Agreed going forward this is a better plan and something which I am
moving towards but with my current inherited code base this is not a
possible so "don't do that" isn't really an option for the moment.

On Oct 29, 4:15 pm, "Mark Murphy" <[email protected]> wrote:
> > Because the service implements an interface to which I require access
> > to by casting the context to it's type.
>
> Then don't do that.
>
> One solid pattern for AlarmManager is to have alarms trigger a
> manifest-registered broadcast receiver, that in turn calls startService()
> on an IntentService that processes whatever work needs to be done
> periodically. This allows the work to be done on a background thread and
> shuts the IntentService down when there is no more work, minimizing memory
> impact.
>
> Conversely, I really do not recommend trying to use AlarmManager with a
> receiver registered in Java code, because that receiver hopefully is
> rarely around, because the service that hosts it hopefully is rarely
> around.
>
> --
> Mark Murphy (a Commons Guy)http://commonsware.com
> Android App Developer Books:http://commonsware.com/books.html
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