31 points

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

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13 points

For me personally, I connect my phone to my car and always have my phone’s volume at 100% for the Bluetooth because I control the volume with the physical knob in the car.

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3 points

Man, I hate that BlueTooth doesn’t have an equivalent of “line-out” that isn’t affected by the host devices’ volume settings. It’s so annoying when I can barely hear my music because I turned the volume way down on my phone while watching a video late last night.

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3 points

There’s a setting in developer options to disable Bluetooth absolute volume. That can remove the sync from the media volume of your smartphone.

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1 point

Poweramp plus allows you to set audio profiles for different devices, I have never gotten it to work properly between my bluetooth, wired headphones, and android auto.

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2 points

Haha yea another good example of this not working as intended

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1 point

This feature is only for wired headphones. They can not reliable calculate it for Bluetooth audio devices because of this very reason.

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1 point

They can’t do it for wired headphones either, hence why the current automation volume reduction sucks

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2 points
*

It’s should to be close enough, the spec is called sensitivity (SPL) and most headphone manufacturers try to hit around 100dB/mW.
Hopefully the setting would allow you to fine tune it based on what headphones you have.

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2 points

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

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1 point

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.

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15 points

This is a good feature if and only if there is an official way to turn it off. I do like that it might actually give you info on how loud it is, although I’m not sure how well that’ll work. This can’t possibly work as intended on all sound outputs, as some get much louder than others.

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12 points

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.

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11 points

Or if, for the love of god, they give us back our headphone jacks.

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4 points

Even with wired headphones, the volume setting didn’t directly correspond to a decibel level. High quality headphones often have a higher impedance than cheaper ones, which makes them much quieter (unless you use an external amp). The automatic volume reducer thing was just always pretty frustrating in the past.

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1 point
*

Especially when you’re driving and it suddenly reduces the volume to the point where it’s barely audible, forcing you to fumble around with your phone. And now that’s apparently gonna happen even more often.

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3 points

Or at the very least a 2nd USB type C port. Personally, use wireless wouldn’t mind using wired if my future phones were guaranteed to include that option.

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2 points

Yeah, as much as I want my headphone jack back, they could at least give us an additional port even if its another USB c

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10 points

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.

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2 points

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”

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1 point

Same here. I have to turn the phone up to max and the car stereo up to near max for it to be audible

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9 points
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