- cross-posted to:
- technology@lemmy.world
- cross-posted to:
- technology@lemmy.world
- The Android Earthquake Alert system failed to detect recent tremors in north India, possibly due to its recent launch and gradual rollout to Android 5+ users in the country.
- The system utilizes accelerometers in Android smartphones to function as mini-seismometers, identifying potential earthquakes when multiple phones detect simultaneous shaking.
- Once an earthquake is detected, the system sends advance warnings to nearby Android handsets. The feature was recently made available in local languages in India.
- However, the system has limitations including the inability to detect all earthquakes, and errors in estimating magnitude and shaking intensity.
- Usage of this feature requires Wi-Fi and/or cellular data connectivity, with both Android Earthquake Alerts and location settings enabled.
From the article, your device needs to be charging with location turned on. I don’t think that’s what the majority of the people do. That and probably a small sample size for the alert to be reliably sent to other devices.
Do folks often manually disable their location services?
I do for my own when not in use and have seen others do the same. The worst i have seen is people disable data.
I used to years ago, in the era of Galaxy S2 and such when battery life was a luxury.
I can’t think of a time in recent years where I’ve seen anyone doing that TBH. I know certain people who turn off the wifi router during bedtime.
Same here. I used to do it when location permissions weren’t as robust as well. I don’t bother anymore.
I disable things i don’t use such as location, mobile data, wifi, bluetooth and rotation.
This is weird. How can charging be a requirement? Phones obviously cannot be charging all the time. It won’t work if an earthquake happens when the phone’s not charging