The problem is that the more you depend on your phone, the
faster you’re going to drain its battery. The bad news is that, efforts to make
improvements in battery efficiency has far been outpaced by processing power, screen size and brightness, as well as 3G and
4G radios, Wi-Fi and Bluetooth antennas, HD cameras, GPS and a variety of other
hardware, all of which require power.
To conserve battery life on your phone, turn off what you
don’t need, optimize what you do and perform a few tasks manually instead of
automating them. You can both increase the time between charges and add to your
battery’s usable life.
1. Dim your screen to significantly improve your battery’s
life. Your phone’s screen is the largest power draw on the device, and the
brighter it is, the more power it draws. Dim it as much as you feel comfortable
with. The phone’s automatic brightness setting, which dims the screen in
low-light conditions, isn’t as effective as reducing the brightness manually.
2. Set a short screen timeout interval to black out the
screen when you’re not using it. If the timeout is very short, you may have to
periodically touch the screen to keep it from timing out while you read
content. However, if you mostly use the phone for short tasks like checking
email or sending SMS messages -- battery-consuming tasks when you do them
frequently -- you'll see significant battery savings when you have a shorter
timeout interval.
3. Reduce the frequency of application updates and syncs.
For example, set your social-media applications to update manually instead of
automatically, so they aren’t constantly running in the background, or while
you’re not using your phone at all. Apple's iCloud also syncs frequently, and
you should turn it off when you don't need it.
4. Eliminate unnecessary widgets and animations. On many
phones, the bells and whistles on the home screen may use significant
resources, especially if they’re updating news or weather frequently, or using
animations where a static image would suffice.
5. Disable Bluetooth, Wi-Fi and GPS when you don’t use them.
Each receiver or transmitter on your phone uses juice even when it isn’t
connecting, and both Bluetooth and Wi-Fi periodically search for devices in the
background, using up even more battery charge. Some smartphones include a
widget that allows you to enable or disable these antennas when they’re not
needed. When you’re in an area without 3G or 4G service, consider disabling
them as well, to spare your phone the battery-hungry effort of searching for
service that isn't there.
6. Use the Battery Saver or Power Saver mode if your phone’s
operating system has one. These features help you to control the functions that
sap your battery’s power, including background apps, widgets, animations and
screen brightness. Third-party apps like JuiceDefender or Battery Saver for
Android may help you conserve even more power.
7. If your phone uses an Organic Light Emitting Diode
screen, use a dark-colored wallpaper as your phone's background. OLED pixels
light up individually, so keeping most pixels as dark as possible results in
power savings. Unfortunately, this method won't work with LCD screens, which
use a backlight that remains at a constant level.
We wish you Good luck as your make efforts to improve your battery life.
We wish you Good luck as your make efforts to improve your battery life.
ADMIN
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