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a month ago in
Galaxy WatchHello,
I have a Galaxy Watch 4 Classic. I started using the timer more often recently to count down a few hours at a time. I don't need to have it visible on the screen, so I hide it.
The problem is, the timer will sometimes just show up on my watch, completely unprompted. Which is an issue, because an active timer drains the battery hard.
I can't figure out how to force the watch to stop doing that. I looked this issue up and saw a mention about "routines", but I don't know where to see or access them. Apparently it could be part of Bixby, but I am not using Bixby (I don't even have it configured).
Is there a way to make this behavior stop?
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a week ago in
Galaxy WatchI've actually been using Google's Clock app on my watch for the last 3 days, and it seems to work great - no unwanted behavior, works just like it should.
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a month ago in
Galaxy WatchThe timer doesn't stay hidden. It uses the same amount of energy in the background as it does in the foreground. May I ask what you are trying to accomplish by setting the timer? Routines can be accessed and created in settings/modes and routines by accessing the routines tab from the bottom menu. You can also create a custom mode such as for whatever you are trying to accomplish by setting the timer.
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a month ago in
Galaxy WatchThank you for the answer.
Unfortunately, the statement about energy draw is simply not true. I have left the timer in the foreground before. Within around 2 hours, my battery level has gone from about 80% to 15%. Having it in the foreground absolutely chews through battery, in stark contrast to leaving it in the background where it doesn't seem to drain the battery at all.
There's also the simple aspect of convenience. This issue forces me to press the Home button every so often just so I can check the time.
I have gone through the settings on the watch, and I was unable to find anything that would resemble a "routine", could it be that it's not available depending on the region or something?
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a month ago (Last edited a month ago ) in
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a month ago in
Galaxy WatchI've browsed through the settings within the Galaxy Watch app on my phone and I couldn't find anything like that either. Unless this is a Samsung-exclusive feature, which might be a problem because I do not own a Samsung smartphone.
Each day I just want to be reminded of something 4 hours later, sometimes twice a day, and it does not happen on a fixed schedule, so I don't think this is something I can possibly automate.
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a month ago in
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a month ago in
Galaxy WatchYes, I do have AOD enabled, but the AOD by itself - without any timers running - does not drain the battery that much, the watch still easily lasts for a full day. Having the timer open amplifies the battery drain tenfold. And that's the problem - I launch the timer, I press the Home button to put it in the background, I see the watch face so I move on with my day, then I look at the watch maybe an hour later and the timer is unexplainably in the foreground again. That sounds like erroneous behavior to me, because I don't know what purpose would it have.
And yeah, I can use my phone's timer instead... But the smartwatch is more handy and always with me, unlike my phone 🙂
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a month ago in
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a month ago in
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a month ago in
Galaxy Watch"The timer is not meant to *stay* hidden."
Why?
- If I want the timer to be visible all the time, then I open it and leave it in the foreground.
- If I do not want the timer to be visible all the time, then I press the Home button to hide it.
- If I want to hide the timer only for a moment, then I press the Home button, do what I want to do, then re-open the timer.
Is my thinking not reasonable here? Is the watch trying to be smarter than me at guessing what I actually want instead of paying attention to my operations? Because that's not smart, it's the opposite. It's dumb.
"You can't have AOD on and then complain about battery drain."
I'm sorry, but you seem to be not fully understanding the actual problem here. Allow me to repeat:
I launch the timer, I press the Home button to put it in the background, I see the watch face (the part with the current time) so I move on with my day, then I look at the watch maybe an hour later without even touching the watch in the meantime, and the timer is unexplainably in the foreground again.
How is AOD at fault here? Yes, having AOD disabled would also prevent this problem from occurring, but so would throwing a disobedient watch into the trash can. Neither of those are the right solution. The right solution is for the watch to realize that if I put the timer in the background, I want it to stay in the background unless I manually bring it back up again.