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battery

njtexas

Newbie
I just got the incredible 2 the other day--verizon. In general for android devices, what is the best way to get the most use out of the battery. i.e. What can I do on a daily basis to make sure my battery lasts longer--do I use that kill apps feature? Do I make sure to get out of the apps completely? etc...

Thanks
 
First off, do not use a task killer to try and extend battery life. You will actually consume more juice using a task killer. This is a pretty good article to explain why.

First thing you'll need to do is Cycle the battery once. Modern Li ion batteries do not have a memory, but you do have to teach android what a full charge is, so it can report power properly. Let your battery run down until the phone shuts off. Then using the AC adapter, let the phone continuously charge until full. Then unplug the phone, and shut it off if it's on. Plug it back in. If plugging the phone it turns it on then while it's plugged in, turn it off and let it charge for at least another hour, even if the phone says fully charged. Reboot the phone.

Be advised that you only need to do this once as repeated deep discharge cycles can harm the battery.

For general power saving, turn off WiFi, Bluetooth and GPS antennas when you aren't using them and set the screen brightness to low or auto. Also, don't sync data frequently. gmail is push, so that won't matter, but any widgets or mail accounts that sync data should do it only once an hour or less.
 
Take a look at green power, it does a lot of what the previous post mentioned but it does it automatically once it is set up. I've read some good and some bad reviews on this app, but I've been using it for a week or so and it has added at least 30 percent to my battery life.
 
First off, do not use a task killer to try and extend battery life. You will actually consume more juice using a task killer. This is a pretty good article to explain why.

First thing you'll need to do is Cycle the battery once. Modern Li ion batteries do not have a memory, but you do have to teach android what a full charge is, so it can report power properly. Let your battery run down until the phone shuts off. Then using the AC adapter, let the phone continuously charge until full. Then unplug the phone, and shut it off if it's on. Plug it back in. If plugging the phone it turns it on then while it's plugged in, turn it off and let it charge for at least another hour, even if the phone says fully charged. Reboot the phone.

Be advised that you only need to do this once as repeated deep discharge cycles can harm the battery.

For general power saving, turn off WiFi, Bluetooth and GPS antennas when you aren't using them and set the screen brightness to low or auto. Also, don't sync data frequently. gmail is push, so that won't matter, but any widgets or mail accounts that sync data should do it only once an hour or less.

Great advice...however do not use auto brightness as it makes the screen consume more battery. I have tried this on various phones. Chances are auto brightness is on since its the default and he only had the phone a few days... Anyway just turn the brightness down. You will only run into issues outdoors in the sunlight.
 
Also if you hit menu>settings>about phone>battery use it will tell you whats eating the most battery. That is a good place to start.
 
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