I am trying to create an Android Daydream application. I started with the sample from -daydream-samples/source/browse/#git%2Fbouncer. That sample does not include a settings activity, so what I am attempting to do is to add a settings activity that will allow me to make create some options for the daydream.

I have read the articles Daydream settings and Clicking on settings button in Android Daydream service stopping the application, trying to copy what they are doing. I have also attempted to copy what a live wallpaper sample was doing, but nothing I have done yet results in the "settings" button under Daydream like the clock, photo frame, and photo table:


Daydream Ringtone Mp3 Download


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Any tips on what I might be missing? I am surprised it all compiles and runs without crashing, but I have no settings on either my device or the emulator. My previous limited experience is that when you have something wrong with an android application, it usually crashes.

I took your advice and reported it to Apple. Hope it gets fixed, because it's a pain in the ***! I guess until then, no customizing already set textones or contact sounds, unless it's a ringtone. So stupid. So inaccessible. I count on my phone making certain noises to indicate certain people and events. And I like custom tones, because it sets them apart from everyone else who has an iphone!

If you already set a custom text tone to your contacts it still works it didn't go away with ios 17. Each personalized custom tone I have for my contacts still works. So yes I can still differentiate who is texting me.

Some of my iTunes purchases still appear on the list. However, when I tried purchasing one yesterday, it asked if I wanted to assign it to a contact as a text tone and I said yes. I completed the purchase and.... the tone is not there. It does show up as a ringtone option, though.

I noticed this too. My custom ringtones only show up in the top ringtone section. My custom ringtones for everything else is still there, but I cant change it or else it'll go away forever. So I cant change it to another custom ringtone. I have since complained to apple, and sent them a feedback email. Fingers crossed that theyll bring it back soon

The tone for Alarm I had originally selected is still playing but is not available on the list of tones, apart from those three I mentioned here. Fortunately, I have plenty of alarms I can edit and it will retain the original tone, but you won't be able to select your custom tone from the list of tones.

Carey is one of the best-selling music artists, with over 220 million records sold worldwide, and is an inductee of the Songwriters Hall of Fame, the National Recording Registry at the Library of Congress and the Long Island Music and Entertainment Hall of Fame.[2][3][4] In 2019, Billboard named her the top-charting female solo artist, based on both album and song chart success. She holds the record for the most Billboard Hot 100 number-one singles by a solo artist (19), a female songwriter (18), and a female producer (15), spending a record 93 weeks atop the chart. Carey is the highest-certified female artist in the United States and 10th overall, with 75 million certified album units. Among her accolades are 6 Grammy Awards (including the Global Impact Award), 10 American Music Awards, 20 Billboard Music Awards and 12 Guinness World Records.

Carey was born on March 27, 1969,[a] in Huntington, New York.[8][9] Her name is derived from the song "They Call the Wind Maria", originally from the 1951 Broadway musical Paint Your Wagon.[10][11] She is the youngest of three children born to Patricia (ne Hickey), a former opera singer and vocal coach of Irish descent, and Alfred Roy Carey, an aeronautical engineer of both African-American and Afro-Venezuelan lineage. The last name "Carey" was adopted by her Venezuelan grandfather, Francisco Nez, after he emigrated to New York.[12][9] Patricia's family disowned her for marrying a black man.[12] Racial tensions prevented the Carey family from integrating into their community. While they lived in Huntington, their neighbors poisoned the family dog and set fire to their car.[12] After her parents' divorce, Carey had little contact with her father, and her mother worked several jobs to support the family. Carey spent much of her time at home alone and began singing at age three, often imitating her mother's take on Verdi's opera Rigoletto in Italian. Her older sister Alison moved in with their father while Mariah and her elder brother Morgan lived with their mother.[13][14]

During her years in elementary school, she excelled in the arts, such as music and literature. Carey began writing poetry and lyrics while attending Harborfields High School in Greenlawn, New York,[15] where she graduated in 1987.[16] Carey began vocal training under the tutelage of her mother. Though she was a classically trained opera singer, Patricia Carey never pressured her daughter to pursue a career in classical opera. Mariah Carey recalled that she had "never been a pushy mom. She never said, 'Give it more of an operatic feel.' I respect opera like crazy, but it didn't influence me."[15][17] In high school, Mariah Carey was often absent because of her work as a demo singer. This led to her classmates giving her the nickname Mirage.[17] Working in the Long Island music scene gave her opportunities to work with musicians such as Gavin Christopher and Ben Margulies, with whom she co-wrote material for her demo tape. After moving to New York City, she worked part-time jobs to pay the rent and completed 500 hours of beauty school.[18] Carey moved into a one-bedroom apartment in Manhattan with four female students as roommates.[19] She landed a gig singing backup for freestyle singer Brenda K. Starr.[20][21]

In December 1988, Carey accompanied Starr to a music executive's party, where she handed her demo tape to the head of Columbia Records, Tommy Mottola.[22][23] After listening to the tape during the ride home, he immediately requested the driver turn around. Carey had already left the event, and in what has been described as a modern-day Cinderella story, he spent two weeks looking for her.[22] Another record label expressed interest and a bidding war ensued. Mottola signed Carey to Columbia and enlisted producers Ric Wake, Narada Michael Walden, and Rhett Lawrence for her first album.[22] Columbia marketed Carey as the main female artist on their roster, competing with Arista's Whitney Houston and Madonna of Sire Records.[24] On June 5, 1990, Carey made her first public appearance at the 1990 NBA Finals, singing "America the Beautiful". The highlight was the piercing whistle note toward the song's conclusion, sparking CBS Sports anchor Pat O'Brien to declare, "The palace now has a queen."[25]

Columbia spent upwards of $1 million promoting Carey's debut studio album, Mariah Carey.[26] After a slow start, the album eventually topped the Billboard 200 for eleven consecutive weeks, after Carey's exposure at the 33rd Annual Grammy Awards, where she won the award for Best New Artist, and Best Female Pop Vocal Performance for her single "Vision of Love".[27][28] The album's singles "Vision of Love", "Love Takes Time", "Someday", and "I Don't Wanna Cry" all topped the US Billboard Hot 100.[29] Mariah Carey was the best-selling album in the United States in 1991,[30] and achieved worldwide sales of 15 million copies.[31]

The following year Carey co-wrote, co-produced and recorded her second studio effort, Emotions.[32][33] Described by Carey as an homage to Motown soul music, Carey employed the help of Walter Afanasieff, who only had a small role on her debut, as well as Robert Clivills and David Cole, from the dance group C+C Music Factory.[34] Carey's relationship with Margulies deteriorated over a songwriting royalties dispute. After he filed a lawsuit against Columbia's parent company, Sony Music Entertainment, the songwriting duo parted ways.[33] Emotions was released on September 17, 1991. Its title track served as the album's lead single and became Carey's fifth chart topper on the Billboard Hot 100, making her the first artist whose first five singles reached the chart's summit.[35] Though critics praised the album's content and described it as a more mature effort, the album was criticized as calculated and lacking originality.[36] While the album managed sales of eight million copies globally, Emotions failed to reach the commercial and critical heights of its predecessor.[37]

Carey did not embark on a world tour to promote the album.[38] Although she attributed this to stage fright and the vocally challenging nature of her material, speculation grew that Carey was a "studio worm" and that she was incapable of producing the perfect pitch and five-octave vocal range for which she was known.[39][40] In hopes of ending any speculation of her being a manufactured artist, Carey booked an appearance on MTV Unplugged.[41] The show presented artists "unplugged" or in a stripped setting and devoid of studio equipment.[41] Days prior to the show's taping, Carey and Afanasieff chose to add a cover of the Jackson 5's 1970 song "I'll Be There" to the set-list. On March 16, 1992, Carey played and recorded an intimate seven-song show at Kaufman Astoria Studios in Queens, New York.[42] The acclaimed revue was aired more than three times as often as the average episode,[43] and critics heralding it as a "vocal Tour de force".[44] Carey's live version of "I'll Be There" became her sixth number-one single on the Billboard Hot 100 chart. Sony capitalized on its success and released it as an EP. It earned a triple-Platinum certification by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA),[45] and earned Gold and Platinum certifications in several European markets.[46]

After Emotions failed to achieve the commercial heights of her debut album, Carey's subsequent release was to be marketed as adult contemporary and pop-friendly. Music Box was produced by Carey and Afanasieff, and began a songwriting partnership that would extend until 1997's Butterfly.[47] The album was released on August 31, 1993, to mixed reviews from music critics. Carey's songwriting was derided as clichd and her vocal performances were described as less emotive and lazier in their delivery. In his review of the album, AllMusic's Ron Wynn concluded: "sometimes excessive spirit is preferable to an absence of passion."[48] In promotion of the album, Carey embarked on her debut tour, a six-date concert series, the Music Box Tour.[49] Music Box's first and second singles, "Dreamlover" and "Hero", became Carey's seventh and eighth chart-toppers in the United States, while her cover of Badfinger's "Without You" was a commercial breakthrough in Europe, becoming her first number-one single in Germany,[50] Sweden[51] and the United Kingdom.[52] Music Box remains Carey's best-seller and one of the best-selling albums, with worldwide sales of over 28 million copies.[53] 152ee80cbc

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