*Every single day *my phone chirps with a notification. I automatically reach for my phone, thinking I have a text.
Your Scanning Settings
Wi-FI and Bluetooth are on. Your device may scan for Wi-Fi networks and near by devices at any time. Even when Wi-Fi and Bluetooth is off.
Well so what? I never got this notification before upgrading to Android 10.
There’s no recommended action. Just this daily notification. What could I do anyhow? The message says turned off devices are still scanned.
I can disable the notification. But is there an important reason Google felt the need to disrupt my life with this daily notification?
AFAIK Wi-FI only auto connects to know networks that I’ve used before. For example, at my mom’s house. I’ve connected and entered the password. Now my phone connects anytime I visit. That’s very convenient and useful.
I have to be careful disabling Notifications. It may turn off all system notifications.
I shut off Chrome notifications because several web sites were bugging me. I couldn’t just shut off one web site. The setting shut off all notifications from Chrome.
You can turn off the scanning. I’ve never had that alert on mine, and checking, I see I have scanning on, but it’s never alerted me to anything, be it just letting me know it’s happening or that it found something.
Go to your settings and turn off “nearby device scanning”, see if that stops it. Or, just disable the notification. I have a feeling that the notification was just meant as a one time thing to let you know that it can, and is, doing this, but if you dismiss it, it’ll pop back up later.
Shutting nearby device scanning notifications won’t shut all notifications off. All the notifications from Chrome got shut off at the same time because you shut off notifications from Chrome, you told that specific app to stop nagging you, which it did.
Go to settings.
Notifications and alerts or Sounds.
Turn the volume off. It’s a slider. Slide it all the way to the left. It will notify you but you won’t hear it.
Mute Is my favorite function on any device.
When you say that you searched setup for scanning, do you mean that you looked through it or used the search bar at the top.
If you looked through all the settings, try using the search bar at the top. If that’s what you did, try other keywords, like ‘scan’ (as opposed to scanning) or ‘nearby’.
That’s probably the best idea. You may not want to be looking for the scan setting again someday when you’re trying to connect/pair your phone to something.