IPhone battery life: Difference between revisions

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If you have an iPhone, you'll want to know  '''how to make an iPhone battery hold its charge for longer'''
If you have an iPhone, you'll want to know  '''how to make an iPhone battery hold its charge for longer'''


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'''Result:''' the day after making the above changes, an iPhone 3GS battery was still at 80% by 5 p.m., compared with 5% the day before before.  
'''Result:''' the day after making the above changes, an iPhone 3GS battery was still at 80% by 5 p.m., compared with 5% the day before before.  


=Credits=
=See also=
Summarised from David Pogue's blog, with his permission.
*[[Laptop battery care]]


=External links=
=External links=
*[http://pogue.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/05/23/four-ways-to-make-your-battery-last-longer/ Four Ways to Make Your Battery Last Longer] - David Pogue's blog in the ''New York Times'', May 23, 2011.  
*[http://pogue.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/05/23/four-ways-to-make-your-battery-last-longer/ Four Ways to Make Your Battery Last Longer] David Pogue's blog in the ''New York Times'', 2011
*[https://www.apple.com/batteries/maximizing-performance/ Maximizing Battery Life and Lifespan] – Apple's advice, with a few more points
*[https://solutionowl.com/ultimate-guide-iphone-battery-drain/ The Ultimate Guide to Solving iPhone Battery Drain] – blog by Scotty Loveless, SolutionOwl, 2016
*[https://mashable.com/2017/02/05/iphone-battery-readings-investigation Why your iPhone battery meter sometimes goes haywire], article by Lance Ulanoff, Mashable, 2017


=Credits=
Summarised from David Pogue's blog, with his permission.




[[Category:How-to guides]]
[[Category:How-to guides]]

Latest revision as of 14:27, 15 December 2018

If you have an iPhone, you'll want to know how to make an iPhone battery hold its charge for longer

The biggest drain is screen brightness, so don't leave it brighter than you need.

David Pogue, New York Times tech columnist, passed on the following hints from an Apple store Genius.

1. "Push" email

Your phone may be checking your email accounts on a frequent schedule. Switch off this "Push" feature; set it to Manually instead (in Settings->Mail, Contacts, Calendars->Fetch New Data). After this, the phone will only check your email when you run the mail app.

2. GPS checks

Look at Settings ->General->Restrictions->Location. This shows which apps on your phone are working out your location using GPS and triangulation. If you don't need any of them to do that, turn them off.

3. Notifications

Next, try Settings -> Notifications to see which apps are allowed to display pop-up notifications. These use power to monitor what else is going on. If you don't need them either, turn them off too.

4. Background apps

Yes, we all thought background apps are meant to be suspended to save power, but this Genius turned them off anyway. Double-press the Home button to open the multitasking app switcher. Hold your finger down on any icon until they all start wiggling. Tap the little [x] close boxes to manually quit open apps.

Result: the day after making the above changes, an iPhone 3GS battery was still at 80% by 5 p.m., compared with 5% the day before before.

See also

External links

Credits

Summarised from David Pogue's blog, with his permission.