Using the phone's light as a reading light is definitely an unfortunate idea in the long run, because it will enforce faster discharge of the battery, followed by other charges. That is exactly what kills phone batteries.

It is a lot more recommended to buy some cheap appliance, designed to do exactly that task. These appliances can be head (your own :)) mounted, wall mounted, free standing on a table, even attachable with a (big) clip to the book. They might provide both battery-stored energy, as well as connection to the wall socket (possibly through an adapter).


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For the love of god, buy a lamp! A little table lamp or perhaps a standard lamp, depending on where you're reading. Or else if there's some special need for darkness, look into buying a torch, many are rechargable.

You can even get, quite inexpensively, the sort of lamp cave explorers use. Straps to your forehead. The better ones are rechargable, the cheaper ones aren't. Although you could get rechargable batteries and a charger to counter that, since this is something you're going to use a lot you don't want to shell out for endless batteries.

A phone is not designed to make a good lamp Using it's camera flash LED gets hot and eats battery massively. They're useful in emergencies cos you've always got your phone on you, but it's not an everyday sort of thing.

You can get a clip-on gooseneck mount for a cell phone or tablet that could be used to hold your phone in an appropriate position. I picked up one of these cheap one Black Friday and was very impressed with how well it holds my tablet. There are other models that have larger clamps, cup-holder mounts, etc.

That said, if you're talking about using the camera flash LED as a light then I'd definitely discourage that -- it'll kill your battery, and those things get mighty hot. If you're just talking about using your phone's screen then it's better, but I'd still just buy a small lamp.

Pictures 1 and 3 already display a solution for this: the glass or cup can double as a standard for your phone. Presumably you don't need the light while you're drinking. Since those objects are round, balancing your phone might be a bit of a problem. Otherwise, you might be better off with basically any rectangular paperweight. Maybe other books which are still on your 'to read' list? (I tend to keep those on a bookcase shelf separate from the ones I already read, but this might be another way to set them apart.)

This has happened numerous times over the last few months; mostly it happens in the evenings and lasts between two and 10 minutes. The phone is sitting on its shelf, properly seated in its base. The display lights up but doesn't show as if there is an incoming call, neither does it show as if the handset is charging. Normally when I press the button to key in the number to be called, the landline dial tone sounds immediately. If I do this when the display is lit up like this, there is a three to four second delay until I get the dial tone.

Thank you! Seems like I have to blame my two cats playing in another room where there's another handset. I just put the phone back on the base when I see it. I'll move the phone out of the cats' reach but they're acrobatic young cats with some amazing moves.

This has become worrying. I've disconnected the two 'extension' bases and left them so the handset batteries must have run down by now. The main base is disconnected from power and phone socket but the batteries still have enough charge to illuminate the backlighting and screen. Rght now the only phone service active here is my mobile.

The main handset flashes regularly even when across the room from its base. Timed with the stopwatch on my mobile, it flashes at approximately 3-1/2 minute intervals. Sometimes it's only the screen that lights up, at other times the keypad backlighting lights up as well, making a brief light level that I notice even when I've turned away from it. I was up (and awake!) most of last night and observed it for nearly five hours.

Can anyone suuggest what might be causing this, please? Any possibilities that might be thought to be 'off the wall' would be welcome if there's a technical grounding for it. I'm not ruling anything out.

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Yes a physical light that I can put on the wall or outside my office so people know I am on the phone. Too many times people walk into my office while I am on speaker phone with customer and say stupid things!

Dave, the easy way to do this would be with a Raspberry Pi running Node Red or a Particle Photon or an ESP device running one of the newer, easy to use firmwares that can do MQTT natively then, using Node Red on the same server as your FreePBX install send an MQTT message to either the Pi, the Photon or the ESP to light either an LED or switch a relay to light a mains voltage lamp.

My PBX is in another city, I cant access the ip directly as indicated? There is no VPN between my network and the network the PBX is on. I like the solution though, I have plenty of these lights already! I have a PI many be I can find some code to put on a PI to monitor the BLF status of my 3 extensions?

GOALS

-Setup a PI

-Allow PI to be added to FreePBX EPM

-Allow multiple BLF entries (like buttons on an extension)

-Allow multiple accounts (each one would be a different light, any BLF on that account would light that lamp)

-Support WiFi lights and/or external ringer

Then I am missing something? I want something that someone who does pbx configuration doesnt have to breakout the RPi programmer to be able to setup and I dont expect the PBX to be onsite so I am unsure how the core show channels on the PBX in WI would work as described with the light here in NY on a 192.168.1.x network?? I havent read your response is detail and fully thought about how it works but at first glance I think it still needs some work? I am sure once I break out the RPi and look at your examples I will have a better feel for whats involved.

If anyone is interested, I go through my steps of creating a custom component for HA. In this case it is a custom sensor that monitors my voip phones on my Asterisk server. It can be found here. The project ends up with an automation that flash my...

First, go in the portal and update Teams Admin Agent, Firmware, Teams App. once they are updated. reboot the phone. if the red light is still on. on the phone go into calls, you will see 3 little bars, press the the 3 bars, and you can clear the missed calls.

Thanks for the reply. I think the phone updated on its own. I updated Teams and restarted my computer and phone. No luck, but yesterday afternoon I noticed that the annoying red light was no longer flashing and going to missed calls clears the alert and light like it always has. Electrical tape was my next course of action!

My phone does not light up when I get a notification when the phone is locked. I have made sure that the do not disturb option is turned off but I am unsure of how to make the phone light up when I get a notification

Hi, I have renewed my VM contract and took off the Phone line. The hub 3 has now got a flashing red phone light. Do I need to do something to tell it there is no phone now or is it going to flash red for the next 18 months?

Are you able to try a pin hole reset? To do this push a pen etc into the reset hole at the back of the Hub and hold in for 60 seconds. This will cause a full factory reset so if you have changed any Hub settings such as the password they will revert to the original but you can change these back afterwards.

Do these apps really work, or are they gimmicks? Can they get the same information from a scene that a real device can? Can they be used as incident-light meters without additional physical attachments like a diffuser dome? Are they accurate? How accurate, compared to the various stand-alone devices? Do the phone apps have any advantages?

Many apps use the camera's own exposure setting, so can vary by nearly a stop at times from what a meter might see (smartphone cameras often "expose to the right" a bit to maximize SNR). iOS devices provide a "brightness value" in their EXIF data stream, and that value appears to track external meters pretty much exactly. Apps that use the brightness value, or that do image analysis on captured pix to compensate for the camera's ETTR behavior, should track an external meter to within a tenth of a stop.

I've used Pocket Light Meter for the iPhone (like dpollitt :) when using my grandfather's old Leica IIIc, a 35mm rangefinder with no light meter or automatic metering. I played around with it quite a lot, comparing its results against those of my Canon 5DmkII's metering, and found it to be very accurate. The results from the Leica bore this out too: generally (where I hadn't messed something up :) they were well exposed. So that app at least is certainly useful and by no means a gimmick.

On Android phones, for example, the usual method is to get the camera to take a photo then read that photo's EXIF data to determine the exposure settings. However, not all manufacturers include EXIF data in their photos (and it's easy to imagine others - especially cheap, low-end phones - might include inaccurate EXIF data), so reliability will vary between models.

It lets me lock in my ISO, and Aperture, then it will calculate the shutter speed.I have used it against my Rangefinder and it seems to at least match up with the built in light meter from 40 years ago! I don't know how it compares to current gen DSLR light meters though. 152ee80cbc

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