Cell Phone help

Is your battery life on your iPhone that bad?? How old is it?

A couple of things. If it's within your 1-year period, you need to go have them look at it. Even with a lot of use, you should at least get a full day's worth of battery life.

Another thing you can do is "close down" anything you're not using. I've found that I've inadvertently left Skype and Facebook running and that drains the battery. Also, shut off the WiFi so it's not constantly searching for it. You can also change the PUSH for your e-mail so that you have to manually do it.

If that doesn't help, make sure your updates are current, and then my try a hard reboot.

Really, you shouldn't have to worry about your battery not lasting that long.


I run mine down daily. Nothing wrong, just normal (for me) usage. However, when I was at WDW, I turned off PUSH, turned off WiFi, made sure to "lock" it when I wasn't using it, and kept background apps to a minimum.

I still had to charge my phone by 4pm.


I disagree about the battery life issue. Even with wifi/push turned off I can easily burn through a charge in less than a half day, especially if I'm taking pics and videos. Not to mention the fact that my two kids are constantly asking to use it for games and netflix. Hopefully at Disney they will have other things to keep their minds on :)

It's not a defective phone.

I suppose you can turn the brightness down low, but too low makes the phone unusable in daylight. Best way to go IMHO is a battery backup of some kind.

I use my camera constantly, and I'm sure that's one of my biggest battery drains. I just suck it up and put a battery pack case on my phone when I know I will be using it hard and heavy like that. For me, it's still more convenient than lugging around a separate camera. Really can't say enough good things about a Mophie Juice Pack.
 
I spent last week in the World w/ my Iphone 4 that is about 2 months old. Never had a problem w/ losing a charge mid-day. Used a few different lines apps between every ride, checked email/facebook in lines, son played angry birds etc. I did have wifi off but left the other settings at their defaults (screen brightness). It was low by the end of the day, but never managed to kill it before getting home at night.:yay:
 
I spent last week in the World w/ my Iphone 4 that is about 2 months old. Never had a problem w/ losing a charge mid-day. Used a few different lines apps between every ride, checked email/facebook in lines, son played angry birds etc. I did have wifi off but left the other settings at their defaults (screen brightness). It was low by the end of the day, but never managed to kill it before getting home at night.:yay:

That's really what I meant. With a lot of usage, you'll run it down by the end of the day, but I couldn't imagine it dying entirely. I guess I've never had quite that problem. I've had a 1st generation and a 4th generation and I use it *a lot* for talking, apps, texting, e-mail, skype, camera, games, etc. I can really run a battery down by the end of the day, but I've never run it down so far that it died. I wouldn't be very happy about that.
 
Read an article today on Yahoo news on how to save your iphone battery life, I put most of it below -

A good friend of mine had been complaining that her iPhone 3GS battery was holding less and less of a charge. When we got together at 5 p.m. one recent day, it was at 5 percent full - and it had been fully charged that morning. She had barely used it all day. The phone was apparently running itself dry simply by being turned on.

The single biggest battery consumer is the screen brightness. But it wasn't especially bright on this phone.

So I suggested that she take the phone to an Apple store to get the $60 battery replacement service. In fact, there was an Apple store only two blocks away, so I accompanied her - and found out, upon arrival, that there is no $60 battery replacement service! There's one for iPods, but apparently not for the iPhone.

There are plenty of do-it-yourself and third-party battery-replacement services that advertise online, but the Apple store Genius, named Nicole, said none of that would be necessary. She tested the battery and found that it was perfectly fine!

Instead, Nicole pointed out a few things that were contributing to my friend's rapid battery depletion. I took notes and thought I'd pass them along.

* Push e-mail. This, I believe, was the big one. My friend has seven e-mail accounts, and her phone was checking each of them every 15 minutes. If you turn off the "Push" feature, and set it to Manually instead (in Settings->Mail, Contacts, Calendars->Fetch New Data), then your iPhone checks for e-mail only when you actually open the e-mail app. Your battery goes a lot farther.

(If you have a corporate Exchange account, your calendar and address-book data will similarly be updated only when you open those apps.)

* GPS checks. In Settings ->General->Location Services, you'll see a list of all the apps on your phone that are using your phone's location feature to know where you are. (It's a combination of GPS, cell-tower triangulation and, on some phones, Wi-Fi hotspot triangulation.) All of that checking uses battery power, too. My friend had dozens of apps with Location Services turned on, many of which didn't really need to be on. She turned most of them off.

* Notifications. Similarly, in Settings -> Notifications, you see a list of apps that are allowed to display pop-up notifications (those blue text bubbles that look like text messages). To do that, they have to monitor what's going on with your phone - and that takes juice. Turn off the ones you don't really need.

* Background apps. Nicole the Genius discovered that my friend had a huge number of apps open - maybe 40 of them. She maintained that they were using battery power, too, in the background.

Now, I kept my mouth shut. But I'd been led to believe that background apps are generally frozen into suspended animation precisely so that they don't use battery power. In fact, Apple was criticized when it introduced "multitasking" in the latest iPhone software, precisely because apps don't actually keep operating in the background. Only a few sanctioned features keep running in the background (Internet radio playback and GPS tracking, for example).

Even so, Nicole quit all 40 of the apps that were still open. (To do that, 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.)

Did the Nicole treatment work? Very well indeed. The next day, my friend's battery, by the same time of day (5 p.m.), was still at 80 percent!

Most of this I knew, with the exception of the background apps. I had over 50 apps open in the background. I had assumed that when you turn the phone off, the background apps quit. Not the case. I cycled my phone off and on, and all the background apps were still there. :confused3 So I turned off all background apps manually.

Hoping this saves my battery a bit.
 

Not to mention the fact that my two kids are constantly asking to use it for games and netflix. Hopefully at Disney they will have other things to keep their minds on :)

This is your culprit right here -- playing games, watching video, and doing other similar things that tax your processor will run the battery down fast. Keep them occupied with other things (like, for example, all of the cool stuff at Disney ;)), and you should be fine.
 
One other thing I didn't see mentioned here....bluetooth is a big battery hog. You can disable that as well.
 
We bought a back up battery that will charge the phone at target before our spring break trip on clearace for $15.

Densie in MI
 
Read an article today on Yahoo news on how to save your iphone battery life, I put most of it below -



Most of this I knew, with the exception of the background apps. I had over 50 apps open in the background. I had assumed that when you turn the phone off, the background apps quit. Not the case. I cycled my phone off and on, and all the background apps were still there. :confused3 So I turned off all background apps manually.

Hoping this saves my battery a bit.

Thanks for posting this -

I just found out (DH showed me) how to know if you have those background apps running - when you turn your phone on - now double click that on button - and you get a row of the apps you have "running"

this helped when dd somehow got the angry bird app frozen and we couldnt quit it at all - dh double clicked the on button then held down the app till you got those " - " in red - touch and it closes that app (it doesnt delete the whole app just 'closes' it)


but of course I hadnt checked that out since - until this thread!
 
I disagree about the battery life issue. Even with wifi/push turned off I can easily burn through a charge in less than a half day, especially if I'm taking pics and videos. Not to mention the fact that my two kids are constantly asking to use it for games and netflix. Hopefully at Disney they will have other things to keep their minds on :)

It's not a defective phone.

I suppose you can turn the brightness down low, but too low makes the phone unusable in daylight. Best way to go IMHO is a battery backup of some kind.

You are right, it is not a defective phone. Games/video will eat your battery up and you will not be able to keep a charge all day using it that way, without charging it. I don't know if the extra power packs give you a full charge or partial, but I would suppose you need at least two of those or try to find an outlet.

I would just not use it for games/video and your battery will be just fine.
 


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