Hello guys, I've been a bit mad over the last 2 years with my two newer samsung modles now. I've since then missed the option to control the ringtone and notification volume together. All I can find in the settings is to choose which sound volume should get changed when pressing the volume buttons, either media or ringtone. I always have to press a volume button to change the ringtone volume, then press on three dots to get to the volume pop-up menu so that I can change the notification volume. Is there any way to connect the notification and ringtone volume? So that both are the same and get changed together when pressing the volume buttons. I mean every other phone before my 2 samsungs had these option. It just got now so frustrating and I couldn't find anything on the Internet so I had to make this reddit post. I hope someone can help me with that, I would be very thankful for that!

I left the alarm vibrating and opened the phone's volume controls; the alarm volume was on (half way on the bar) and ringtone was off. I slid the ringtone volume up and there it was, my selected alarm song was playing.


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I'm referring to preventing the user from silencing the ringer by turning the volume down to 0. We'd like to set the ring volume to a specific value and prevent the end user from adjusting it. I know you can disable to volume button to completely to accomplish this, but that is not something we going to be allowed to do in our environmentĀ 


By default, the volume buttons on the side of your iPhone only control the system volume, used for things like music and video playback. This doesn't affect your iPhone's ringer volume, which decides how loud your ringtone and alert tones are. In turn, this means you can still have your call volume set indistinguishably low, even while your system volume is on max, potentially preventing you hearing important phone calls.

This works whenever you're playing audio, so even if you close the app, if you're still listening to music the volume buttons will adjust system levels. While you're not listening to audio or watching a video, the volume buttons adjust the ringer.

Some of my users use an external speaker puck as primary device for their phone calls. The volume they set for talking to people is too high for the ring when new calls come in. If they turn the volume setting down on the speaker to make the ringtone low, then the cannot hear the callers when answering a call. They then turn the volume up high on the speaker during their conversations. But unless they remember to turn the speaker volume down after the call, then the next ring is loud again. There needs to be a way to separate the volume for incoming ringtone from that used in a phone conversation.

Thanks for the reply @Ray_Harwood . However, we have looked into the Windows part of the equation too. The volume mixer uses the same device for the incoming ringtone as for the call itself so the issue remains the same.

in your Zoom Settings under Audio you should be able to select "Use separate audio device to play ringtone simultaneously" once they select this they should be able to adjust the volume slider for each device. They should be able to increase the external speaker volume and keep the headset volume lower or vise versa.

Thanks for the reply @JimmyOrtiz3. As I mentioned, the user is using his external speaker puck as his primary device for phone calls so lowering the volume on that will lower the volume for ringing and for the actual call. Having a secondary simultaneous ringing device would not change that

If I change the volume when the phone is locked or I am outside the Spotify or Sonos app, it just controls the phone ringtone volume.

So every time I have to adjust the volume, i need to unlock the phone, open one of the 2 apps, and control the volume. this does take up a lot of time because i need to adjust the volume very frequently.

I agree - but the really cool thing was that the volume buttons were controlling my SONOS only while it was playing.Ā 

And, even better: if my SONOS was playing (controlled by my phone), and I opened a youtube video on my phone, the volume buttons would control the youtube by default. When I would then close youtube and go to my homescreen, or even lock the phone, the volume buttons would go back to control my SONOS by default. It was just so smart.

It appears that Android now doesn't recognise the Sonos app as a media player and so the media volume buttons don't get activated on the Android home page. If I'm playing music through Bluetooth headphones through Spotify, the volume buttons work as expected for media (taking priority over other volume settings eg notifications or ringtone, per my settings choices), and if I switched to a YouTube video, the volume buttons then control the volume of YouTube as the "active media source". But for some reason, this doesn't then work when you're playing media through Sonos.

Even if I play from my Spotify App to my SONOS, I can change the Spotify Volume from the Home/Lock Screen by default (when I press volume buttons). ?

So it seems to be an Android issue as I expected.

I have the Sonos notification up and the extra one "stopping the service may interrupt playback notifications" which is super confusing and a poor UX. You can see in the screenshot that I'm trying to press the volume and it is not adjusting Sonos but instead my Android media volume.

I have actually tested this on the T8210 with latest firmware and found that the sliders work just fine. The prerecorded responses are unfortunately played over the ringtone volume. This is supposedly by design.

I had the same issue of not been able to set the volume down of the home base speaker when ringing the doorbell. I found that going to the setting options- Indoor Chime- Homebase as Chime- there you can adjust the Homebase ringtone volume.

Somehow the volume of my Z3C got locked at 0. When I press the volume up button on the side, the slider is displayed but the volume is not increased. When I press the button to show all volume sliders, the Ringtone slider is grayed out, the other two not. Also the slider for Ringtone volume in Setting->Sound and notification is grayed out. So now I need to regularly check if messages have come in and phone calls are probably missed. How to resolve this?

I really like the "Caller ID announcement" feature, where it announces the number calling you. However, I've noticed it announces it regardless of my volume or mute settings. I do not want my phone making any noise if it's set to "Silent", or the ringer volume is all the way down. Any way to do that?

For the past couple of versions, Android has had one volume slider for notifications and ringtone volume. That means if you want to silence incoming calls, you have no choice but to silence notifications too, and vice-versa. Now, Google is fixing this limitation and adding separate volume controls for ringtones and notifications.

The Android maker has confirmed the development in a comment under a feature request added to the issue tracker. Google has marked the issue as fixed, which means you can expect separate volume and ringtone sliders on your Pixels with a future Android release.

When I'm adjusting the volume on my iPhone, I've noticed that sometimes it says "ringer" as I adjust it, and sometimes it says "volume"; also, sometimes it says "volume (headphones)". What determines when the volume buttons are adjusting the volume vs. the ringer, and what is the difference between the two actions?

Your ringer volume adjusts the volume of the sound coming out of the phone when it's ringing. If the phone is not playing media (i.e. no sound is coming out of it) then the volume buttons on the side adjust the ringer volume.

Finally, when you have headphones plugged in, the iPhone knows this and has a separate volume for headphones. Using the volume buttons will adjust the headphones volume when headphones are plugged in.

The reason why these are separate is because sometimes you want to mute your ringer, but still want to listen to media (or vice versa), and because the headphone and internal speaker volumes are different and need to be adjusted separately.

iPhone volume adjustments are easy, and Apple makes it possible to change the sound level of music separately from that of calls and alerts. This is a useful feature, as some sounds are more important to the user and need to be louder so that they can be heard over ambient noise in the room or when outdoors. A notification chime might be needed, but not as loud as game sounds or music. Alternatively, a phone call can be more important than background music that's playing while working.

An iPhone's ring volume and alert intensity can be set to a different level than music and other media once the setting is enabled. Apple provides a very simple toggle in the Settings app that makes this separation possible, although the wording is a bit confusing. In the Settings app, go to 'Sounds & Haptics.' There is a switch labeled 'Change with Buttons.' When enabled, which is the default, the volume buttons control the level of the ring tone, alerts, and media at the same time. When disabled, the ringer and alert volumes can only be changed in Settings, while music, podcasts, audiobooks, and video sounds can still be raised and lowered with the volume buttons.

An iPhone's volume can also be controlled by swiping down from the top-right to open Control Center. The tall, thin audio level display can be dragged up or down to raise or lower sound intensity. Pressing and holding the volume slider opens a larger version allowing greater control of the audio level. Sounds from phone calls and alerts can be silenced quickly by using the physical mute switch that's just above the iPhone's volume buttons, but it's important to remember to flip this on again or there will be a risk of missing calls.

Do Not Disturb and Focus modes affect notifications, which could delay or even block sounds from some apps. Alarm sounds and volume levels can be adjusted in the clock app and the Health app as well. Naturally, most apps that play sounds provide on-screen controls that adjust the volume or mute audio. While the physical volume buttons and mute switches are the most common ways to change audio levels, it's quite nice to be able to adjust music, game, and video volume without affecting the intensity of iPhone calls and alerts. ff782bc1db

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