Lines Matching full:sensor
20 <p>From the perspective of Android applications, every Android sensor is an
25 underlying physical sensor </li>
28 <li> This is also true for wake-up and non-wake-up versions of the same sensor </li>
31 another. That is, any action on one Android sensor must not impact the behavior
35 <li> activating a sensor </li>
36 <li> deactivating a sensor </li>
37 <li> changing the sampling frequency of a sensor </li>
38 <li> changing the maximum reporting latency of a sensor </li>
42 <li> another activated sensor to stop working </li>
43 <li> another activated sensor to change sampling rate </li>
44 <li> another activated sensor to decrease the quality of its measurements </li>
45 <li> another non-activated sensor to start delivering events </li>
48 and parameter changes) on another sensor from succeeding. For instance,
51 <p>As another important example, a wake-up sensor activated at 5Hz must generate events