You can know how to use it even without reading the instructions, which is the charm and advantage of iPhone. However, there are also situations in which the known intention cannot be understood correctly. In this session, we will easily explain "the reason for iPhone that we haven't heard yet." This time, we will answer, "Why did Snooz interval 9 minutes after the second time?" the question.
Suppose you set up an alarm on iPhone and start sounding at the specified time. If you unlock the screen at this time (drag the slider to the right), the alarm will be lifted and the sound will not sound, but click the "nap" button in the dialog box displayed, the first time is 10 minutes later, the second time is 9 minutes later, the alarm goes off again. Click the snooping button again in 9 minutes, again. And, it helps to prevent two sleeps and three sleeps.
The question is "Why 9 minutes", which has to do with the fact that the time displayed on the iPhone lock screen is a numeric symbol. No, I didn't get a formal comment from Apple, so "it might be relevant".
That's "the effect of the next digit getting smaller". For example, when the alarm is set at 6:00, the first Snooz 6:10, the second 6:19, the third 6:28, the fourth 6:37. Before 7:31 the tenth time, each time, the next digit changes.
But if Snoop's interval is 10 minutes, then the next digit is the same every time. Even if it is five minutes, the same number will appear even several times. Whether the interval is 2 minutes or 3 minutes is the same, in a certain period of time there is no change at the end of the same. If there is an interval of 9 minutes, an hour is 60 minutes, so each time Snoop must have the next digit change. Because it is a digital marker, displaying different numbers will reduce misreading / misunderstanding.
The Snoop interval of 9 minutes after this second time is fixed and cannot be changed. At first glance, it may seem stubborn, but it may be Apple's compassion, hoping to reduce the harm to users who "sleep twice".
The "napping function" of the alarm clock inadvertently used at ordinary times. In this case, Apple's concern is obvious. |