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Friday, July 12, 2013

Save ur Android phone's battery(no application needed)

Save ur Android phone's battery(no application needed)



Android smartphones like LG, HTC, Samsung and Micromax are really powerful, but unfortunately, they don't have endless battery life. Android smartphones consumes more battery compare to other Mobile phone. Because Android Smartphones have thinner designs with less room for batteries, larger and brighter screens, faster dual-core processors, more software that runs in the background, and power-hungry GPS radios all share responsibility. Networks move from 2G to 3G then 4G networks. So try these tips to extend your handset's battery life.

How to see which apps & hardware are using max battery: - Click to Navigate button --> system setting --> Battery Use to see an organized breakdown of what's consuming your phone's battery. If you see an application you barely use or a feature you never use, uninstall the app or turn off the feature.

1. Set brightness to dim or adjust automatically: - Set brightness to dim it is best for your battery and you’re Eyes. If you don’t want to set on dim then use automatically brightness adjust apps. Android Market has lots of app for this.

 2. Turn off unnecessary hardware: - It is great that today's phones have LTE, GPS, Wi-Fi, GPRS and Bluetooth, but do you really need all four activated 24 hours? These app & hardware keeps drain on your battery in background. If your phone has a power control widget, you can use it to quickly turn on/off GPS, Wi-Fi, and Bluetooth.

3. Remove unnecessary home screen widgets and live wallpaper: - Just because home screen widgets and live wallpaper consuming Battery power in the background.

4. Keep the screen timeout short: - In your phone's display settings menu, you should find an option labeled 'Screen Timeout' or something similar. This setting controls how long your phone's screen stays on. Every second counts here, so set your timeout to the shortest available time. On most Android phones, the minimum is 15 seconds. If your screen timeout is currently set to 2 minutes, consider reducing that figure to 30 seconds or less.

5. Don't leave apps running in the background: - Todays Android smartphones have multitasking ability to run more than one app at a time. It also burns a lot of energy, because every app you run uses a share of your phone's processor cycles. By killing apps that you aren't actually using, you can drastically reduce your CPU's workload and cut down on its power consumption. So kill all apps which are running in background. I like an app called Advanced Task Killer, which has an auto-kill feature.

6. Do not use vibrate: - Unfortunately vibrating uses much more power than playing a ringtone does. In contrast, the vibration motor rotates a small weight to make your whole phone shake. That process takes a lot more power. If you don't want to be disturbed audibly, consider turning off all notifications and leave the phone in view so you can see when a new call is coming in.

7. Turn off non-essential notifications: - Almost every app now polls the internet in search of updates, news, messages, and other information. When it finds something, the app may chime, light up your screen and display a message, make your LED blink, or do all of the above. It is consuming your battery life.

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