On iPhone 14 Pro, iPhone 14 Pro Max, iPhone 15 Pro, and iPhone 15 Pro Max, the Always-On display setting allows a dimmed version of your Lock Screen to stay visible, even when your iPhone is locked. By glancing at the dimmed screen, you can check essential information, like notifications, the date and time, and information in your widgets.

The display automatically turns off when iPhone is either face down or obstructed from view, not near a paired Apple Watch, when a CarPlay session begins, while Continuity Camera is in use, while Low Power Mode is on, while


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As you probably already know, Always On Display shows important information on your Galaxy device's screen when it's turned off. However, there are a couple settings and display mode options that you can adjust.


Show always: This setting will display AOD continuously whenever your phone screen is off. Use this setting if you don't want to tap anything to see your AOD. Keep in mind that this setting will use more battery power.

Show as scheduled: This setting shows your AOD based on a set schedule. Use this setting if you want AOD to display at certain times. For example, you can set your AOD to only display during your work day and turn off while you're asleep. This setting will reduce AOD's battery consumption.

Auto brightness: This setting is on by default and automatically adjusts the brightness level of your AOD. To manually control the brightness level, tap the switch next to Auto brightness to turn it off. Then, adjust the slider to set your desired brightness level. Alternatively, you can double tap the clock when your AOD displays, and then adjust the brightness level there.


An always-on display (AOD) is a smartphone feature that has the device continue to show limited information while the phone is asleep. It is widely available on Android handsets, and is available on Apple iPhones since the iPhone 14 Pro.[1] On some Android devices, the feature is sometimes called Ambient Display (Google Pixel) or Active Display,[citation needed] depending on its implementation and behavior. Depending on the phone's design, it may be a replacement or complementary to another feature, such as the notification LED.

A device with AOD enabled keeps a limited portion of the screen on during sleep mode. An Always On Display may display a set of recent push notifications in place of a notification tone or LED signal, as well as information such as the time, date, and battery status of the device; they often may also be configured to also show various types of notifications as they arrive, or screensavers.

Various devices have differing behavior for this feature. Some phones would have the screen off until new notifications arrive whereupon the display would either be active for a few seconds or remain on until the user interacts with the device to read or dismiss the notification (essentially having the entire screen serve as a larger notification LED); others instead have the phone screen activate when it detects input, such as being picked up or the screen interacted with. These versions are often called ambient displays,[citation needed] in contrast to "true" always-on displays, where at least part of the screen remains on at all times. Again depending on the manufacturer, not all apps may be supported for showing notifications with this feature - only first-party apps or popular apps may be supported.

This technology was first introduced by Nokia in on the Nokia N70 and Nokia 6303 (on TFT display in 2008), and more widely adopted with its next generation AMOLED Symbian phones in 2010 (the Nokia N8, C7, C6-01 and E7). Later functionality was updated with Nokia Sleeping Screen app for last generation of Symbian smartphones (Nokia 808 and other) with features like custom standby screen from any image, and two themes for notifications design. It became a standard feature on most Nokia Lumia Windows Phones in 2013, paired with the Nokia Glance Screen app.[2] The feature has since become more widely available on Android handsets. Apple has the feature since Apple Watch Series 5 (2019) and on iPhone 14 Pro in 2022.[3]

The Always On Display feature does consume energy, although the Samsung Galaxy S7 series phones, and later phones that made the feature popular are built with AMOLED screens that turn off black pixels. On today's AMOLED phone displays, it is true that only a few pixels may need to be turned on but they do need to be moved to prevent pixel burn in. Colors, sensors and processors all consume energy while AOD is in use, which leads to an extra consumption of roughly 3% battery.[4][5]

On LCD displays, the backlight has to be turned on, even if only a part of the screen is showing information, so this feature consumes a significant amount of power compared to a notification LED. Some LCD displays use Transflective LCD. It uses a layer called a transflector. It is typically made from a sheet polymer. It is similar to a one-way mirror but is not specular. Some smartwatches such as the Pebble Smartwatch and the Amazfit Stratos also use this technology. Under bright illumination (e.g. when exposed to daylight) the display acts mainly as a reflective display with the contrast being constant with illuminance.

Typically, an ambient display solution which turns on the screen only when notifications are present, remains on, but turns off when they are dismissed will consume the least amount of battery power while still drawing the user's attention when required, in contrast to an Always-on Display which will keep the screen on, all of the time, to show some information, even if notifications may not be present. Since the date and time are less essential than battery status or notifications which may require the user's immediate attention, an AOD can be customized in many app-based implementations to only show notifications or selectively choose what is shown.

Yesterday I tried an R5 for the first time and my comments are the same as yours. As I never use the rear screen for composing my picture I cannot see why it should always be in live view. It would be more useful if my settings were displayed as they are on my 5D mk4.

The Aura Carver 10.1" HD Digital Frame is a great way to put your portfolio on display and a great way to surface forgotten memories. The colors are vibrant, and the build quality is solid, but the Carver isn't without a few quirks.

e.g of problem, lets say I have a page that doesn't have that much on display in it, the footer therefore becomes in the middle of the screen. Can I ensure that if the page doesn't have a lot of contents then the footer just be at the bottom of the screen?

AS digital watches get more popular so does the need to have the time displayed. When using a watch at and for work it is annoying to have to flick your wrist to see time. So always on display is an ever increasing feature to attract users as the watch is mostly a time displayer not only a notification device. Why do so many people still use the casio and timex as it shows the time.

Thank you, these pictures and video look nice and visibility of the current and planned trajectory are good. I guess the main question if the floating lines still offer enough 3D cues. Maybe you can show the trajectories as true 3D lines (tubes) and make the 2D floating lines semi-transparent. This way you would still have strong 3D cues and keep the trajectories always visible. Keep us updated how well it works!

I asked Google Workspace Support this question few times over the years. While the answer above works in most emails, for some senders option 'Images from this sender are always displayed. Don't display from now on' is missing. Support cannot tell why.

When the editor is blurred, the cursor is hidden. This is a good indicator of whether it is focused or not, but it is not ideal for every situation. Particularly when trying to use CodeMIrror in more of a movie setting than an editor setting. I would like an option for the cursor to always be displayed regardless of whether the editor has focus.

@DUSKvsDAWN Hello, well, you have no other choice but to put the phone in Safe Mode and verify the behavior of Always on display. If the problem does not persist in Safe Mode, you will have to uninstall apps to verify which one is causing it.

I've got a Galaxy S7 and for some reason spotify shows what song is playing on the Always on display, isnt there a setting to remove that? I've tried blocking notifications both in regular and advanced settings, aswell as in the Lockscreen-settings.

My series watch 7 does not stay "always on" , no one can help. I have the right settings, to display only on activated, the Theater mode is not on. I called t Apple tech support and they were not aware how to help. They just read me the same instructions I can read. Then they got a supervisor . I am very very frustrated. I really like the watch. It worked no problems the first day and then never stayed on after that. Each time I have to wake it up and unlock it. Is there a glitch in the series 7 watch always on or is my watch defective. In researching it seems like many people have the same issue. Would really appreciate Thanks Jerry

Have you managed to fix it? I am having exactly the same problem. Have everything switched on to use the always on feature but it just doesn't stay on. As soon as I lower my arm the screen goes blank

Here's what you need to do. Use the special accounts registry entry to hide the administrator account (and whatever other accounts you want to hide) from the login screen. Then, configure UAC to prompt for both a username and password, instead of just showing the clickable usernames. This will let you elevate to one of the hidden accounts, because it behaves much like the "do not display last username" setting does for the login. This is what it will look like; you can type in any (administator's) username: ff782bc1db

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