The title, basically. My sister's phone is identical to mine in terms of make, model, OS version and build level (we upgraded on the same plan at the same time) and her alarm apps work just fine when they go off. It makes no difference which app I try; Alarm Clock Xtreme, Alarmy, Gentle Alarm, etc - none of them appear in the foreground when the alarms go off. Furthermore, the alarm apps aren't located in the 'draw over other apps' for me to give them permission manually. Yesterday, I went as far as to wipe my phone and rebuild from scratch, and it made zero difference.

Up until updating to iOS 13, I used a third-party alarm clock app that I liked. I would set the alarm as the last thing I did, and then turn off the screen, and as expected it would sound at the set time.


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But from what I can see, each app I've tried will not work with the screen off. Alarm clock apps need to be set, with the screen kept on (some have settings to prevent the screen turning off). Is this now a requirement of third-party apps? The stock Clock app works OK, but I'd prefer another. Has it become impossible under iOS 13 for a third-party clock app to continue to function with the screen turned off?

One alarm clock app I downloaded had a specific warning as a notification (and also referenced on a page within the app) that for the clock to function normally one had to make sure the app was in the foreground, that Do Not Disturb was not blocking notifications, and that the screen was turned on. The developer noted in the text that the screen part was the part that had changed.

This morning I did find one app that DID work. I tested it with the screen off and with DnD manually turned on, and it worked fine. So my search is over, at least for the moment. But I'm not sure the question has been definitively answered: one app out of dozen isn't enough to determine that there's just something else different about the app that makes it not REALLY an alarm clock app but that it works somewhat like it.

Third party alarm clocks have always been problematic. Every one I've ever used had to be the active app or it wouldn't sound. Many had to have the screen unlocked. That's why, despite some very cool features on third party apps, I've stayed with the built in one.

Developers are stuck with the limitations Apple places on third party apps. Every time there's a major change in iOS, there's a risk that things won't work properly any more. Apps that are created and maintained by individuals may not get updated quickly or at all.

Something in iOS 13 broke alarm clock apps. I have tried 4 different alarm clock apps, all of which have worked before the iOS update, and all of them have failed to go off in the morning. When I test them for an hour or two they work fine, but not overnight. Not doing anything fancy, just playing a song that I have on my phone. I keep the apps open (using the display as my clock) and have the phone on a low wattage charger. Nothing I have tried works. Contacted developers and they said they would look into it.

I worked on a script for a couple of hours to set daily alarms for me, only to realise towards the end that there's no way to disable "Snooze" when creating alarms with Shortcuts. There's no way to make "Snooze" disabled by default, either, so it looks like the only possible option left is using a third-party app for my alarms. Does anyone know of an alarm clock app with better support for Shortcuts? Or maybe there's another tool like Toolbox Pro which does allow setting alarms with "Snooze" disabled?

I would like if there was the ability to access the alarm.com sensor information from hubitiat (when last activated, inactive for, battery level etc) that would be extra beneficial if I could tie that information into some routines but it's just a hoop dream.

The alarm.com service is responding with that code, so it's unlikely anything within the app itself can address it. I would check your alarm.com account and make sure it's active. You could also try to create a service (secondary) user on your account and use that for the ADC app.

I've had intermittent issues with the app failing to refresh the cookie data. I initially thought it was because of the 2FA enforcement, but the frequency was only once every couple of days and the next refresh cycle would be successful. I've had a few instances where the failure lined up with setting the alarm though. I finally decided to crack down and try to root cause the problem. It looks either the site itself, or my connectivity, is randomly failing. I changed the ADC Manager app code to always give back the actual error and see both "read timeout" and "503" errors in the logs. The upshot, I just threw a call back to the main function in the "catch" portion of each function. Basically "if at first you don't succeed...try again." Seems to be alright now.

I live in a dorm with 3 other people, and I'm also the one with classes at the earliest time. I like to think that I'm a compassionate person for wanting to use a vibration-only alarm to wake up in the morning.

Alarmy used to help me do that, but recent updates seem to make it impossible to create silent, vibration-only alarms anymore. Does anyone else have any good alternatives? I tried Sleep as Android, but the vibrations aren't nearly strong enough to wake me up. Other options on the Play Store seem to either be alarms that go off if the phone is vibrated (as in moved or stolen) or look like phone-AIDS in a download.

Also, I tried searching for an apk of an older version of Alarmy, but I couldn't find one made before the update I'm thinking of, as it was made a while ago. It hasn't been a problem because all the old silent alarms still work fine, but now I have a new phone and need new alarms. If someone happens to have resources beyond the ones I found and are willing to put in elbow grease for a stranger, first, thanks, and second, the silent alarms seemed to go away when the UI was updated to look more material design-y.

AutoWake integrates with the companion sleep tracker AutoSleep to allow you to set alarms that will wake you after a certain amount of actual seep time (not time in bed) and/or wake you during light sleep (rather than when you're really sleeping soundly). I've been using it daily since getting my Apple Watch in January, and going back to the standard old "ready or not, time to get up" alarm type would really suck.

I'm sorry too for digging this up but it seems to me that this kind of feature perfectly fits the Joplin scope. To-do's are already implemented, alarms are already implemented, it makes sense to extend these functionalities to make them more powerful.

The new Makey Makey Apps are the culmination of years of learning and play at JoyLabz. We took our tried-and-true piano app that was created when Makey Makey was first introduced, and we took it up a level alongside a number of new apps that we have created from the ground up. The new apps all have a number of cool features and are adjustable so you can plug and play your next invention.

3. just recently, whenever i switch on a pre-set alarm, the app goes off immediately and displays the usual time left for the alarm to ring. if i need to put on more alarms, i will have switch on & launch the app again and again!

I had a alarm and canceled it. But the app is now red. I can arm and disable bt it s read

You can not edit the settings until the alarm is cleared. I rebooted the HUB but that did not fix it. Any ideals on how to clear the red screen from the app.

I installed splunk enterprise 6.2.3 on Ubuntu server 1404 with no GUI. After I remote accessed the splunk web page and click splunk apps for downloading app, the browser jumped to one page "http://:8000/en-US/manager/search/apps/remote", and said :

Disarm should ask for the pass code, especially if duress code is set. Without it there is a duress code and no way to use it. Especially if intruders know that ring alarms can be easily and safely disarmed using apps.

+1, I think this is a BIG security loop hole. Not requiring the user to use the alarm code has the same security loop hole as a keychain with disarm button (this is exactly the reasoning provided by Ring for not providing a keychain accessory). Someone could force the user to disarm the system via the Ring app without alerting the monitoring center. Not requiring the alarm code makes it impossible to use the Duress code via the Ring app.

Hi, I am new to Homey, and Heimdall looks like a fantastic app to turn Homey into an alarm system.

I have a house with three floors: cellar, ground floor and first floor. I would like an alarm to be able to operate in four modes: No alarm at all (disarmed), alarm when sensor in cellar is triggered only, alarm when sensor in cellar or ground floor is triggered, alarm when any sensor is triggered.

Alarm permits expire on December 31st of each year. A renewal notice and keyholder update form will be included with your January invoice. A $5 late fee will be charged for any alarm permit payment that is delinquent 30 days after initial invoicing.

Under the revised Alarm Ordinance, the City will no longer respond to alarms free of charge. In addition to recovering the $229 fee for service, escalating penalties will be imposed for multiple false alarms. e24fc04721

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