Find " Location ". Slide two fingers downwards starting from the top of the screen.
Press the settings icon. Press Biometrics and security.
Press Location. Turn GPS on or off. Press the indicator to turn the function on or off.
Select positioning method. Press Google Location Accuracy. If you press the indicator next to "Improve Location Accuracy" to turn on the function, your phone can find your exact position using the GPS satellites, the mobile network and nearby Wi-Fi networks. Satellite-based GPS requires a clear view of the sky.
If you press the indicator next to "Improve Location Accuracy" to turn off the function, your phone can find your exact position using the GPS satellites but it may take longer as there is no access to supplementary information from the mobile network or nearby Wi-Fi networks.
Let's work together to keep the conversation civil. Open in app. Notification Center. It has been reported several times that Samsung is working on a toned-down version of its flagship phablet smartphone — Galaxy Note 10 — allegedly called the Galaxy Note 10 Lite. Multiple leaks and tips have suggested specs of the upcoming smartphone from the South Korean tech giant. Now, a new report by Sammobile has suggested that the S-Pen that comes along with the upcoming handset will offer Bluetooth 5.
What this means is that using this location tracking feature, users will be able to track the location of the S-Pen with the Galaxy Note 10 Lite. If this happens to be true, the Galaxy Note 10 Lite will be the first Samsung smartphone to feature Bluetooth 5. The size translates into fantastic battery life that will easily get you through a full day. Samsung built Bluetooth into its mini stylus with the launch of the Note 9 so it doubled as a remote, but it never built out functionality beyond rudimentary camera controls and music playback.
On the Note 10, the stylus can act as a sort of magic wand, so Instead of simply clicking to advance a track, you can wave your hand to change the camera mode or raise the volume from a distance.
Does it work? For the most part, yes, though some of the gestures are tricky.
Is it useful? Not really. Far more useful is the optical character recognition built into Samsung Notes. Even after a live demo, I was skeptical, but the OCR engine was remarkably accurate at turning my admittedly terrible handwriting into the right words. The bundled Measure app works as well, but so do the ones on the Pixel and iPhone, without a 3D camera. You can usually find him with his nose buried in a screen.