Six months ago I wrote a piece for The Atlantic about \u201Cthe millennial pause,\u201D a term the creator @nisipisa coined to describe the split second of dead air millennials inadvertently include at the beginning of front-facing videos because they\u2019re confirming that their phone is recording. I turned this piece into a TikTok that has since received two million views and ruined my notifications forever. Not 15 hours ago, someone commented, \u201Cwhat in the christening hell are you going on about? Are these your real and important thoughts?\u201D This still happens every day.

The weirdest part about writing something that went viral has not been the comments, but stumbling across organic conversations about the thing on my TikTok For You page. Everyone from Hank Green to Emily Ratajkowski has used or acknowledged the term. But now it\u2019s being paired with a brand new generationalism: The Gen Z shake.


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\u201CThe Gen Z equivalent to the millennial pause is the shake and setting [the phone] down,\u201D a creator named Zaina said in a viral video earlier this month. In other words, many TikTok creators hit record a second too early, when they still appear to be setting up their phone to film.

I\u2019ve noticed other versions of this, like people hitting record before they\u2019ve finished chewing a bite of food so we\u2019re forced to watch them do so before they launch into whatever they were about to say. Like the Gen Z shake, it signals to viewers that the creator was caught in media res\u2014that the thought they needed to share simply couldn\u2019t wait until they put the phone down or swallowed.

Whereas the millennial pause is unintentional\u2014real, even vulnerable\u2014the Gen Z shake is a performance. Both could easily be edited out. The fact that neither are signifies two entirely different relationships with the internet.

Mocoe sees the shake as an act of ironic rebellion. If every moment of one\u2019s life is up for public consumption, you can simply refuse to take that reality seriously. For me, the shake\u2019s value is how it acknowledges the life that\u2019s lived outside of recorded snippets. The person I\u2019m watching doesn\u2019t just exist on a screen\u2014they\u2019re real, and they have to set their phone up like everyone else.

Like the millennial pause, the Gen Z shake does not \u201Cmatter.\u201D And yet any time someone notes differences between generations, it is greeted with a weird hostility. The millennial pause doesn\u2019t make millennials lame, and the Gen Z shake doesn\u2019t make Gen Z obnoxious. They\u2019re digital anthropological markers that we\u2019re observing amongst ourselves. Isn\u2019t that what the internet is for?

In my application I want to detect the shake event and I'm using SensorEventListener, the code is working fine when my activity is running in foreground. But when I press the lock button of the phone to lock the screen, the shake event can't be detected. I have tested my code on the Samsung gts5360. But the same code is working fine on sony ericssion xperia mini pro. Actually my Samsung phone is not detecting the shake events when I leave the device idle for approx. 45 seconds, after locking the device.

Then I shake the phone, it does not detect the shake, but when I shake phone after several seconds delay it starts listening the shake. This behavior of my samsung phone is not consistent. It starts and stop listening the shake event after a random amount of time.

Even with all of this it may not work. I've found that LG phones most recently are less likely to support background sensors. Also many Motorola phones don't require a wake lock but instead just need to re-register for the sensor when the screen goes off.

The shake feature in BlueStacks only shakes the device horizontally. To activate the debug menu in Expo, the device needs to be shaken vertically. BlueStacks only implementing horizontal shake was a poor decision.

Now, if I am already in the Home screen or any active screen and shake up-and-down, it does open the camera. But I like to do that when the screen is off and if the screen is locked. If the screen is locked, it should open the camera and allow me to take pictures, but disallow anyone to bypass the security lock.

Every day I open an app called Shakepay and shake my phone to receive a tiny amount of bitcoin. For some reason on my iPhone shaking to activate this feature is annoying. So I contacted Shakepay for help and they told me to add an assistive touch feature to "fake" shaking the phone by clicking a button.

That lead me down the path to try and automate the process. Currently, I have it set up so that every time I open Shakepay the assistive touch accessibility button pops up, but I still have to manually click the button to simulate a shake (I know, quite the complaint).

I purchased my Galaxy S20 and came previously from a Motorola G6 Plus. Which offered a feature to shake the phone to turn my flashlight on and off. This feature was extremely useful and convenient and it seems that Samsung does not offer this feature. Being able to turn my light on and off without having to touch the screen when it's off, and when my hands aren't disposable to touching the screen is invaluable to me.

Use device motion if you want to shake the phone as trigger.

Use target tracker transform if you want to shake the target tracker as trigger.

Use face tracker transform if you want to shake the head as trigger.

Use hand tracker transform if you want to shake the hand as trigger.

Use body tracking transform from their template to shake any part of the body as trigger.

@DazzaF: My first thought when you mentioned a rattling sound was the Optical Image Stabilisation component, however this should only be audible if you shake the phone while the Camera app is closed. Is this the case?

I have the same problem. S20 ultra seems to have this issue . I have to vigorously shake the phone for the main camera to gain focus. After the shake ritual it works fine for an hour or so even if you keep the phone down and then the main camera becomes blurry again . Don't know what is a permanent fix for this . Many people have reported the same issue and the only solution so far is to shake the camera vigorously for a few seconds

I have tried all of the Gooseneck window mounts for my Smartphone, but all of them are rigid and they transmit Vibration into my video shots. Has anyone a suggestion on a technique for eliminating this? I am doing much better holding it in my hand, but eventually I will have an accident doing it this way!

Couple of years ago I was out on the California coast with a rental car and improvised (coast and canyon drives) with a pocket camera, on a Gorillapod wrapped around the padded passenger headrest. Was eye-level, quite stable with camera anti-shake and a bit of telephoto through the windshield. The wide angle on a phone set that far back wouldn't work for tourist viewing but could be an advantage if the purpose is just recording surrounding traffic events.

I use one of the magnetic phone holders attached to the inside of the front windshield. There is a little bit of play in the extension arm that holds the magnet so the rattling of the car itself is dampened and seems to work well with the IS of my Note 5.

You have three options. 1) Use a gimbal - you can mount them to the window or the dash depending on your vehicle, or, 2) get a newer smartphone that is stabilized for videos, or, 3) the best option is to use a stabilized phone on a gimbal IMHO. Stabilizing in post is a compromise as it is not as effective as the above methods and it always involves cropping the image.

The MyShake App sends a warning to mobile phone users that shaking is about to occur. The system uses ground-motion sensors to detect earthquakes that have already started and estimates their size, location, and impact. When it detects a significant magnitude, the system issues a ShakeAlertĀ  Message, providing a warning before shaking begins. The MyShake App allows people to crowdsource valuable information about how much shaking people felt and to share information about damage following an earthquake.

Record. When the MyShake App detects an earthquake, its network of phones records (and securely stores data that does not contain personally identifiable elements) the shaking for analysis of earthquake trends and continuous improvement of the technology.

ShakeAlert uses science and technology to detect significant earthquakes quickly and sends a real-time alert to people on compatible cell phones and other mobile devices through text-like messages, and through apps as they become available. These important alerts come automatically on most cell phones, making a distinctive sound and displaying a text message that reads, Earthquake Detected! Drop, Cover, Hold On. Protect Yourself." This text message is also available in Spanish. Some mobile phones with text-to-voice capability may read out the message text.


ShakeAlert-powered alerts are sent through the Wireless Emergency Alert System automatically to most cell phones (just like an AMBER Alert). Sign-up is not required and no action needs to be taken other than enabling emergency alerts on your cell phone. To do this, follow the directions below:

Check that Wireless Emergency Alerts (WEA) are turned on. Mobile phones that have WEA turned on are able to receive ShakeAlert messages. Click to learn more about ShakeAlert and WEA. While this setting may already be turned on in your settings on your mobile phone, please take the time to check.


unfortunately, this is not an option on android at the moment. however, you can press m from the expo-cli interactive prompt to open the menu. press ? to see the full list of commands. in my opinion. this is easier than trying to shake or do some awkward gesture on your device. to reload the app, you can press r. easy peezy 2351a5e196

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