![]() ![]() Tap on "Sound" and abra-cadabra! My music folders magically appeared and I was able to navigate to a sound byte/ringtone/notification sound that I could use for Incoming Calls. ![]() Scroll down and tap on "Incoming Call"/Advanced. Once you tap (select) "Notifications", you'll see various actions that you can select a notification sound for. Then, in there where you see, "Permissions", "Storage and cache", "Advanced", etc, you'll also see "Notifications". So if left like that, the app still wouldn't ring - until, I went into the Android phone settings and selected Google Voice (now referred to as just "Voice") from the list of Applications. Neither is there even a Google default ringtone mentioned. ![]() There seems to be no place within the app to assign a ringtone. Never-the-less, I toggled the Android phone to ON and kept the call setting to "prefer wifi & mobile data", contrary to the article you referenced.Īnd, this is where Google lets us down. We're merely wanting to answer the call from within the app. Google's terminology here is a bit confusing because we are not actually "forwarding" the call. In GV settings under Call Forwarding, I toggled the Android phone to ON. A free VOIP app really shouldn't try to confuse the user with the mention of "carriers" and nor should it cause a user to incur charges from their carrier - assuming they have one.īut in the process of all this, I have discovered a workaround. But using the carrier-only option is counter-productive, if not confusing to someone who either doesn't have a carrier in the first place or who just wants to use the app over wifi. ![]()
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