I have a HTC Tilt 2 and the backlight in my screen does not work. When I power the device on the backlight would come on and the screen would be working perfectly but when it goes in hibernation mode or i press the power button for it to go in hibernation mode the backlight would turnoff on the screen and would never come back on. at times after a numerous amount of button pushing it would come on and sometimes if i continuously slide it up and down it would come on. I thought it would be a software problem so i installed the rhodium ram on it and the problem still occurs. What can i do to fix this and why is this happening?
I have a tablet wich runs only one app for light control in my house.
The tablet is fixed on the wall.
I want to turn the screen off after some seconds.
When i touch the screen it has to switch on.
Tried a screensaver but it doesnt really turns the screen black.
Still light coming off.
Is it possible to do ?
It runs Android 4.1.1
Who can help me? Tnx!
As the title says the phone's screen won't turn on after I ended a longer call, i have to press the power button to get the screen working.
Did it happen to you also?I have this phone for 2 months but it never happened in the beginning, this seems to be a recent issue.
Is it a hardware issue or a software bug?I've tested the proximity sensor and it works just fine as much i can tell, it switches the screen of and on, it never happened to wake the screen during a call and to activate random keys.
Another strange thing that i noticed during a call:If have the keypad up and i lay the phone horizontally the screen won't turn off if i hover my hand over the proximity sensor but if i put the phone vertically the screen goes off or if i hide the keypad the screen also goes instantly off.
Maybe I'm missing something but is lollipop ambient display useless?
When I get a notification the screen lights up in black and white as it should and pulses about 4 times over a few minutes then nothing. I can move it, place it in and out my pocket, but the screen won't relight without pressing the power button.
Am I doing something wrong or is this normal on our moto g's ? I thought it was meant to use the phones sensors to light the screen?
Yes its normal. Ambient Display needs a gyroscope to work properly, and the Moto G doesn't have one.
its normall
Looks like it's back to acdisplay then!
Am i the only one whose screen, when it's off, doesn't turn back on properly? It registers both the fingerprint and the power "button" with haptic feedback, and the screen flickers quickly, but doesn't stay on until trying it finally works randomly, or if i use the squeeze gesture to open the camera immediately after pressing the power button. Locked and stocked too.
What is os version are you running?
Does this happen indoors or out?
I used to have an issue where auto brightness would immediately adjust to 0. The screen itself was on but the backlight was essentially turned of.
Only noticed it outside and auto-brightness was on (didn't even think that might be related to the issue! good call. If it happens again, I'll turn that off and see if the issue persists). Running 8.0.0.0 w/ 1.30.617.2 in USA
I have similar experience with my unlocked U12+ and may be Smart screen affected somehow screen back light. I've tried different combinations of settings (automatic Brightness on/off), Smart screen on/off and I noticed lack off problem in dark room. Even though some very strange reactions off haptic buttons (volume down by itself) makes me think about some general functionality problems of this device.
Has anyone noticed whether pressure on a particular point on the display affects the backlight?
When I squeeze moderately strong with two fingers in the area of the padlock (that is seen in a locked screen), it's the same as pressing the power button.
I've been using HTC flags for a long time, but for the first time I've come across such a touch-sensitive device. Every touch wakes him up, even in my pocket, which uses a battery.
I am terrified that there is no separate adjustment of the power and response style of touch-sensitive locations (haptic buttons, squeeze sensor)