Hi, Alexey.
This is getting complex. If at any point you want to pursue the
converasation with the MLO Support staff instead of continuing with
the forum, you can reach them at support [at] mylifeorganized [dot]
net
You wrote "it cannot happen that my current location is not in the
NearBy circle" - I'm afraid that I didn't explain about location
precision well enough. The place that you are actually at is one
thing, the place that your device thinks it's at is another. If your
location precision is good the distinction between the two may be
very small and therefore unimportant. If your location precision is
poor then this may be a significant factor. If my device's
calculated location is 5km away from my actual location and I have a
nearby radius of 1km, then the Nearby widget will be showing
locations that are near the device's calculated location instead of
locations that are near your actual location.
It sounds as though this is not your problem so let's move on.
I'm not really clear on what the blog meant by "if context's radius
included to NearBy radius." I think maybe there is a translation
problem. If my understanding is correct, the blog should have said
something like "Each context will be included in the NearBy view if
a circle with center = device's current calculated location and
radius = NearBy radius intersects or contains a circle with center
at the context location and radius = the context radius'
Or, to put it more simply, if the distance between the device's
calculated location and the context location is less than the sum of
the Nearby radius and the Context radius.
I don't really understand the difference between contexts that get
included in the NearBy view versus contexts that result in location
alarms. I hope that someone else chimes is with the answers that you
want, or that you canget them from support.
I also do not understand why a location which the device considers
to be 285m away would be included in NearBy if the Nearby radius and
the Context radius were both set to 100m. Unless it had to do with
location precision. Under some circumstances, MLO makes a circle
with radius set to Nearby radius plus location precision. If
location precision were 85 m or worse, then the object which is
apparently 285m away might still be nearby - you could possibly be
85m closer to the object than the device has calculated and if that
were true then you would be within the 200m combined radius.
-Dwight
MLO Betazoid on Windows, Cloud and Android SGN2