Skip to main content

How to set ICE(In Case of Emergency Call) in Android phone?

Let me show you How to set ICE(In Case of Emergency) call.If care about your near and dear one, Please do share this if you haven't set ICE in your mobile phone.

Step:1
You can see Emergency call option in your lock screen.To see ICE number, first you have to set any mobile number from your phone contact or you can create a new contact.Remember this number should be of a well know person or contact,who have a close connection with you.
 
Step:2
If you need to create new contact,please do so as below screen

Step:3
 Here you will see different groups.Tap on  ICE-emergency contacts and add contact
Step:4
You can either create a New contact or select an existing contact.

Step:5
For Demo i have created two contact, Emergency1 and Emergency2.Select two to four contact.
Step:6
 Now Tap on the picture as show in below picture to see ICE contact.

Step:7
 Select Contact and you will seethe phone starting to dial that number.
Please Share.!!

Popular posts from this blog

The possibility of quantum computing breaking encryption algorithms

The possibility of breaking encryption algorithms is a powerful motivating factor for many countries of the world. Thus, knowledge of the enemy's encryption systems could give a huge advantage in intelligence, while at the same time contributing to the conduct of new fundamental research in the field of physics, since modern experimental systems have at their disposal only less than 100 qubits.    To achieve the useful computing performance of a supercomputer, we probably need machines with hundreds of thousands of qubits. In order for the devices to function correctly, they must correct all minor random errors in the software. In a quantum computer, such errors arise due to imperfect elements of the circuit and the interaction of qubits with their environment. For these reasons, qubits can lose coherence in literally a split second. A quantum computer with 100 qubits can simultaneously represent 2100 solutions. For some tasks, this exponential parallelism can be used to create a h

How to install cloudflare wrap on linux

 command mode dumb......expert user edition   millen@TechGlyphs-Studio:~/Desktop$ wrap-cli wrap-cli: command not found millen@TechGlyphs-Studio:~/Desktop$ curl https://pkg.cloudflareclient.com/pubkey.gpg | sudo gpg --yes --dearmor --output /usr/share/keyrings/cloudflare-warp-archive-keyring.gpg Command 'curl' not found, but can be installed with: sudo snap install curl  # version 7.86.0, or sudo apt  install curl  # version 7.81.0-1ubuntu1.6 See 'snap info curl' for additional versions. [sudo] password for millen:  gpg: no valid OpenPGP data found. millen@TechGlyphs-Studio:~/Desktop$ sudo apt  install curl Reading package lists... Done Building dependency tree... Done Reading state information... Done The following packages were automatically installed and are no longer required:   chromium-codecs-ffmpeg-extra gstreamer1.0-vaapi libflashrom1 libftdi1-2   libgstreamer-plugins-bad1.0-0 Use 'sudo apt autoremove' to remove them. The following NEW packages will be in

Simple steps to protect your privacy.

  Step 1. Download DuckDuckGo on all your devices With just one download you'll get tracker blocking, private searching, increased encrypting, and privacy grading on all of your browsing. Our mobile app for iOS/Android (DuckDuckGo Privacy Browser) and browser extensions for Firefox, Chrome, and Safari (DuckDuckGo Privacy Essentials) has all of this in one seamless package. Privacy, simplified. Step 2. Update your software Your device operating systems get out-of-date over time, and old software can contain security bugs or settings that leak personal data. Set your devices (and the apps on them) them to update automatically. That way you'll always have the latest, safest versions. Step 3. Update your privacy settings Make sure your devices are using the best privacy settings. Here are step-by-step instructions for all the major device types. Especially make sure you adjust per-app location settings, so that your location history isn’t leaking where it shouldn’t. For extra bonus