to comp.mobile.android on Mon Apr 29 07:55:54 2024
    From Newsgroup: comp.mobile.android

    On 4/28/24 10:00, Jörg Lorenz wrote:
    On 28.04.24 14:56, Newyana2 wrote:
    On 4/28/2024 7:48 AM, bad sector wrote:


    You may not understand it but the fact remains that there *is* a lot of
    confusion and my take on it is that the reason for the confusion is
    shitty design. There have been and continue occurring thousands of live
    mic or phone incidents EVEN with well designed idiot-proof LOW-TECH
    devices. Digital crap should have either a hard on/off switch that does
    nothing else AND an easily removable battery. My flexphone has half a
    dozen ways to be turned off and even when I will know them all by heart
    they WILL NOT suffice. Having to trust that the OS has turned the mic or >>> itself off is not the answer

    I can understand the frustration. One reason that I don't normally
    use a cellphone is because they're natural spyware devices. A second
    reason is the complexity and lockdown.

    Why are you writing in this group?
    You are lacking any credibility. And you try to spread conspiracy
    theories of the worst kind like the thread starter.

    I get a kick out of barbie-boys living in la-la land; if more positive
    and verifiable device controls including easy battery removal are not a serious threat to the snooping scum of the earth then why do they shriek
    in panic as if the offender had just killed their mother every time one mentions such changes? Why would easily removable batteries be such a
    bogeyman to some who claim to have no use for them if others do? Are
    they paranoid and fear that the batteries might pop out and never come
    back? The digital giants need to be trimmed back in terms of yards, not millimeters; so far legislation is scarce partly because legislators are traditionally just barely on the legal side of the septic tank and know
    shit about technology ...but the situation is evolving, they comply
    with the public will or soon enter oblivion.
    --
    “The society that separates its scholars from its warriors will have its thinking done by cowards and its fighting by fools.”
    ― Thucydides


    --- Synchronet 3.20a-Linux NewsLink 1.114
  • From Arno Welzel@usenet@arnowelzel.de to comp.mobile.android on Mon Apr 29 15:02:04 2024
    From Newsgroup: comp.mobile.android

    bad sector, 2024-04-25 00:55:

    The net is full of people having issues with phones they only thought
    were OFF. My android Zflip is even worse that a simple conventional
    design. Most times I turn it OFF/ON to be sure, there being no obvious, bulletproof, always in your face, indication which should be a prerequisite.

    Well - as long as you did not explicitely did POWER OFF the phone it is
    not turned off. And "power off" means you press and HOLD the power
    button until a menu appears where you can select to POWER OFF the
    device. Just turning the display off by pressing the power buttons
    briefly is not enough of course.
    --
    Arno Welzel
    https://arnowelzel.de

    --- Synchronet 3.20a-Linux NewsLink 1.114
  • From bad sector@forgetski@_INVALID.net to comp.mobile.android on Mon Apr 29 19:40:53 2024
    From Newsgroup: comp.mobile.android

    On 4/29/24 09:02, Arno Welzel wrote:
    bad sector, 2024-04-25 00:55:

    The net is full of people having issues with phones they only thought
    were OFF. My android Zflip is even worse that a simple conventional
    design. Most times I turn it OFF/ON to be sure, there being no obvious,
    bulletproof, always in your face, indication which should be a prerequisite.

    Well - as long as you did not explicitely did POWER OFF the phone it is
    not turned off. And "power off" means you press and HOLD the power
    button until a menu appears where you can select to POWER OFF the
    device. Just turning the display off by pressing the power buttons
    briefly is not enough of course.


    There has been a bit of misunderstanding since my OP in which I raised
    two issues. When I said "they only thought were OFF" I obviously meant 'on-hook' although an unwanted power-on state could in and of itself
    also kill you in the wrong situation. After that MY workaround of
    powering off TO ASSURE THAT IT IS ON-HOOK clouded the issue I think, but
    both issues remain IMO extremely important all the time.





    --- Synchronet 3.20a-Linux NewsLink 1.114
  • From Arno Welzel@usenet@arnowelzel.de to comp.mobile.android on Tue Apr 30 10:33:54 2024
    From Newsgroup: comp.mobile.android

    bad sector, 2024-04-30 01:40:

    On 4/29/24 09:02, Arno Welzel wrote:
    bad sector, 2024-04-25 00:55:

    The net is full of people having issues with phones they only thought
    were OFF. My android Zflip is even worse that a simple conventional
    design. Most times I turn it OFF/ON to be sure, there being no obvious,
    bulletproof, always in your face, indication which should be a prerequisite.

    Well - as long as you did not explicitely did POWER OFF the phone it is
    not turned off. And "power off" means you press and HOLD the power
    button until a menu appears where you can select to POWER OFF the
    device. Just turning the display off by pressing the power buttons
    briefly is not enough of course.


    There has been a bit of misunderstanding since my OP in which I raised
    two issues. When I said "they only thought were OFF" I obviously meant 'on-hook' although an unwanted power-on state could in and of itself
    also kill you in the wrong situation. After that MY workaround of
    powering off TO ASSURE THAT IT IS ON-HOOK clouded the issue I think, but both issues remain IMO extremely important all the time.

    I see - you refer to the question if there is a phone call still active
    or unintentially started. Yes, unfortunately, smartphones usually don't
    have dedicated "hang up" keys any longer except special models intended
    to be used by older or disabled people.

    However, when the phone app is still in an active call you should
    usually also see a notification about this at the top of the screen.
    --
    Arno Welzel
    https://arnowelzel.de

    --- Synchronet 3.20a-Linux NewsLink 1.114
  • From Frank Slootweg@this@ddress.is.invalid to comp.mobile.android on Tue Apr 30 09:57:18 2024
    From Newsgroup: comp.mobile.android

    Arno Welzel <usenet@arnowelzel.de> wrote:
    bad sector, 2024-04-30 01:40:
    [...]
    There has been a bit of misunderstanding since my OP in which I raised
    two issues. When I said "they only thought were OFF" I obviously meant 'on-hook' although an unwanted power-on state could in and of itself
    also kill you in the wrong situation. After that MY workaround of
    powering off TO ASSURE THAT IT IS ON-HOOK clouded the issue I think, but both issues remain IMO extremely important all the time.

    I see - you refer to the question if there is a phone call still active
    or unintentially started. Yes, unfortunately, smartphones usually don't
    have dedicated "hang up" keys any longer except special models intended
    to be used by older or disabled people.

    Are these scenarios even possible?

    (AFAIK,) For a still active phone call: If the remote party 'hangs
    up', the connection is terminated and the local phone will be 'on hook'
    again.

    For an unintentially started phone call: Unless the remote phone keeps
    on ringing 'for ever' or switches to voice mail with 'endless'
    recording, the call will be terminated at some stage and the local phone
    will be 'on hook' again.

    FWIW, I don't call or am called all that often (Using a smartphone as
    a *phone*, what *will* they think of next! :-)), but I've never had a
    situation where the phone was still 'off hook' without me knowing.

    However, when the phone app is still in an active call you should
    usually also see a notification about this at the top of the screen.

    I'll have to check how that is on my phone. I normally see the full
    screen from the phone app, but have never tested what happens if I make
    that go away without hanging up.
    --- Synchronet 3.20a-Linux NewsLink 1.114
  • From bad sector@forgetski@_INVALID.net to comp.mobile.android on Tue Apr 30 06:21:11 2024
    From Newsgroup: comp.mobile.android

    On 4/30/24 04:33, Arno Welzel wrote:
    bad sector, 2024-04-30 01:40:

    On 4/29/24 09:02, Arno Welzel wrote:
    bad sector, 2024-04-25 00:55:

    The net is full of people having issues with phones they only thought
    were OFF. My android Zflip is even worse that a simple conventional
    design. Most times I turn it OFF/ON to be sure, there being no obvious, >>>> bulletproof, always in your face, indication which should be a prerequisite.

    Well - as long as you did not explicitely did POWER OFF the phone it is
    not turned off. And "power off" means you press and HOLD the power
    button until a menu appears where you can select to POWER OFF the
    device. Just turning the display off by pressing the power buttons
    briefly is not enough of course.


    There has been a bit of misunderstanding since my OP in which I raised
    two issues. When I said "they only thought were OFF" I obviously meant
    'on-hook' although an unwanted power-on state could in and of itself
    also kill you in the wrong situation. After that MY workaround of
    powering off TO ASSURE THAT IT IS ON-HOOK clouded the issue I think, but
    both issues remain IMO extremely important all the time.

    I see - you refer to the question if there is a phone call still active
    or unintentially started. Yes, unfortunately, smartphones usually don't
    have dedicated "hang up" keys any longer except special models intended
    to be used by older or disabled people.

    However, when the phone app is still in an active call you should
    usually also see a notification about this at the top of the screen.

    In this day and age of (even apolitical) globalization and cultural
    babylon it no longer suffices for communication to be understandable, communication must henceforth be impossible to misunderstand. The phone (supposedly) is trying to communicate to the user *vitally important* information at the top of which list figure power and connection or line states. If this is not an unconditional success at the level of both facilitation and communication, and IMO it most certainly is not, I can
    see two reasons for that: intentional virtualization distancing the user
    from real control and awareness or incompetent hardware/software design
    by fucktards (of the kind that we see in cars more every day).


    --- Synchronet 3.20a-Linux NewsLink 1.114
  • From bad sector@forgetski@_INVALID.net to comp.mobile.android on Tue Apr 30 07:21:48 2024
    From Newsgroup: comp.mobile.android

    On 4/30/24 05:57, Frank Slootweg wrote:
    Arno Welzel <usenet@arnowelzel.de> wrote:
    bad sector, 2024-04-30 01:40:
    [...]
    There has been a bit of misunderstanding since my OP in which I raised
    two issues. When I said "they only thought were OFF" I obviously meant
    'on-hook' although an unwanted power-on state could in and of itself
    also kill you in the wrong situation. After that MY workaround of
    powering off TO ASSURE THAT IT IS ON-HOOK clouded the issue I think, but >>> both issues remain IMO extremely important all the time.

    I see - you refer to the question if there is a phone call still active
    or unintentially started. Yes, unfortunately, smartphones usually don't
    have dedicated "hang up" keys any longer except special models intended
    to be used by older or disabled people.

    Are these scenarios even possible?

    (AFAIK,) For a still active phone call: If the remote party 'hangs
    up', the connection is terminated and the local phone will be 'on hook' again.

    Once (when we were all driving used Chevvy-II's and Pintos with babies
    in cribs or child seats) my sister-in-law got a call from her dad
    telling her that they were welcome to visit any time (he lived on the
    coast). She and her husband were very happy to hear that. But the old
    fart kept failing to hang-up so several minutes after that call one of
    them picked up the phone only to hear him say to someone physically
    beside him "the Rockafellers are coming visiting".

    A phone is also an emergency device, I'm not sure how I would call 911
    with a hand also holding by belt as a tourniquet on the other arm,
    busted up.

    We need helluva more brains and bandwidth is the design and developmenmt bureaus, les freakin' eye-candy and hype and more robust controls and unmistakable feedback.


    --- Synchronet 3.20a-Linux NewsLink 1.114
  • From Arno Welzel@usenet@arnowelzel.de to comp.mobile.android on Tue Apr 30 14:10:06 2024
    From Newsgroup: comp.mobile.android

    bad sector, 2024-04-30 13:21:

    On 4/30/24 05:57, Frank Slootweg wrote:
    [...]
    Are these scenarios even possible?

    (AFAIK,) For a still active phone call: If the remote party 'hangs
    up', the connection is terminated and the local phone will be 'on hook'
    again.

    Once (when we were all driving used Chevvy-II's and Pintos with babies
    in cribs or child seats) my sister-in-law got a call from her dad
    telling her that they were welcome to visit any time (he lived on the coast). She and her husband were very happy to hear that. But the old
    fart kept failing to hang-up so several minutes after that call one of
    them picked up the phone only to hear him say to someone physically
    beside him "the Rockafellers are coming visiting".

    When they did not hang up, yes then this is possible - otherwise not.
    --
    Arno Welzel
    https://arnowelzel.de

    --- Synchronet 3.20a-Linux NewsLink 1.114
  • From Frank Slootweg@this@ddress.is.invalid to comp.mobile.android on Tue Apr 30 14:01:50 2024
    From Newsgroup: comp.mobile.android

    Arno Welzel <usenet@arnowelzel.de> wrote:
    bad sector, 2024-04-30 13:21:

    On 4/30/24 05:57, Frank Slootweg wrote:
    [...]
    Are these scenarios even possible?

    (AFAIK,) For a still active phone call: If the remote party 'hangs
    up', the connection is terminated and the local phone will be 'on hook'
    again.

    Once (when we were all driving used Chevvy-II's and Pintos with babies
    in cribs or child seats) my sister-in-law got a call from her dad
    telling her that they were welcome to visit any time (he lived on the coast). She and her husband were very happy to hear that. But the old
    fart kept failing to hang-up so several minutes after that call one of them picked up the phone only to hear him say to someone physically
    beside him "the Rockafellers are coming visiting".

    When they did not hang up, yes then this is possible - otherwise not.

    But that was a scenario with a normal (not mobile) phone with a
    seperate handpiece/receiver (we Dutch call it the 'hoorn' (horn). As I mentioned, (AFAIK, for the reasons I gave) such a scenario is not
    possible for a smartphone (and probably also not for most 'dumb'/feature phones).

    My take is that 'bad sector' just wants to ramble/vent.
    --- Synchronet 3.20a-Linux NewsLink 1.114
  • From =?UTF-8?B?YmFk8J+SvXNlY3Rvcg==?=@forgetski@_INVALID.net to comp.mobile.android on Tue Apr 30 17:05:54 2024
    From Newsgroup: comp.mobile.android

    On 4/30/24 10:01, Frank Slootweg wrote:
    Arno Welzel <usenet@arnowelzel.de> wrote:
    bad sector, 2024-04-30 13:21:

    On 4/30/24 05:57, Frank Slootweg wrote:
    [...]
    Are these scenarios even possible?

    (AFAIK,) For a still active phone call: If the remote party 'hangs >>>> up', the connection is terminated and the local phone will be 'on hook' >>>> again.

    Once (when we were all driving used Chevvy-II's and Pintos with babies
    in cribs or child seats) my sister-in-law got a call from her dad
    telling her that they were welcome to visit any time (he lived on the
    coast). She and her husband were very happy to hear that. But the old
    fart kept failing to hang-up so several minutes after that call one of
    them picked up the phone only to hear him say to someone physically
    beside him "the Rockafellers are coming visiting".

    When they did not hang up, yes then this is possible - otherwise not.

    But that was a scenario with a normal (not mobile) phone with a
    seperate handpiece/receiver (we Dutch call it the 'hoorn' (horn). As I mentioned, (AFAIK, for the reasons I gave) such a scenario is not
    possible for a smartphone (and probably also not for most 'dumb'/feature phones).

    My take is that 'bad sector' just wants to ramble/vent.

    Not really, what I want is CHANGE. The BlackBerry had not only real
    buttons but chicklety ones extremely well engineeered for that positive
    feel. My son had one, they *were disappeared* just when I was getting
    set to buy one! I had to do with a basic cell-phone with no texto even.
    I did what I needed done but a while ago it packed up so I wanted to buy another one like it but with texto capability. My provider said
    "FORGET-IT, we've been keeping your special low-end account for as long
    as you phone would last, now it's NOT renewable anymore". So I went and
    bought this android zFlip5 but it's a giga-letdown for too many reasons
    to mention and I think I will get rid of it. I can live without a
    cell-phone, my take is that demand will eventually force design
    improvements as well as open source non-proprietary OS'es developed by
    units walking on two legs. Meanwhile I call a spade a spade and I will
    let no apple, faecesbook or goongle steer my life, they already have way
    too much influence on my bowel movements.

    tinyurl.com/3s7bkhw7

    --- Synchronet 3.20a-Linux NewsLink 1.114
  • From Frank Slootweg@this@ddress.is.invalid to comp.mobile.android on Wed May 1 10:08:31 2024
    From Newsgroup: comp.mobile.android

    bad?sector <forgetski@_invalid.net> wrote:
    On 4/30/24 10:01, Frank Slootweg wrote:
    [...]

    My take is that 'bad sector' just wants to ramble/vent.

    Not really, what I want is CHANGE. The BlackBerry had not only real
    buttons but chicklety ones extremely well engineeered for that positive feel. My son had one, they *were disappeared* just when I was getting
    set to buy one! I had to do with a basic cell-phone with no texto even.
    I did what I needed done but a while ago it packed up so I wanted to buy another one like it but with texto capability. My provider said
    "FORGET-IT, we've been keeping your special low-end account for as long
    as you phone would last, now it's NOT renewable anymore". So I went and bought this android zFlip5 but it's a giga-letdown for too many reasons
    to mention and I think I will get rid of it. I can live without a cell-phone, my take is that demand will eventually force design
    improvements as well as open source non-proprietary OS'es developed by
    units walking on two legs. Meanwhile I call a spade a spade and I will
    let no apple, faecesbook or goongle steer my life, they already have way
    too much influence on my bowel movements.

    tinyurl.com/3s7bkhw7

    As I've said to others with similar needs/wants/complaints:

    Buy a 'dumb'/'feature' phone and be done with it. They still have real
    keys/ buttons. have SMS capability and can work on modern 4G (and of
    course 2G and 3G) networks. Problem solved.
    --- Synchronet 3.20a-Linux NewsLink 1.114
  • From Carlos E.R.@robin_listas@es.invalid to comp.mobile.android on Thu May 2 08:17:27 2024
    From Newsgroup: comp.mobile.android

    On 2024-04-27 11:16, Theo wrote:
    Jörg Lorenz <hugybear@gmx.net> wrote:
    On 25.04.24 15:55, Frank Slootweg wrote:
    Jeff Layman <Jeff@invalid.invalid> wrote:
    [...]

    The charging circuitry is within the battery itself. It controls the
    rate of charge and, in particular, monitors the temperature of the
    cell(s). If it gets too high it will stop the charging. Note though,
    that the connection from the phone's charger socket (lightning, USB, or >>>> whatever) goes through some of the phone's circuitry, so the phone knows >>>> the state of charge of its battery. That way its % charge can be
    displayed on the phone's screen, and battery-usage apps can let you know >>>> what's being used and how long the phone might last before recharging is >>>> essential.

    The fact that the phone is charging and how full its battery is, is
    also displayed/displayable when the phone is switched 'off'.

    Ergo, the phone is never really off. It's either awake or sleeping
    during normal use or in cold standby when the user switched it 'off'.

    Bullshit!
    The OS is not booted when the Android is turned off.

    AIUI it is, kind of. When you plug in the charger with the phone off, the phone starts. The bootloader then launches the Android kernel with the flag androidboot.mode=charger

    Instead of doing the full Android boot, that causes the kernel to launch a charger UI application that shows your battery percentage on the screen or
    an animation (which comes from files on your OS partition). The charger app doesn't allow you to otherwise interact with the phone and other services like the radios aren't running, but the SoC is booted and running software. The SoC is also doing standard power management, ie the charging process
    here likely looks very similar to charging when the phone is turned on (because it is, in essence).

    The full OS services are not running, but the Android kernel and the charger app is.

    Theo
    (usual caveats: my understanding may be out of date, different vendors may
    do their own thing, etc)


    Hum! That's the best explanation I have seen so far. Thank you. It
    explains things.
    --
    Cheers, Carlos.

    --- Synchronet 3.20a-Linux NewsLink 1.114
  • From Carlos E.R.@robin_listas@es.invalid to comp.mobile.android on Thu May 2 08:14:20 2024
    From Newsgroup: comp.mobile.android

    On 2024-04-26 22:53, bad sector wrote:
    On 4/25/24 21:28, micky wrote:
    In comp.mobile.android, on Thu, 25 Apr 2024 07:00:53 -0400, bad?sector
    <forgetski@_INVALID.net> wrote:

    On 4/25/24 05:29, Nick Cine wrote:
    On Thu, 25 Apr 2024 09:47:17 +0100, Jeff Layman wrote:

    [*] or any other action such as lifting it up, or touching the
    screen,
    or poking the fingerprint reader.

    The lifting it up thing is interesting. I wonder if that's done
    with an
    accelerometer? If so, it would be checking that too.

    A few more comments, but I don't know much about this topic.

    1. Even if a phone is "off", when you plug in a charger, "something
         happens", so is it really off? I don't know, but how does it >>>> charge?

    2. The government has, in the past, secretly modified gangster's phones >>>>      such that they looked to be off, but were secretly still
    transmitting.

    3. The iPhone, I believe, is never off, which, I'm told, is how the
    FindMy
         sensing works for stolen phones.

    How does any of that work? I don't know.

    For one thing the battery should be removable with one hand,
    blindfolded, in 3 seconds or less.

    Wyatt Earp could do that but I can't.

    Regulations require it for oxygen masks, if enough people demand it the
    same lawmakers can just as easily require it for cell phones as well.

    The EU is planning to regulate user replaceable batteries in phones and
    other devices. No mention of doing it "with one hand, blindfolded, in 3 seconds or less", though.
    --
    Cheers, Carlos.

    --- Synchronet 3.20a-Linux NewsLink 1.114
  • From =?UTF-8?Q?J=C3=B6rg_Lorenz?=@hugybear@gmx.net to comp.mobile.android on Thu May 2 08:42:56 2024
    From Newsgroup: comp.mobile.android

    On 02.05.24 08:14, Carlos E.R. wrote:
    On 2024-04-26 22:53, bad sector wrote:
    On 4/25/24 21:28, micky wrote:
    In comp.mobile.android, on Thu, 25 Apr 2024 07:00:53 -0400, bad?sector
    <forgetski@_INVALID.net> wrote:

    On 4/25/24 05:29, Nick Cine wrote:
    On Thu, 25 Apr 2024 09:47:17 +0100, Jeff Layman wrote:

    [*] or any other action such as lifting it up, or touching the
    screen,
    or poking the fingerprint reader.

    The lifting it up thing is interesting. I wonder if that's done
    with an
    accelerometer? If so, it would be checking that too.

    A few more comments, but I don't know much about this topic.

    1. Even if a phone is "off", when you plug in a charger, "something
         happens", so is it really off? I don't know, but how does it >>>>> charge?

    2. The government has, in the past, secretly modified gangster's phones >>>>>      such that they looked to be off, but were secretly still
    transmitting.

    3. The iPhone, I believe, is never off, which, I'm told, is how the >>>>> FindMy
         sensing works for stolen phones.

    How does any of that work? I don't know.

    For one thing the battery should be removable with one hand,
    blindfolded, in 3 seconds or less.

    Wyatt Earp could do that but I can't.

    Regulations require it for oxygen masks, if enough people demand it the
    same lawmakers can just as easily require it for cell phones as well.

    The EU is planning to regulate user replaceable batteries in phones and other devices. No mention of doing it "with one hand, blindfolded, in 3 seconds or less", though.

    Readjust your irony sensors, Carlos.
    --
    "Alea iacta est." (Julius Caesar)
    --- Synchronet 3.20a-Linux NewsLink 1.114
  • From =?UTF-8?B?YmFk8J+SvXNlY3Rvcg==?=@forgetski@_INVALID.net to comp.mobile.android on Thu May 2 07:21:40 2024
    From Newsgroup: comp.mobile.android

    On 5/2/24 02:14, Carlos E.R. wrote:
    On 2024-04-26 22:53, bad sector wrote:
    On 4/25/24 21:28, micky wrote:
    In comp.mobile.android, on Thu, 25 Apr 2024 07:00:53 -0400, bad?sector
    <forgetski@_INVALID.net> wrote:

    On 4/25/24 05:29, Nick Cine wrote:
    On Thu, 25 Apr 2024 09:47:17 +0100, Jeff Layman wrote:

    [*] or any other action such as lifting it up, or touching the
    screen,
    or poking the fingerprint reader.

    The lifting it up thing is interesting. I wonder if that's done
    with an
    accelerometer? If so, it would be checking that too.

    A few more comments, but I don't know much about this topic.

    1. Even if a phone is "off", when you plug in a charger, "something
         happens", so is it really off? I don't know, but how does it >>>>> charge?

    2. The government has, in the past, secretly modified gangster's
    phones
         such that they looked to be off, but were secretly still
    transmitting.

    3. The iPhone, I believe, is never off, which, I'm told, is how the >>>>> FindMy
         sensing works for stolen phones.

    How does any of that work? I don't know.

    For one thing the battery should be removable with one hand,
    blindfolded, in 3 seconds or less.

    Wyatt Earp could do that but I can't.

    Regulations require it for oxygen masks, if enough people demand it
    the same lawmakers can just as easily require it for cell phones as well.

    The EU is planning to regulate user replaceable batteries in phones and other devices. No mention of doing it "with one hand, blindfolded, in 3 seconds or less", though.


    I don't think they know what it means :-)

    Seriously, they're way ahead of us in handling foxes in chicken-coops! I
    say if a camera can have an easily ejectable battery then so can a
    phone. period.




    --- Synchronet 3.20a-Linux NewsLink 1.114
  • From =?UTF-8?B?YmFk8J+SvXNlY3Rvcg==?=@forgetski@_INVALID.net to comp.mobile.android on Thu May 2 07:42:26 2024
    From Newsgroup: comp.mobile.android

    On 5/1/24 06:08, Frank Slootweg wrote:
    bad?sector <forgetski@_invalid.net> wrote:
    On 4/30/24 10:01, Frank Slootweg wrote:
    [...]

    My take is that 'bad sector' just wants to ramble/vent.

    Not really, what I want is CHANGE. The BlackBerry had not only real
    buttons but chicklety ones extremely well engineeered for that positive
    feel. My son had one, they *were disappeared* just when I was getting
    set to buy one! I had to do with a basic cell-phone with no texto even.
    I did what I needed done but a while ago it packed up so I wanted to buy
    another one like it but with texto capability. My provider said
    "FORGET-IT, we've been keeping your special low-end account for as long
    as you phone would last, now it's NOT renewable anymore". So I went and
    bought this android zFlip5 but it's a giga-letdown for too many reasons
    to mention and I think I will get rid of it. I can live without a
    cell-phone, my take is that demand will eventually force design
    improvements as well as open source non-proprietary OS'es developed by
    units walking on two legs. Meanwhile I call a spade a spade and I will
    let no apple, faecesbook or goongle steer my life, they already have way
    too much influence on my bowel movements.

    tinyurl.com/3s7bkhw7

    As I've said to others with similar needs/wants/complaints:

    Buy a 'dumb'/'feature' phone and be done with it. They still have real keys/ buttons. have SMS capability and can work on modern 4G (and of
    course 2G and 3G) networks. Problem solved.

    Other than satellite, where I live there are only 3 providers one of
    which (Bell) doesn't even have my physical address in their data base so
    when I call them they say "you do not exist". The other big one (Telus)
    is the only major that is available on paper but with only 4g service
    and so poor as to make the entire idea of a cell-phone laughable,
    tethering is a joke that NEVER works. The third one is a discount arm of
    Telus selling their crap for a few pennies less. I'm only saying this to
    put things into perspective. Telus as I said will NOT renew my old
    plane-jane service for a plain-jane flip phone fare, I have no choice
    but to go with the minimal but hefty price of full 5g and tethering
    package very little of which could I use with ANY phone and almost none
    of which with less. Bottom line, if I have service at all be that
    minimally high-end on paper, I might as well have the phone for it.

    Problem 'solving' would BEGIN with stomping on the manufacturers' and providers' balls with both feet and forcing them into line or lose their market or licenses. Unfortunately our barbie-boy leader always sits with
    his legs crossed.


    --- Synchronet 3.20a-Linux NewsLink 1.114
  • From =?UTF-8?B?YmFk8J+SvXNlY3Rvcg==?=@forgetski@_INVALID.net to comp.mobile.android on Thu May 2 07:43:42 2024
    From Newsgroup: comp.mobile.android

    On 5/2/24 02:17, Carlos E.R. wrote:
    On 2024-04-27 11:16, Theo wrote:
    Jörg Lorenz <hugybear@gmx.net> wrote:
    On 25.04.24 15:55, Frank Slootweg wrote:
    Jeff Layman <Jeff@invalid.invalid> wrote:
    [...]

    The charging circuitry is within the battery itself. It controls the >>>>> rate of charge and, in particular, monitors the temperature of the
    cell(s). If it gets too high it will stop the charging. Note though, >>>>> that the connection from the phone's charger socket (lightning,
    USB, or
    whatever) goes through some of the phone's circuitry, so the phone
    knows
    the state of charge of its battery. That way its % charge can be
    displayed on the phone's screen, and battery-usage apps can let you >>>>> know
    what's being used and how long the phone might last before
    recharging is
    essential.

       The fact that the phone is charging and how full its battery is, is >>>> also displayed/displayable when the phone is switched 'off'.

       Ergo, the phone is never really off. It's either awake or sleeping >>>> during normal use or in cold standby when the user switched it 'off'.

    Bullshit!
    The OS is not booted when the Android is turned off.

    AIUI it is, kind of.  When you plug in the charger with the phone off,
    the
    phone starts.  The bootloader then launches the Android kernel with
    the flag
    androidboot.mode=charger

    Instead of doing the full Android boot, that causes the kernel to
    launch a
    charger UI application that shows your battery percentage on the
    screen or
    an animation (which comes from files on your OS partition).  The
    charger app
    doesn't allow you to otherwise interact with the phone and other services
    like the radios aren't running, but the SoC is booted and running
    software.
    The SoC is also doing standard power management, ie the charging process
    here likely looks very similar to charging when the phone is turned on
    (because it is, in essence).

    The full OS services are not running, but the Android kernel and the
    charger
    app is.

    Theo
    (usual caveats: my understanding may be out of date, different vendors
    may
    do their own thing, etc)


    Hum!  That's the best explanation I have seen so far. Thank you. It explains things.


    Like your compuer, it's sleeping with one ear (and maybe eye) open.


    --- Synchronet 3.20a-Linux NewsLink 1.114
  • From =?UTF-8?Q?J=C3=B6rg_Lorenz?=@hugybear@gmx.net to comp.mobile.android on Thu May 2 16:45:39 2024
    From Newsgroup: comp.mobile.android

    On 02.05.24 13:43, bad💽sector wrote:
    On 5/2/24 02:17, Carlos E.R. wrote:
    On 2024-04-27 11:16, Theo wrote:
    Jörg Lorenz <hugybear@gmx.net> wrote:
    On 25.04.24 15:55, Frank Slootweg wrote:
    Jeff Layman <Jeff@invalid.invalid> wrote:
    [...]

    The charging circuitry is within the battery itself. It controls the >>>>>> rate of charge and, in particular, monitors the temperature of the >>>>>> cell(s). If it gets too high it will stop the charging. Note though, >>>>>> that the connection from the phone's charger socket (lightning,
    USB, or
    whatever) goes through some of the phone's circuitry, so the phone >>>>>> knows
    the state of charge of its battery. That way its % charge can be
    displayed on the phone's screen, and battery-usage apps can let you >>>>>> know
    what's being used and how long the phone might last before
    recharging is
    essential.

       The fact that the phone is charging and how full its battery is, is >>>>> also displayed/displayable when the phone is switched 'off'.

       Ergo, the phone is never really off. It's either awake or sleeping >>>>> during normal use or in cold standby when the user switched it 'off'. >>>>
    Bullshit!
    The OS is not booted when the Android is turned off.

    AIUI it is, kind of.  When you plug in the charger with the phone off, >>> the
    phone starts.  The bootloader then launches the Android kernel with
    the flag
    androidboot.mode=charger

    Instead of doing the full Android boot, that causes the kernel to
    launch a
    charger UI application that shows your battery percentage on the
    screen or
    an animation (which comes from files on your OS partition).  The
    charger app
    doesn't allow you to otherwise interact with the phone and other services >>> like the radios aren't running, but the SoC is booted and running
    software.
    The SoC is also doing standard power management, ie the charging process >>> here likely looks very similar to charging when the phone is turned on
    (because it is, in essence).

    The full OS services are not running, but the Android kernel and the
    charger
    app is.

    Theo
    (usual caveats: my understanding may be out of date, different vendors
    may
    do their own thing, etc)


    Hum!  That's the best explanation I have seen so far. Thank you. It
    explains things.


    Like your compuer, it's sleeping with one ear (and maybe eye) open.

    Are you trying to spread FUD again?
    --
    "Alea iacta est." (Julius Caesar)
    --- Synchronet 3.20a-Linux NewsLink 1.114
  • From Frank Slootweg@this@ddress.is.invalid to comp.mobile.android on Thu May 2 15:22:45 2024
    From Newsgroup: comp.mobile.android

    bad?sector <forgetski@_invalid.net> wrote:
    On 5/1/24 06:08, Frank Slootweg wrote:
    bad?sector <forgetski@_invalid.net> wrote:
    On 4/30/24 10:01, Frank Slootweg wrote:
    [...]

    My take is that 'bad sector' just wants to ramble/vent.

    Not really, what I want is CHANGE. The BlackBerry had not only real
    buttons but chicklety ones extremely well engineeered for that positive
    feel. My son had one, they *were disappeared* just when I was getting
    set to buy one! I had to do with a basic cell-phone with no texto even.
    I did what I needed done but a while ago it packed up so I wanted to buy >> another one like it but with texto capability. My provider said
    "FORGET-IT, we've been keeping your special low-end account for as long
    as you phone would last, now it's NOT renewable anymore". So I went and
    bought this android zFlip5 but it's a giga-letdown for too many reasons
    to mention and I think I will get rid of it. I can live without a
    cell-phone, my take is that demand will eventually force design
    improvements as well as open source non-proprietary OS'es developed by
    units walking on two legs. Meanwhile I call a spade a spade and I will
    let no apple, faecesbook or goongle steer my life, they already have way >> too much influence on my bowel movements.

    tinyurl.com/3s7bkhw7

    As I've said to others with similar needs/wants/complaints:

    Buy a 'dumb'/'feature' phone and be done with it. They still have real keys/ buttons. have SMS capability and can work on modern 4G (and of
    course 2G and 3G) networks. Problem solved.

    Other than satellite, where I live there are only 3 providers one of
    which (Bell) doesn't even have my physical address in their data base so when I call them they say "you do not exist". The other big one (Telus)
    is the only major that is available on paper but with only 4g service
    and so poor as to make the entire idea of a cell-phone laughable,
    tethering is a joke that NEVER works. The third one is a discount arm of Telus selling their crap for a few pennies less. I'm only saying this to
    put things into perspective. Telus as I said will NOT renew my old plane-jane service for a plain-jane flip phone fare, I have no choice
    but to go with the minimal but hefty price of full 5g and tethering
    package very little of which could I use with ANY phone and almost none
    of which with less. Bottom line, if I have service at all be that
    minimally high-end on paper, I might as well have the phone for it.

    If you tell the audience where (about) you live, they probably can
    give you some sensible and reasonable cost alternative providers, possibly/probably 'even' some prepaid ones.

    Meanwhile we in the read world - meaning non-US or maybe non-NA - have
    no such problems. How I use or do not use my phone is no-one's business,
    I only pay my provider(s) for what I need/use. End of story.

    Problem 'solving' would BEGIN with stomping on the manufacturers' and providers' balls with both feet and forcing them into line or lose their market or licenses. Unfortunately our barbie-boy leader always sits with
    his legs crossed.
    --- Synchronet 3.20a-Linux NewsLink 1.114
  • From Carlos E.R.@robin_listas@es.invalid to comp.mobile.android on Thu May 2 23:59:35 2024
    From Newsgroup: comp.mobile.android

    On 2024-05-02 13:43, bad💽sector wrote:
    On 5/2/24 02:17, Carlos E.R. wrote:
    On 2024-04-27 11:16, Theo wrote:
    Jörg Lorenz <hugybear@gmx.net> wrote:
    On 25.04.24 15:55, Frank Slootweg wrote:
    Jeff Layman <Jeff@invalid.invalid> wrote: [...]

    ...

    Bullshit! The OS is not booted when the Android is turned off.

    AIUI it is, kind of. When you plug in the charger with the phone
    off, the phone starts. The bootloader then launches the Android
    kernel with the flag androidboot.mode=charger

    Instead of doing the full Android boot, that causes the kernel to
    launch a charger UI application that shows your battery
    percentage on the screen or an animation (which comes from files
    on your OS partition). The charger app doesn't allow you to
    otherwise interact with the phone and other services like the
    radios aren't running, but the SoC is booted and running
    software. The SoC is also doing standard power management, ie the
    charging process here likely looks very similar to charging when
    the phone is turned on (because it is, in essence).

    The full OS services are not running, but the Android kernel and
    the charger app is.

    Theo (usual caveats: my understanding may be out of date,
    different vendors may do their own thing, etc)


    Hum! That's the best explanation I have seen so far. Thank you. It
    explains things.


    Like your compuer, it's sleeping with one ear (and maybe eye) open.

    Low power processors can do things like switch off circuitry, or stop processing completely till some external event happens.

    This is used in circuitry that runs on batteries for months, like the
    speed meter of a bicycle. If the wheel doesn't turn, the processor and everything sleeps, except the turn counter.

    Well, this is the same idea: boot a different image that only powers up
    what it needs in order to track battery power and charging.

    Doable.
    --
    Cheers, Carlos.

    --- Synchronet 3.20a-Linux NewsLink 1.114
  • From =?UTF-8?B?YmFk8J+SvXNlY3Rvcg==?=@forgetski@_INVALID.net to comp.mobile.android on Thu May 2 20:42:15 2024
    From Newsgroup: comp.mobile.android

    On 5/2/24 11:22, Frank Slootweg wrote:
    bad?sector <forgetski@_invalid.net> wrote:
    On 5/1/24 06:08, Frank Slootweg wrote:
    bad?sector <forgetski@_invalid.net> wrote:
    On 4/30/24 10:01, Frank Slootweg wrote:
    [...]

    My take is that 'bad sector' just wants to ramble/vent.

    Not really, what I want is CHANGE. The BlackBerry had not only real
    buttons but chicklety ones extremely well engineeered for that positive >>>> feel. My son had one, they *were disappeared* just when I was getting
    set to buy one! I had to do with a basic cell-phone with no texto even. >>>> I did what I needed done but a while ago it packed up so I wanted to buy >>>> another one like it but with texto capability. My provider said
    "FORGET-IT, we've been keeping your special low-end account for as long >>>> as you phone would last, now it's NOT renewable anymore". So I went and >>>> bought this android zFlip5 but it's a giga-letdown for too many reasons >>>> to mention and I think I will get rid of it. I can live without a
    cell-phone, my take is that demand will eventually force design
    improvements as well as open source non-proprietary OS'es developed by >>>> units walking on two legs. Meanwhile I call a spade a spade and I will >>>> let no apple, faecesbook or goongle steer my life, they already have way >>>> too much influence on my bowel movements.

    tinyurl.com/3s7bkhw7

    As I've said to others with similar needs/wants/complaints:

    Buy a 'dumb'/'feature' phone and be done with it. They still have real >>> keys/ buttons. have SMS capability and can work on modern 4G (and of
    course 2G and 3G) networks. Problem solved.

    Other than satellite, where I live there are only 3 providers one of
    which (Bell) doesn't even have my physical address in their data base so
    when I call them they say "you do not exist". The other big one (Telus)
    is the only major that is available on paper but with only 4g service
    and so poor as to make the entire idea of a cell-phone laughable,
    tethering is a joke that NEVER works. The third one is a discount arm of
    Telus selling their crap for a few pennies less. I'm only saying this to
    put things into perspective. Telus as I said will NOT renew my old
    plane-jane service for a plain-jane flip phone fare, I have no choice
    but to go with the minimal but hefty price of full 5g and tethering
    package very little of which could I use with ANY phone and almost none
    of which with less. Bottom line, if I have service at all be that
    minimally high-end on paper, I might as well have the phone for it.

    If you tell the audience where (about) you live, they probably can
    give you some sensible and reasonable cost alternative providers, possibly/probably 'even' some prepaid ones.

    Meanwhile we in the read world - meaning non-US or maybe non-NA - have
    no such problems. How I use or do not use my phone is no-one's business,
    I only pay my provider(s) for what I need/use. End of story.

    I live in eastern Quebec and our two levels of government can't even
    spell "utility price controls" the way they do in Europe where unlimited
    4g plans are about 20 euros from what I hear. But cost is NOT the issue
    nor the topic which is "is my smartphone ON or OFF including on-hook
    off" conditions which IMO are not that obvious all the time nor is their setting as simple and intuitive as it could and should be.

    When designing something as important as a communications tool or its OS
    for the masses you sit down with a number of people who have never used
    a cell phone and give them one asking 'is that phone ON or is it OFF
    right now as it is'? In the event of no answer or a wrong answer it's
    back to the drawing board UNTIL YOU GET IT RIGHT! Ditto for putting
    on-hook or turning off without reading any manual in which context I
    also want to see removable batteries.

    I'm not looking to use providers whose head offices do not fall under
    Canadian law. As I said there are 3 domestic ones here at least
    theoretically available to me, all of them suck and a 4th one which I
    haven't named gets such bad reports that I wouldn't even use them if
    THEY paid ME.


    Problem 'solving' would BEGIN with stomping on the manufacturers' and
    providers' balls with both feet and forcing them into line or lose their
    market or licenses. Unfortunately our barbie-boy leader always sits with
    his legs crossed.






    --- Synchronet 3.20a-Linux NewsLink 1.114
  • From =?UTF-8?B?YmFk8J+SvXNlY3Rvcg==?=@forgetski@_INVALID.net to comp.mobile.android on Thu May 2 20:48:26 2024
    From Newsgroup: comp.mobile.android

    On 5/2/24 17:59, Carlos E.R. wrote:
    On 2024-05-02 13:43, bad💽sector wrote:
    On 5/2/24 02:17, Carlos E.R. wrote:
    On 2024-04-27 11:16, Theo wrote:
    Jörg Lorenz <hugybear@gmx.net> wrote:
    On 25.04.24 15:55, Frank Slootweg wrote:
    Jeff Layman <Jeff@invalid.invalid> wrote: [...]

    ...

    Bullshit! The OS is not booted when the Android is turned off.

    AIUI it is, kind of.  When you plug in the charger with the phone
     off, the phone starts.  The bootloader then launches the Android
    kernel with the flag androidboot.mode=charger

    Instead of doing the full Android boot, that causes the kernel to
     launch a charger UI application that shows your battery
    percentage on the screen or an animation (which comes from files
    on your OS partition).  The charger app doesn't allow you to
    otherwise interact with the phone and other services like the
    radios aren't running, but the SoC is booted and running software.
    The SoC is also doing standard power management, ie the
    charging process here likely looks very similar to charging when
    the phone is turned on (because it is, in essence).

    The full OS services are not running, but the Android kernel and
    the charger app is.

    Theo (usual caveats: my understanding may be out of date,
    different vendors may do their own thing, etc)


    Hum!  That's the best explanation I have seen so far. Thank you. It
     explains things.


    Like your compuer, it's sleeping with one ear (and maybe eye) open.

    Low power processors can do things like switch off circuitry, or stop processing completely till some external event happens.

    Like a suspersensitive motion sensor or passive mic? I don't wanna get
    into that discussion, it's a whole another can of worms :-)



    This is used in circuitry that runs on batteries for months, like the
    speed meter of a bicycle. If the wheel doesn't turn, the processor and everything sleeps, except the turn counter.

    Well, this is the same idea: boot a different image that only powers up
    what it needs in order to track battery power and charging.

    Doable.


    --- Synchronet 3.20a-Linux NewsLink 1.114
  • From Carlos E.R.@robin_listas@es.invalid to comp.mobile.android on Fri May 3 13:42:56 2024
    From Newsgroup: comp.mobile.android

    On 2024-05-02 13:21, bad💽sector wrote:
    On 5/2/24 02:14, Carlos E.R. wrote:
    On 2024-04-26 22:53, bad sector wrote:
    On 4/25/24 21:28, micky wrote:
    In comp.mobile.android, on Thu, 25 Apr 2024 07:00:53 -0400, bad?sector >>>> <forgetski@_INVALID.net> wrote:

    On 4/25/24 05:29, Nick Cine wrote:
    On Thu, 25 Apr 2024 09:47:17 +0100, Jeff Layman wrote:

    ...

    How does any of that work? I don't know.

    For one thing the battery should be removable with one hand,
    blindfolded, in 3 seconds or less.

    Wyatt Earp could do that but I can't.

    Regulations require it for oxygen masks, if enough people demand it
    the same lawmakers can just as easily require it for cell phones as
    well.

    The EU is planning to regulate user replaceable batteries in phones
    and other devices. No mention of doing it "with one hand, blindfolded,
    in 3 seconds or less", though.


    I don't think they know what it means :-)

    Seriously, they're way ahead of us in handling foxes in chicken-coops! I
    say if a camera can have an easily ejectable battery then so can a
    phone. period.

    Yes, but cameras are significantly thicker. And they are not water
    proof. Not even rain resistant.
    --
    Cheers, Carlos.

    --- Synchronet 3.20a-Linux NewsLink 1.114
  • From =?UTF-8?Q?J=C3=B6rg_Lorenz?=@hugybear@gmx.net to comp.mobile.android on Fri May 3 15:36:16 2024
    From Newsgroup: comp.mobile.android

    On 03.05.24 13:42, Carlos E.R. wrote:
    On 2024-05-02 13:21, bad💽sector wrote:
    On 5/2/24 02:14, Carlos E.R. wrote:
    The EU is planning to regulate user replaceable batteries in phones
    and other devices. No mention of doing it "with one hand, blindfolded,
    in 3 seconds or less", though.


    I don't think they know what it means :-)

    Seriously, they're way ahead of us in handling foxes in chicken-coops! I
    say if a camera can have an easily ejectable battery then so can a
    phone. period.

    Yes, but cameras are significantly thicker. And they are not water
    proof. Not even rain resistant.

    Bingo!
    --
    "Alea iacta est." (Julius Caesar)
    --- Synchronet 3.20a-Linux NewsLink 1.114
  • From Frank Slootweg@this@ddress.is.invalid to comp.mobile.android on Fri May 3 14:19:54 2024
    From Newsgroup: comp.mobile.android

    bad?sector <forgetski@_invalid.net> wrote:
    On 5/2/24 11:22, Frank Slootweg wrote:
    bad?sector <forgetski@_invalid.net> wrote:
    On 5/1/24 06:08, Frank Slootweg wrote:
    bad?sector <forgetski@_invalid.net> wrote:
    On 4/30/24 10:01, Frank Slootweg wrote:
    [...]

    My take is that 'bad sector' just wants to ramble/vent.

    Not really, what I want is CHANGE. The BlackBerry had not only real
    buttons but chicklety ones extremely well engineeered for that positive >>>> feel. My son had one, they *were disappeared* just when I was getting >>>> set to buy one! I had to do with a basic cell-phone with no texto even. >>>> I did what I needed done but a while ago it packed up so I wanted to buy >>>> another one like it but with texto capability. My provider said
    "FORGET-IT, we've been keeping your special low-end account for as long >>>> as you phone would last, now it's NOT renewable anymore". So I went and >>>> bought this android zFlip5 but it's a giga-letdown for too many reasons >>>> to mention and I think I will get rid of it. I can live without a
    cell-phone, my take is that demand will eventually force design
    improvements as well as open source non-proprietary OS'es developed by >>>> units walking on two legs. Meanwhile I call a spade a spade and I will >>>> let no apple, faecesbook or goongle steer my life, they already have way >>>> too much influence on my bowel movements.

    tinyurl.com/3s7bkhw7

    As I've said to others with similar needs/wants/complaints:

    Buy a 'dumb'/'feature' phone and be done with it. They still have real
    keys/ buttons. have SMS capability and can work on modern 4G (and of
    course 2G and 3G) networks. Problem solved.

    Other than satellite, where I live there are only 3 providers one of
    which (Bell) doesn't even have my physical address in their data base so >> when I call them they say "you do not exist". The other big one (Telus)
    is the only major that is available on paper but with only 4g service
    and so poor as to make the entire idea of a cell-phone laughable,
    tethering is a joke that NEVER works. The third one is a discount arm of >> Telus selling their crap for a few pennies less. I'm only saying this to >> put things into perspective. Telus as I said will NOT renew my old
    plane-jane service for a plain-jane flip phone fare, I have no choice
    but to go with the minimal but hefty price of full 5g and tethering
    package very little of which could I use with ANY phone and almost none
    of which with less. Bottom line, if I have service at all be that
    minimally high-end on paper, I might as well have the phone for it.

    If you tell the audience where (about) you live, they probably can
    give you some sensible and reasonable cost alternative providers, possibly/probably 'even' some prepaid ones.

    Meanwhile we in the read world - meaning non-US or maybe non-NA - have no such problems. How I use or do not use my phone is no-one's business,
    I only pay my provider(s) for what I need/use. End of story.

    I live in eastern Quebec and our two levels of government can't even
    spell "utility price controls" the way they do in Europe where unlimited
    4g plans are about 20 euros from what I hear.

    Why do you need an unlimited plan if you only want/need cals and SMS?

    But cost is NOT the issue
    nor the topic which is "is my smartphone ON or OFF including on-hook
    off" conditions which IMO are not that obvious all the time nor is their setting as simple and intuitive as it could and should be.

    When designing something as important as a communications tool or its OS
    for the masses you sit down with a number of people who have never used
    a cell phone and give them one asking 'is that phone ON or is it OFF
    right now as it is'? In the event of no answer or a wrong answer it's
    back to the drawing board UNTIL YOU GET IT RIGHT! Ditto for putting
    on-hook or turning off without reading any manual in which context I
    also want to see removable batteries.

    As I mentioned - and neither you nor anybody else debunked -, with smartphones, 'dumb' phones and even 'cordless' ('landline') phones,
    there *is* no on-hook/off-hook problem scenario.

    The on/off demand is unsolvable (without instructions/a_manual), i.e. unrealistic. It's unsolvable for many/most devices, so why would a
    mobile phone be different?

    As to (easily, user) removable batteries: Don't hold your breath.

    Bottom line:

    [Rewind/repeat:]

    My take is that 'bad sector' just wants to ramble/vent.

    [Resume:]

    I'm not looking to use providers whose head offices do not fall under Canadian law. As I said there are 3 domestic ones here at least theoretically available to me, all of them suck and a 4th one which I haven't named gets such bad reports that I wouldn't even use them if
    THEY paid ME.

    There are some Canadian posters in the smartphone groups who could
    probably help with finding a Canadian provider, probably a MVNO (Mobile
    Virtual Network Operator), but as far as I know, they're iPhone users,
    so not likely to follow this group, unless crossposted.

    Problem 'solving' would BEGIN with stomping on the manufacturers' and
    providers' balls with both feet and forcing them into line or lose their >> market or licenses. Unfortunately our barbie-boy leader always sits with >> his legs crossed.
    --- Synchronet 3.20a-Linux NewsLink 1.114
  • From bad sector@forgetski@_INVALID.net to comp.mobile.android on Fri May 3 16:15:26 2024
    From Newsgroup: comp.mobile.android

    On 5/3/24 10:19, Frank Slootweg wrote:
    bad?sector <forgetski@_invalid.net> wrote:

    Why do you need an unlimited plan if you only want/need cals and SMS?

    I need a wifi hotspot because my internet provider is in a transition
    period with tons of outages, unfortunately except for brief periods my expensive smartphone wifi acces is useless too. This issue should
    resolve before year's end but I will still need a wide band backup of
    some capacity.

    But cost is NOT the issue
    nor the topic which is "is my smartphone ON or OFF including on-hook
    off" conditions which IMO are not that obvious all the time nor is their
    setting as simple and intuitive as it could and should be.

    When designing something as important as a communications tool or its OS
    for the masses you sit down with a number of people who have never used
    a cell phone and give them one asking 'is that phone ON or is it OFF
    right now as it is'? In the event of no answer or a wrong answer it's
    back to the drawing board UNTIL YOU GET IT RIGHT! Ditto for putting
    on-hook or turning off without reading any manual in which context I
    also want to see removable batteries.

    As I mentioned - and neither you nor anybody else debunked -, with smartphones, 'dumb' phones and even 'cordless' ('landline') phones,
    there *is* no on-hook/off-hook problem scenario.

    The on/off demand is unsolvable (without instructions/a_manual)

    No it isn't. Motion sensor and a LOUD display briefly flashing "ON" on
    all screens so no display means it's OFF. No one needs a manual for that
    much.

    As to (easily, user) removable batteries: Don't hold your breath.

    No problemo, in fact I will sleep just as well if smart phones anf half
    of humanity vanish altogether but meanwhile I accept one of only two constraints and that with respect to just about anything: feasability
    and demand. These features are doable, demand will decide the rest.
    Those that can't keep up with the fast dogs should stay home on the
    porch like those carmakers who once said that electric starters needed
    large batteries and were for women only anyway.
    --
    Some people cannot think outside the box, forever complaining that they
    cannot find it.






    --- Synchronet 3.20a-Linux NewsLink 1.114
  • From bad sector@forgetski@_INVALID.net to comp.mobile.android on Fri May 3 16:16:09 2024
    From Newsgroup: comp.mobile.android

    On 5/3/24 07:42, Carlos E.R. wrote:
    On 2024-05-02 13:21, bad💽sector wrote:
    On 5/2/24 02:14, Carlos E.R. wrote:
    On 2024-04-26 22:53, bad sector wrote:
    On 4/25/24 21:28, micky wrote:
    In comp.mobile.android, on Thu, 25 Apr 2024 07:00:53 -0400, bad?sector >>>>> <forgetski@_INVALID.net> wrote:

    On 4/25/24 05:29, Nick Cine wrote:
    On Thu, 25 Apr 2024 09:47:17 +0100, Jeff Layman wrote:

    ...

    How does any of that work? I don't know.

    For one thing the battery should be removable with one hand,
    blindfolded, in 3 seconds or less.

    Wyatt Earp could do that but I can't.

    Regulations require it for oxygen masks, if enough people demand it
    the same lawmakers can just as easily require it for cell phones as
    well.

    The EU is planning to regulate user replaceable batteries in phones
    and other devices. No mention of doing it "with one hand,
    blindfolded, in 3 seconds or less", though.


    I don't think they know what it means :-)

    Seriously, they're way ahead of us in handling foxes in chicken-coops!
    I say if a camera can have an easily ejectable battery then so can a
    phone. period.

    Yes, but cameras are significantly thicker. And they are not water
    proof. Not even rain resistant.


    Reasonably good point and a hard switch can handle that, but a battery
    having no moving parts is easy enough to waterproof too.
    --
    Interests: dogs, music, nature, animals, trees, diesels, tractors,
    theology, biology, economy, bacteriae skunks, and humanity ..in that order. --- Synchronet 3.20a-Linux NewsLink 1.114
  • From Frank Slootweg@this@ddress.is.invalid to comp.mobile.android on Sat May 4 14:24:46 2024
    From Newsgroup: comp.mobile.android

    bad sector <forgetski@_invalid.net> wrote:
    On 5/3/24 10:19, Frank Slootweg wrote:
    [...]

    The on/off demand is unsolvable (without instructions/a_manual)

    No it isn't. Motion sensor and a LOUD display briefly flashing "ON" on
    all screens so no display means it's OFF. No one needs a manual for that much.

    But that assumes that the user touches/moves the device. Not an
    unreasonable assumption, but an assumption nonetheless.

    BTW, you'll be delighted to hear that my Samsung (Galaxy A51) does essentially that, i.e. the display lights up when I 'pick up' the phone.
    Also when kept stationary, for example lying on a table, touching the
    display, lights it up ('Always on' display).

    As to (easily, user) removable batteries: Don't hold your breath.

    No problemo, in fact I will sleep just as well if smart phones anf half
    of humanity vanish altogether but meanwhile I accept one of only two constraints and that with respect to just about anything: feasability
    and demand. These features are doable, demand will decide the rest.

    Yes, (easily, user) removable batteries are doable, but - as already mentioned - it has it's constraints and disadvantages. Nothing in this
    world has only advantages and removable batteries are no exception to
    this law.

    BTW, don't get me wrong, I'm all in favour of (easily, user) removable batteries. I had them in my ('dumb' and smart) phones and laptops, but
    now have to do without.
    --- Synchronet 3.20a-Linux NewsLink 1.114
  • From =?UTF-8?B?YmFk8J+SvXNlY3Rvcg==?=@forgetski@_INVALID.net to comp.mobile.android on Sat May 4 21:12:18 2024
    From Newsgroup: comp.mobile.android

    On 5/4/24 10:24, Frank Slootweg wrote:
    bad sector <forgetski@_invalid.net> wrote:
    On 5/3/24 10:19, Frank Slootweg wrote:
    [...]

    The on/off demand is unsolvable (without instructions/a_manual)

    No it isn't. Motion sensor and a LOUD display briefly flashing "ON" on
    all screens so no display means it's OFF. No one needs a manual for that
    much.

    But that assumes that the user touches/moves the device. Not an unreasonable assumption, but an assumption nonetheless.

    BTW, you'll be delighted to hear that my Samsung (Galaxy A51) does essentially that, i.e. the display lights up when I 'pick up' the phone.
    Also when kept stationary, for example lying on a table, touching the display, lights it up ('Always on' display).

    As to (easily, user) removable batteries: Don't hold your breath.

    No problemo, in fact I will sleep just as well if smart phones anf half
    of humanity vanish altogether but meanwhile I accept one of only two
    constraints and that with respect to just about anything: feasability
    and demand. These features are doable, demand will decide the rest.

    Yes, (easily, user) removable batteries are doable, but - as already mentioned - it has it's constraints and disadvantages. Nothing in this
    world has only advantages and removable batteries are no exception to
    this law.

    BTW, don't get me wrong, I'm all in favour of (easily, user) removable batteries. I had them in my ('dumb' and smart) phones and laptops, but
    now have to do without.

    What the mass of users or the regulatory acting for them want or are
    prepared to put up with is evidently the ultimate deciding factor. What
    I do NOT accept is minoritary influences representing only themselves
    deciding to include/exclude any feature. It's like should cell-phones
    disable themselves within XYZ feet of a car with a runing engine? IMO
    they should. Will the using masses or their regulatory insist on it? IMO
    they will not because they're too pucking stupid, and so the brainless
    chaff WILL continue thinning its own ranks, natural selection at its evangelical very best :-)


    --- Synchronet 3.20a-Linux NewsLink 1.114