randomtoast
4 days ago
The font size is too small for emergencies on mobile devices. You need to consider that users might be in a panic, may not have both hands free to zoom in, and their vision could be impaired by smoke or other factors.
ericbarrett
4 days ago
It is astonishing how one's motor skills degrade when the adrenaline is flowing. I once tried to dial 911 on an iPhone in such circumstances. My hands were shaking so badly I kept dialing 922, 811, 914, and so on. Terrible in the moment but a very good lesson for preparedness. I really appreciate the "dial Emergency" methods on modern phone software that just need a button held down.
smallerize
3 days ago
You might find it easier to dial 112, which is also universal and works outside of the USA.
ericbarrett
3 days ago
It's a much saner number, though probably easier to pocket dial as well. I'm not sure how far back it was chosen, but 112 would also dial a lot faster than 911 or 999 on a rotary phone.
ornornor
3 days ago
I think it came about around 2000.
8cvor6j844qw_d6
4 days ago
My only complaint with hold-to-dial emergency dialing is phones with damaged or glitchy buttons (ghost presses) that trigger it accidentally. There's probably a setting to disable it, though I think its manufacturer-dependent.
ornornor
3 days ago
That’s one of my recurring “disturbing dreams”: I get iban emergency and can’t dial the right numbers.
drob518
4 days ago
Imagine trying to navigate Hacker News in an emergency. LOL!
Imustaskforhelp
3 days ago
I can actually imagine this when AWS goes down and you have to go check if AWS is down again. (Although it's not a type of medical emergency but still) xD
Though to be fair, If your prod depends on AWS and it goes down, you might be going through tons of adrenaline too as well.
tinuviel
4 days ago
Thank you. This has been patched.