I'm fairly new to the Android platform so hopefully this is a silly question, but since I've had my Pixel (Pixel 1, Android 8.0.0), it's been giving me notifications for alarms I set in the Clock app two hours prior to their occurrence (disregard actual time in the screenshot). Note that I do not want to delete the alarm, just this notification about it.
Well, this is a late response but I just ran across this as I am having the same problem. Thank to jszpila here for posting Google's response so I didn't have to waste any more time trying to get rid of the "upcoming alarm" notification.
I managed to do it by setting an alarm and waiting for the notification to come up. Long press and go to more settings. Weirdly, as you said, it's already disabled, but if you tap on the bottom line with the disabled setting, you get a new menu and then select notification priority (the top option) and select "low priority".
There is a function called "alarm skip" that lets you dismiss/turn off an alarm two hours before it rings. I hadn't realized that I had turned it on, but I was missing alarms because of that notification (and dismissing it turns the alarm off). I turned off Alarm Skip in settings, and things should work better now. Sharing in case someone else needs this.
Evidently this is possible now with newer version of Android. I just wish they made the distinction between having the notification be available to see, but not "wake" the screen at 120 minutes and 30 minutes before the alarm.
So, a while back something melted in the handle of my driver side door. Now the car thinks the door is open all the time. I no longer use the interior lights function that is linked to the door opening. I drive with the door open light on my dash. And on top of that my car alarm likes to go off at really inconvenient times for no reason.
They have a problem, with the software for the population monitors. There are times swathpro will shut off the outside two rows but the population monitor will show that the outside 4 rows aren't planting. Corn is now up, and guess what, rows 3 and 4 were indeed planting. Other times it will display a population for rows that aren't planting. Still throws alarms when rows shut off if you are using a ratecontroller to run tru-counts.
Seriously, I think in your boat only 3 things will set the alarm beeping....low oil pressure, high engine temp and high transmission temp. I start by pulling the connections off the sensors and seeing if that changes anything. Chances are it is just a sensor and not a real problem.
My 2005 23LSV was doing the same thing beeping when a boarder fell and I slowed and turned to pick them up. I noticed one time that the gauge flashed "Oil" because I was never looking at the dash when picking up my boarder. Turns out there is a low oil level alarm under the dash that beeps several times and my monsoon 340 was 2 quarts low. The vdrive and tranny were full. My two cents check the engine oil level. Mine would only beep when I went from speed to slowing and a u-turn.
This isn't a *required* solution. It's not like every kid in a car seat is going to die if any of the failure modes you list come to pass. In fact, what you're describing is ANY such system: by your logic, smoke detectors are stupid and bad because batteries can run out, or electronics can fail. Or any other technology that's imperfect (as, indeed, all are).
One of the italian national channels just aired an interview to the representative of some car seat company, who showed a car seat sensor (NOT those in the picture!) that (going by memory) \u201Chas its own app, that will conveniently ring an alarm on your smartphone if you leave the baby in her seat\u201D.
Baby safety yes, of course. But I am frankly appalled that that whole category of products, that is \u201Ccar seat alarms that need a smartphone to work\u201D is allowed to exist, and was conceived in the first place.
It\u2019s great to have an alarm ring if you forget your baby inside the car. But who on Earth tought that that way to do it made sense, and should be legal? How is it possible to trust as life-saving alarm something that:
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