One of my past phones had that feature, but you had to turn it on. I guess it would be a good function if you always listen via the same hardware. Or maybe per Bluetooth device at least.
Comment on she just doesn't understand me
MartianSands@sh.itjust.works 9 hours ago
I get really irritated when my phone limits volume with a notification like this, because the phone has no idea what hardware I have playing the sound. They’ve made some unfounded assumption about how loud 80% volume actually is, and interrupt whatever I’m doing to complain about it
autriyo@feddit.org 9 hours ago
MartianSands@sh.itjust.works 9 hours ago
Agreed, perfectly reasonable precaution so long as it’s possible to calibrate it per device
0ops@piefed.zip 7 hours ago
I have it now, and as far as I can tell it can’t be turned off. Really annoying when volume level doesn’t sink with the Bluetooth head unit in my car and this feature suddenly halves my volume
apex32@lemmy.world 7 hours ago
Yup! I use an aux cable in my car and then all of a sudden I’m driving in silence. I tried settings and developer settings, but this behavior persists.
FinalRemix@lemmy.world 5 hours ago
Mine fucking resets every few months… it just decides I need to re-up the “I understand I’ll go deaf” notification while I’m in the middle of a drive.
boonhet@sopuli.xyz 7 hours ago
Ios lets you mark a Bluetooth device as a car stereo and it stops doing that. Maybe other device types too. Just make sure it’s not set as headphones.
I’m sure Android has a way out too
defrostedLasagna4921@piefed.zip 20 minutes ago
Yes, my Samsung has that option.
captainlezbian@lemmy.world 7 hours ago
Yeah also, they don’t understand that I’m fucking hard of hearing. Yes my audio is loud, that way I can hear it
stupidcasey@lemmy.world 4 hours ago
TBF, if you’re doing it properly you should be using any exrarnal audio at line level and amplify it outside your phone to keep all audio devices at a standard level, it prevents some devices from playing too loud and some playing too quiet it also prevents clipping.
MartianSands@sh.itjust.works 4 hours ago
That’s pure wishful thinking. The vast majority of users wouldn’t even know what line level is, and you can’t expect end users to have audio engineering expertise. You also can’t expect anyone other than an audiophile or actual audio engineer to be able to get alll of their consumer electronics conform to such a standard
stupidcasey@lemmy.world 4 hours ago
Devices used to have a dedicated line out you were never supposed to use headphone ports on external devices so technically you are just working outside of the standard, so technically your device is incompatible with all those external devices you are using, what we really need is a new protocol that is designed to keep everything at the same level on external devices.
MartianSands@sh.itjust.works 3 hours ago
Given that we’re discussing the behaviour of phones, I’m quite certain that there was never a time when they generally had line out ports. Also, I can’t imagine people are connecting their Bluetooth speakers to the wrong interface.
What you’re describing is still wishful thinking, because there’s no world where every consumer device is going to have accurately calibrated volume regardless of whether there’s a protocol which specifies it.
AI_toothbrush@lemmy.zip 2 hours ago
I dont have this problem because i have extremely sensitive hearing but still, seeing my phone say im “listening to 20db” for example, really got me thinking about how the hell would it know that.