Google wants to reduce hearing loss with Android 14's latest safety feature
Google wants to reduce hearing loss with Android 14's latest safety feature
While I like the concept, I don’t think it’s going to be very useful
A given volume, e.g. 50% can be vastly different on different headphones/earbuds. Only really useful on 1st party products
Samsung turns the volume icons green beyond 60%, and it’s much better than nothing; I would’ve raised the volume way above that way too often, if it weren’t for that feature.
There’s a feature to limit increasing the volume beyond some point, which—if you enable—you’d have to disable it to increase the volume, but I find it unnecessary.
Where exactly are you seeing that most manufactures are aiming for that spl?
I own many headphones all with vastly different sensitivities. And headphones are almost always far less sensitive than IEM’s
If you’re wondering, no, Android does not track the sound dose for music played over Bluetooth speakers or headphones, as the actual sound level of these devices can be set independently of the Android device.
Apparently, it will not work for Bluetooth audio devices. With wired being used less overall. Makes this feature a bit redundant unless they add support for Bluetooth.
Not too different than an old iPad, or maybe it was an iPod, used to do to me, when I’d listen for a while then it would just get quiet and I’d see that the screen had a volume warning on it.
Not new in general, but still good and valuable that it’s being implemented more.
The bigger hitch/conundrum is getting people to care, on the personal/listener level, since, as we’re aware, corporations profit off of us every second and would throw us all away if it earned them more money, so they’re of course going to kinda half-ass the effort and let us keep letting our hearing systems go bad.
It doesn’t help that under like 25 years old and you’re still not really even perceiving the future as “real” yet.
Android devices sold in the EU display a warning when headphones are connected and the user tries to raise the output volume level above 85 dB
No the don’t, they pop that up when you try to raise the volume above some arbitrary percentage. What volume that corresponds to depends on the audio hardware, it might be barely audible. And now they’re apparently gonna make that crap even worse.
I had no idea this was eu specific…
It’s annoying because I use my car volume knob, and keep my phone at max volume. It’s a pain when I’m driving and it cuts down the volume due to “extended amount of time at high volume”