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Coconut Battery

Iphone | Ipad | Mac | Windows - Battery Life

Why I need to have a Long Battery Life on my Macbook Pro

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Saving your battery life has become a war and the battlefield is behind the scenes apps running silently on your device. If you try and get rid of the things that are draining the battery the most, and trim down other things that you need to use, but maybe can find a middle ground of perfect battery amount. There’s a setting built into Iphone that most casual users probably don’t even know about, and it can tell you exactly what is killing your battery. Coconut Battery

Wi-Fi can really speed up accessing data on your phone, but it can also be a big drain on the battery if you don’t need it enabled, especially when you are out and about… The phone will try and scan for a wireless network even though you may not want it to.

If you aren’t using a wireless headset, there’s no reason to have Bluetooth running all the time, and you should probably cut it off to save the battery life. If you never use it at all, head into Settings –> Wireless & networks–> Bluetooth.

Newer Iphones includes a built-in app that can easily toggle these settings on or off. You’ll notice in installing this that GPS is enabled but when you are not using Wi-Fi or Bluetooth at the moment—the icon all the way on the right lets you easily toggle the screen brightness settings.

The built-in Email application (not the Gmail one, which uses Push technology) can suck the battery badly, because it syncs on a too-regular basis, especially when you have lots of accounts—each one of them is set to sync every 15 minutes. You’d be better off setting it up to sync manually, but if you want it to sync automatically, you should set it to sync less frequently.

Open up the Email application, head to your account, and choose Account settings –> Email check frequency from the menu. Change this to something more like an hour… or never. You can always hit refresh manually when you want to read your email.

The same thing holds true for other accounts, like Twitter clients, which are even less important to update all the time. For Seesmic, you can head into Settings –> Background Updates from the main screen. For the official Twitter app, the settings are similar.

One of the biggest battery sucking features on my droid is the GPS… When I have navigation going, the battery dies far too fast, so I end up having to keep it plugged in the whole time I am driving. This makes sense… but what you might not know is that a lot of other applications use the GPS as well.

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