Here we conclude five tips for saving your
iPhone and Android battery life and tell you why they work. You may have
already heard some of them, but some are new.
Tip
1: Turn off the feature you aren’t using
This might be obvious to some, but this is
one of the biggest causes of fast battery drain. Turn off the radio features in
your phone you aren't using; even when they are idle, they suck power. That
means switching off the WiFi, GPS and Bluetooth when you don't need them.
Tip
2: Turn down the screen brightness.
The screen is the biggest power sucker on
your phone. Keep the brightness low whenever you can and set the auto-lock so
it turns the screen off when you aren't using it. The iPhone and Android phones
also have auto-brightness settings, but you are still best keeping the screen
in the 30 percent to 50 percent range if you can.
Tip
3: Kill the apps you aren't using.
Close apps you aren't using, or at least
some of them. iOS and Android phones do a decent job of not allowing all open
apps to suck your battery, but keeping more than 10 open is never a good idea.
On an Android phone also kill the widgets you don't use; even if they look
pretty, they are constantly updating and draining your battery.
And for those who don't know, on the
iPhone, you can close apps by double-tapping the Home button to bring up the
open apps. Then swipe up to remove the ones you don't need. Hit the Home button
when you are done. On Android phones, you can go to the "Manage
applications" area in settings or you can select the open apps menu and
swipe to close the app.
Tip
4: Turn off or limit notifications.
Notifications are very useful, but they can
also tax your battery. Be smart about which app notifications are enabled. Do
you need notifications from your recipe app or Yelp? Also make sure those apps
that are always busy -- like Twitter or Facebook -- aren't always refreshing
with new updates and notifying you of them. With email, make sure you don't
have notifications enabled for every new message.
Tip
5: Buy a mobile charger or battery-equipped case.
The aforementioned software adjustments
will help, but they will only go so far, at least after a day of heavy use. If
that extra juice doesn't go far enough, take the plunge: buy a mobile battery charger case to have on hand.
There are a number of mobile chargers with Micro USB or Apple charging connectors, which makes the phone pretty chunky but
also doubles your battery life.
Hi
ReplyDeleteTks very much for post:
I like it and hope that you continue posting.
Let me show other source that may be good for community.
Source: Surfing internet while talking iphone and shelf wallpapers iphone
Best rgs
David