1. Is there a way to change/customize the notification sound?

We have a Nest hub and one Nest mini, and the default seems to be "There is someone at the door". The problem is that I've missed it several times because it's not loud enough, especially when sitting in a room the speakers aren't in. With my previous (simple) doorbell, you could hear the sound from the other side of the backyard. Is the Nest doorbell more form than function? We get the notification on our phone as well, but this is also not very loud and is more of a push notification (in the background) than an actual "call" or ringing sound. I usually notice these about an hour after someone rings the doorbell, which isn't helpful.

For those who have one as well, how did you set this up?

To go into further detail, we have our Nest hub volume set at 40%, which feels optimal for the room it's in. The problem is that the doorbell notification ("There is someone at the door") uses the same volume, which is not helpful for a doorbell notification (you would want this to be very loud). But the alternative would be to set the speaker volumes to 100%, but then that means that everything you do on it every day is at 100% (and considering our preferred volume is 40%, that's not really an option)


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2. A few weeks after installing, we stopped hearing the notification on the Nest speakers

The only notification we would hear when someone rings the doorbell ("There is someone at the door") stopped working a few weeks after installation, so now our doorbell is practically useless.

How do we get this back?

I usually keep the laptop one at late night when the laptop's low battery notification sound becomes very annoying, and sometimes it even wakes me up from sleep. Can I replace the sound with some soother one or disable it completely?

First, some relavent information:I'm running Ubuntu 16.04 on a Microsoft Surface Book, using an awesome, reliable, custom kernel from this repository. The Surface Book has 2 batteries. One battery in the Surface screen that can be detatched and work standalone like a tablet, and one battery in the keyboard.

The issue:When my Surface Book batteries get low, Ubuntu notifies me with a pleasant 'chime' sound that I'm at xx%. All is well... The problem is that when I plug in my Surface Book, The pleasant 'chime' sound goes off almost every 10 seconds. Upon asking the repository maintainer what the issue could be, he basically said that the issue cannot be fixed on his end because the way the Surface Book works is that one battery charges for 10 or so seconds, then it stops charging while the other battery charges for 10 or so seconds. Basically the batteries don't both charge at the same time- they alternate back and fourth. My belief is that this causes Ubuntu to think I'm unplugging the charger to one of the batteries although I am not.

Solution?For now, I just want to turn the 'chime' off completely. I have tried uninstalling a few things like indicator-battery to no avail, and several other things. I cannot seem to figure out what package the chime is coming from. Otherwise i could just replace the wav or ogg file with a silent tone!! Any suggestions?

I had issues with a battery utilization alert/sound that would play repeatedly as my battery would switch back and forth between fully charged and current being drawn from it. This was particularly noticeable when loading webpages that contained video players, a process that involves more computations than the system's base state.

Anyway, the solution for me was to rename a oga file in a similar directory as this one. I moved the following files and it appears to have resolved my issue (difficult to say as there are other factors in play that I do not have control over [the software playing the sound] and other factors whose values I no longer have an outward indicator for [the battery's charge level]). Files were at the locations:

Update: I discovered the package causing the sound. It's indicator-power, and I found the .ogg file it's called "Low battery.ogg" located in /usr/share/indicator-power/sounds/ - I guess I will just rename it for now, but if anybody has any other idea on how to prevent the sound from occuring when not on the charger, that would be neat.

This is ridiculous because even when I put the tone volume at 15% my airpods still make the stupidly loud doo-doo doo doo noise that makes me want to kms when they reach 10% battery. WHYYY. Pls ffs Apple just fix this and stop hurting my ears every time my air pods are low ??

I believe the person before and myself are trying to turn off the audible sound coming from the AirPods. It seems to come every time the charge level of the individual AirPod drops by 1% after hitting the 20% remaining threshold. How do we turn off that sound in our ears? Not the charging case sound

It's pretty disturbing that this was left this way for so long. I'm constantly desperate and living on the edge, afraid for when my airpods go to low battery.... It's really hurtful and triggers so many emotions, especially irrational anger and expletive-filled internet queries in search for a solution.

OMG painfully loud! It hurts! Unbelievably loud, never has any music/sound from my Airpods Pro 2 Gen been too loud except for the painful ear/brain piercing low battery alert alarm. This is truly shocking that it exists as such because it could cause physical harm/ damage. Please tell me there is a way to change it, cancel it, something??

Try turning off the headphones safety. It worked for me. There is a bug where the low battery sound is dependent on the set volume. And if you set the limit to 70 decibels you tend to have the volume set to the maximum.

Yes, this needs to change. The 'low battery' notification is at maximum volume and is not only jarring but can damage your hearing. I have seen one answer to this question, which I tried, but did not work (go to settings>accessibility>airpods; I tried this, there is no 'airpods' menu option in accessibility.

This is the main reason I am refusing to buy a new set of airpods. There is no reason to have that notification be so loud every time when emergency alerts are at a lower volume, and it completely defeats the purpose of wearing airpods to sleep or relax.

The low-battery sound is the generic default sound, which is just a little blip which I hardly ever notice. However, I can't change it, the setting is grayed out, and strangely it says it's the "Silent" one when I know it's not. I'm using the Galaxy S10 with Android 10 (on T-Mobile in the USA).

Press the volume rocker to show the volume level, click on the arrow pointing downwards, and reduce the sound of your "system" sound. The low battery noise is usually under system sound, as it is with the unlock noise.

You know the way when you change the volume of your device, a bar appears at the top of the screen with your volume level? At the right of that bar, there should be an arrow. Click on it, and it shows you sound, notifications, system, ringtone and bixby volumes. Turn your "system" volume down.

The developers have advised us that some important system sounds are non-customisable in order to avoid user confusion that'd result from changing the entire sound system, and that they have no plans to change this for that reason.

Battery Sound Notification is a free utility application from developer Argon Dev. It's a tool that lets users create custom notification alerts that correspond to their device's battery level. They can set it for any percentage they want and use any audio file they have using the app.

Compared to other battery status apps like Battery Level for Status Bar or Battery Status Monitor that inform users of users through visual indicators, Battery Sound Notification provides a truly unique solution to users by using sound. Everything is configurable through a simple and intuitive user interface.

Smartphones keep getting more powerful but people still have cold sweats when they realize their battery has dropped so low without realizing it. Battery status indicator apps make it easier to visually keep track of power levels yet users still forget to charge. Enter Battery Sound Notification, which takes a different approach with the use of auditory cues.

Last night at 130am and 430am my wife and I were awoken to the notification that someone had pressed the door bell. But it was just a 30% low battery notification. What genius thought that was a good idea?! They had better fix this ASAP!

Do you happen to know which is triggered by which action?

I have a really obnoxious sound for the Smart Home Monitor intrusions. Unfortunately, the Low Battery Alert triggers the same sound and for some reason Samsung likes to send Low Battery when i am asleep. Low Battery alerts are also inaccurate.

I would like to get an alert (with sound) when my laptop battery is fully charged.I checked many softwares on the net and none of them has that capability.

Also there is a depricated thread on SuperUser and that software's link does not exist anymore.

With Battery Notification, you don't have to worry again about leaving your device while the laptop/tablet is being charged. The Charge Notification will play Notification sound to notify you when your battery is fully charging. ff782bc1db

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