That is probably something from your OS, or the launcher. I have no green dots anywehere on Android icons at all. I have numbers in red dots, showing me the number of messages. At GC it is for example, when there is a new activity, or another event.

No such option on my Android. I have the option "App icon badges" enabled instead of it. As I wrote, it shows a red dot with the number of notifications of given application. At GC Mobile it shows up for example when there is a new activity recorded, when I received a new badge, or when there is any other system notification from the app, which is exactly the expected behaviour fully conform with Android policies. It has nothing to do with the watch being connected to GC or not.


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Android 9 with Samsung One UI v1.1. However it is still the same thing, just the color is different, and additionally there is the number of notifications in the dot. The dot still means that there is a notification from the app pending, and it has nothing to do with the watch being connected or not.

My Oculus Go worked for years - until last time I had the "3 dots of death" .... then I did a factory reset - and can't get the GO startup properly anymore. It stuck at the step "connect with mobile phone APP".

In the first step the Oculus APP detects my Oculus Go with the correct serial number - so there must have been some successful communication already. But in the second step the APP always says "cannot connect"

I would love some help, I just had to update my Oculus Go to the Horizon Profile; I finally got the accounts to link up and now my device is stuck on three dots. Your update clearly bricked my device. Can you help? This is really disappointing.

However, that changed recently when it just stopped working and all it showed me was Couldn't connect in my Android device when I entered my DNS server's hostname in the Private DNS provider hostname field. This coincided with the time I decided to wipe my cluster clean and start over, so I figured that it was probably a misconfiguration on my part.

Because Root Certificates are so powerful, they are permanently stored offline in a secure physical location, disconnected from the Internet. Throughout the lifetime of a Root Certificate, it is only used a handful of times, mostly (if not always) to sign CA Certificates (intermediate certificates). These intermediate certificates are subsequently used to sign TLS Certificates for issuance.

The output showed a successful DNS query for google.com and I was even more confused as to why my Android device errored out with a very informative Couldn't connect message when I tried setting it as my Private DNS server.

Typically, the trust chain validation should stop on encountering the first valid Root Certificate, but in this case the expired DST Root CA X3 Root Certificate which is one step deeper than the ISRG Root X1 Root Certificate in the chain, likely raised a fatal error when establishing a connection with a DNS over TLS server. As a result, the phone fails to connect to the DNS over TLS server.

I am trying to print e-mail from my Comcast e-mail account on my Android, which I bought from Comcast, using my wireless ("Brother") printer. The only information I can find on the Internet is to hit the 3 dots at the top right of the screen on an e-mail. Ain't no such animal. I can print Comcast e-mail from my desktop just fine, this is a mobile phone issue. And when I go to any site on my phone, there also is no option to print, it's not just my e-mail, apparently. Any suggestions? TIA

I have been using Pihole on my home network for quite some time. Our android phones use the Private DNS option which makes sense when out of the house, but at home Private DNS means that the android phones bypass the Pi-hole with a DoT connection to Google DNS. I also use Fedora for my workstation and for a small raspberry cluster. The next version (F35) will default to 'opportunistic' DoT.

Current configuration. I host Pi-hole as a container container on a Synology NAS. The Pi-hole uses a DNS-over-HTTPS client which is also running in a container as the 'upstream' DNS service with the DOH client connecting to Google's DOH servers. The Pi-hole is configured as the DNS server in the Unifi network administration web interface.

Again the goal is to extend Pi-hole to offer opportunistic DoT for clients like android so that my pihole is providing DNS and add blocking etc while connected to the home network but also maintain classic DNS service for all other clients. I am constantly amazed at how many network devices we have in our farm house.

Blockquote Your best approach here is to set up an incoming VPN service for your Pi-hole. Clients will connect securely and privately to your local Pi-hole while off your home network. We offer several guides.

Thanks. I have not thought about a VPN service. We live in a rural location with a low bandwidth wireless connection from our ISP. We are also double NAT'ed although the ISP does offer a public IP for additional cost. I will give some thought to a VPN and review your links.

My primary goal with the DoH connection is minimize snooping by any and all ISPs between my home network and the world at large. Google already knows a lot about me so I am not too concerned with their monetizing that information.

Dot-a-Pix are an advanced adaptation of the classic dot-to-dot puzzles which provide high quality color pictures when solved. Starting with dozens and going up to several hundreds of dots, Dot-a-Pix puzzles create beautiful detailed pictures and provide the satisfaction as if you drew them yourself.

Each puzzle consists of a collection of color dots with clues next to each dot. The object is to reveal a hidden picture by connecting the dots in ascending order and according to their color starting with 1 and ending with the highest number.

Two Dots is a puzzle video game for iOS and Android, developed and published by American indie studio Playdots, Inc. The Windows 10 Mobile and Microsoft Windows versions are no longer supported. It is the sequel to Dots. It was released for iOS platforms on May 29, 2014,[2] and became available for Android on November 12, 2014.[3]

At the start of each level, the objectives are displayed; furthermore, the player must complete them within a specified number of moves. At the start of a level, a set of dots is "dropped" from the top of the in-game area. The player must connect at least two dots of the same color in order to make a move. They can be connected horizontally or vertically, but never diagonally. The connected dots are removed from the game area; dots directly above those will then drop down until they hit other dots or the floor beneath. When a player connects a grouping of at least four same-colored dots to form a complete circuit, all of the dots in the game area with that same color will disappear, and any dot(s) fully inside the circuit will become "bomb(s)" which will explode in all eight directions once those dots drop down. If there are no two adjacent same color dots to connect, the dots are automatically scrambled so that the player can make a valid move, similar to other games.

The game was developed by Playdots, known for games Dots, and Dots & Co. In August 2020, Playdots has reached an agreement to be acquired by publisher Take-Two Interactive. Take-Two will pay $192 million for the deal, $90 million in cash and the remaining $102 million in stock.[10]

In Dots, you have 60 seconds to connect as many dots of the same color in one swipe. You get bonus points and trophies for special combos. The controls in Dots: A Game About Connecting are simple and effective. The game looks great, is immediately satisfying and has great options for challenging your friends.

To connect an Echo Dot to a Roku TV, open the Alexa app and tap More (three lines) > Skills & Games, then search for and select the Roku skill and tap Enable. Sign in to your Roku account as prompted. Select your Roku TV > Continue; back in the Alexa app, your Roku TV should appear on the Device Discovery screen. Select your Roku TV > Continue, then choose your Echo Dot and select Link Devices.

To connect your Echo device to Wi-Fi, open the Alexa app on your mobile device and navigate to Menu (three lines) > Add New Device. Choose your device type and model, then plug your Echo Dot into a power outlet. When the Echo Dot is ready, tap Continue in the app, then follow the on-screen prompts to connect the device to your wireless network.

To connect an Echo Dot to Bluetooth, put your Bluetooth device into pairing mode, then open the Alexa app and tap Devices. Select Echo & Alexa, then choose your device and tap Bluetooth Devices > Pair New Device.

Hello, i own a fullHD tv (model n: UE46F6100AK) and i have some problems with it. A few months ago i started seeing occasionally a lot of white dots -small as a pixel- flashing scattered on the tv, at first we replaced the device connected to the tv thinking it was the problem but soon the white dots came back again. I realized that the problem was coming only from the HDMI/2 port of the tv so i moved the connected device to the HDMI1 port. The problem disappeared for some time but then after i switched the connected device with another one of another company the white dots came back again. Due the fact i've connected 3 different devices to the tv and the same problem occurred with all of them i imagine the problem is coming from the tv. What do i need to do? I think the warranty is over and i don't want spend too much on it. e24fc04721

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