The reason it was noticed here is because the Beta changed the previous sound set by the OS and it needed to be changed back. The Beta also introduces the second WyzeMessage channel with the new App Provided sound that needs to be overridden.

I am currently running the production app prior to the current Beta and every production and beta app prior to that. I have always changed my notification sound in the OS and thru use of a 3rd party app.


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The settings may be a bit different depending on the brand of phone that is running Android and the version of Android running since there are differences in each OS and Brand build, but the stock Android OS has always been a capable changing the notification sounds for all your individual app notification channels (unless restricted by the app). My example was based on a Moto Android 11.

My friend gave me his old iPhone SE. It works great without the SIM card over my WiFi and elsewhere. I've installed "TextNow," a calling/texting app. App works fine, but on my iPhone SE, it doesn't matter what notification sounds I specify for the app, there is no ringing for incoming calls/texts, making the phone next to useless for my purposes. (I typically work using desktops.)

I have a messaging app (TextNow) that sometimes likes to put a sticky notification up (to notify me that I have used up my data and am being throttled), which I do not want and cannot be disabled in the apps settings.

Normally when an app abuses notifications like this I simply disable notifications for that app. However, in this case I would miss text messages if I did that. Therefor I was hoping for some way to either:

Once you have them working satisfactorily, you can elegantly combine above macros to have a single macro (not tested by me since I don't have any apps that produce multiple sticky notifications but should work). This is a better approach, since notifications aren't lost as pointed out by OP in his solution

On the Samsung A32 5G phone. Why can't I set different sounds for different notifications like texts vs. everything else like I could do on my previous and MUCH OLDER Samsung Galaxy phones? I want to set a separate and specific sound/music for my text messages but unfortunately the Samsung A32 5G phone has but ONE sound option for ALL notifications.

I want to be able to select a specific sound for different notification but the Samsung A32 5G phone ONLY allows for a single sound option for ALL notifications. That needs to be change to allow for a user to choose different notification alarms/song for different notifications.

TextNow also incorporates advanced features like read receipts and message delivery confirmation, ensuring that you never miss an important message. Additionally, users can personalize their messaging experience by customizing chat backgrounds, fonts, and notification sounds.

When iOS 17 rolled out, Apple made a change that irked some iPhone owners: the new default notification went from the classic "Tri-tone" to a new, gentler "Rebound." If you're among those who hate it, there's good news. A future update will likely let you change it for the first time.

It's hard to believe, but iOS has never let you change the default notification sound. Until iOS 17, Tri-tone has always been the default notification noise going back to the original iPhone. If you didn't like it, you couldn't change it.

The one benefit to Tri-Tone is that it's easy to hear, even in a crowded room. The downside, of course, is that every iPhone had the same notification, so you never knew if Tri-tone just emitted from your phone or one of the other five or six in the room. As more and more iPhones switch to Rebound, that problem won't disappear.

Or maybe it will if the latest iOS 17.2 beta is any indication. Because now, you can finally change the notification noise, 9to5Mac reports. If you have the beta, head to Settings > Sounds & Haptics to find a new "Default Alerts" option. If you really want to, you can change back to the Tri-tone sound; find it in a "classics" submenu. But for the sake of your own sanity, we recommend finding something else. You'll finally know if it's your iPhone or someone else's.

Unfortunately, there's no guarantee this option will survive the beta process. The first 17.2 beta introduced collaborative playlists; this fourth iteration removed that feature. It's unclear if Apple decided to cut the idea altogether, go back to the drawing board for a redesign, or omit it for some other testing reason. Cross your fingers if you want to keep the option to customize your notification sound.

Audio from one of those springtime hoax bomb alerts sounds markedly similar to the voice, accent and narrative behind recent active shooter calls that NPR has listened to from Virginia, Minnesota, Ohio and Florida.

The caller, who sounded like a grown man with a North African accent, claimed to be a student. Students were evacuated from the school, the parish fire department deployed and the grounds were searched. No bomb was found.

Can someone help please? Every time I receive a notification, my phone emits a high piercing tone. Also when I switch it on and off. It does not happen if the phone is on vibrate or silent. Just started happening this morning. Thank you

You may have just missed that this was happening before. In the Watch app under Notifications you can disable certain alerts from appearing on your watch which will cause them to only show up on your iPhone. You can also un-silence your watch which will let you get an audible ping when notifications come in.

@RosemaryOrchard and @tgara are correct; for some reason not apparent to me, notifications go to only one device, either the Watch or the iPhone. I would prefer that the notifications for certain apps such as iMessage go to both, in part for the reason stated below.

Note that many adults have hearing loss at higher frequencies. The particular sound frequency for the Watch iMessage notification is squarely in the range where the hearing loss for many adults occurs. Apple should change this sound notification.

I agree, it would work best if the trigger word is used only in emergenceis, but it would also cause my heart to stop and for me to into controlled panic mode if it sounded like a real alarm. I know because, I once woke up to a new alarm clock out of a dead sleep and grabbed my jacket and purse to evacuate before I realized it was the clock and not a fire alarm. (I changed the alarm to radio mode after that).

Yes! I once let my phone vibrate until everyone in a meeting was glaring at me, because I thought it was a facilities maintenance guy outside the window with a lawn mower. (In my defense, the coincidence rate of meetings accompanied by the sound of a facilities crew lawnmower was very high).

I have one person at work who has the bleep from Sonic when you get a coin as a notification. Amusing for about 5 mins. Another one uses the default google hangouts one, which is fine, except I get paranoid its my phone going off (even though noone I know will send a message via there during the workday :/)

In general, the amount of noise your phone makes should be inversely related to how many times it makes noise. So for example, if you hardly get any notifications, texts, e-mails, calls, etc. during the day, it seems fine to have it vibrate. If it gets frequent notifications, it should be on silent, because constant buzzing can drive people nuts.

In our open-plan office (8 of us), we sometimes get telemarketer calls that sweep around all our phones like a ricochet effect, each one slightly out-of-time with the others. Fortunately the ring tones are at harmonious pitches. They sound like a telephone choir when that happens. Very disruptive!!!

You probably know this but you can quickly silence your phone while typing a text message by pressing the lower volume control button (left side of phone) until it's at zero volume. After you're done typing the text message press the upper volume control to return the sound to the phone.

While some contributors and editors of the Wikipedia may, in truth, make intentional use of ambiguous language - be it due to personal bias, in order to gloss over gaps in knowledge or intellectual rigor, or out of stylistic habit; to sound a little more 'encyclopedia-like', in bad faith, or due to the pure evil of their utterly twisted and irredeemable character - I suspect that in the great majority of cases, ambiguous language appears in the Wikipedia unintentionally. Furthermore, I suspect that it is often beside the point, when not impossible, to attempt to demonstrate that a given ambiguity was or wasn't used intentionally.

Currently, I'm using Airtel Internet connection and now I'm getting better and faster speed so the IP will be changed, so Basically, I want to know that will I be considered as Sock of anyone who has used that IP before which I'll get in some time? I'm getting Hathway Broadband I have read at WP:SOCK Checkusers considers Sock if the same IP address is being used or ever used by two different users (not Specifically) but by reading it sounds like that only. I can share in Userpage my previous and Current(new) IP address when I'll get connection today in some time. --Siddharth ?? Talk To Me!! 11:17, 21 May 2019 (UTC) ff782bc1db

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