home
Guest Signup/Login to unlock all features

Menu

Views: 959

Replies: 0

Share this post
facebook twitter wa-ico

avatar

HERO

Adedayo

How to find your lost phone with the Google Home

Oct 13 2017 at 12:06am

If you misplace your phone around the house, the Google Home can help you locate it.
Originally, even while a Google search could locate and ring a lost Android phone, Google Home didn't have the ability. Instead, Google created an IFTTT applet for this very purpose.

This week, in the most recent round of Google Home updates, Google enabled native compatibility with Find My Device. This means the Google Home can locate your Android phone and make it ring, even if it's on silent -- a particularly helpful little trick.

All you need to do to get the feature working is to make sure your device is:

Turned on with location enabled
Signed in to the same Google Account as your Google Home
Connected to Wi-Fi or mobile data
Visible on Google Play under the correct Google Account
Enabled in the Find My Device app
With all of these steps taken care of, you simply have to say, "OK, Google, find my phone" or, "OK, Google, ring my phone." The Home will then walk you through a list of devices it finds, asking which one you would like it to ring. First, it will find any registered devices (the ones listed in Find My Device under the same account). Using this route, your Android device will ring, and as soon as you wake the phone, the ringing will stop.

Find a lost iPhone with the Google HomeHome

While Find My Device is limited to Android devices, you can still use the Google Home to locate a lost iPhone -- it just won't be able to ring the phone if it's been silenced.

To set this up, you will need to add your phone number under your My Account privacy settings. Go to myaccount.google.com/privacy, then go to Phone > Add Recovery Phone. Enter your phone number and click Next, followed by Get Code. Enter the six-digit code and click Verify.

Now when you tell the Google Home to find your phone, it can call that number, not a just specific device.

If you have registered devices, the Google Home will ask you if you want to ring those first. If you keep saying "No," it will say, "Let's try something else." Then it will then move on to phone numbers associated with your Google Account. When you tell it to ring a number, it will place a standard VoIP (Voice Over Internet Protocol) call to your phone, regardless of what kind of phone it is.


img attachment

img attachment


Quick reply


+ files BBCode

Sponsored