I installed Battery ETA and it says my battery only lasts around 11h 30m. Is that app accurate?
I got my phone yesterday and I installed Battery ETA too and it tells me my battery ETA is 11:23:30.
Is this normal?
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I installed Battery ETA and it says my battery only lasts around 11h 30m. Is that app accurate?
Obligatory: "Hi, first post here".
I just joined this forum after reading posts here since buying my first Android phone a few weeks ago. I'm coming up to speed on what's causing my Google Nexus S to have poor battery life - meaning it would go critical & shutdown in the evening after light usage if I didn't plug it in to my PC's usb port at work to trickle-charge it a bit in the afternoon.
Like @jgallagh, I was also seeing the AndroidOS as the top user of battery. I had already tried to roll back sync times on email, facebook, twitter, news+weather widget etc to bare minimums (every 4 or 6 hours) and still wasn't seeing an improved battery life. I just didn't understand how it could be that bad.
Reading lots of forums led me to three other "smoking guns" with workarounds that I *think* are effective, although it's only my 2nd day since implementing them.
I read that there's an issue with suspend mode or the /init process chewing up CPU, and that turning on USB Debugging can help:
Issue 11126 - android - "suspend" process runs continually in background at ~40% CPU on HTC EVO 4G - Project Hosting on Google Code
Issue 13130 - android - The process "/ INIT" uses between 70% to 98% CPU - HTC Legend Froyo - Project Hosting on Google Code
Someone else had a theory that establishing any alarms in the built-in clock app can trigger the runaway /init issue:
Android 2.2 (FRF85B) /init process always eating 100% CPU - Android Help
Many folks have pointed out that Picasaweb album-sync-to-phone-gallery is a major battery hog. I know I have well over 1,000 photos online & was worried that my battery was draining just trying to make sure all those albums in my phone's Gallery were in sync with Picasaweb. More info:
Battery life observations.. - Page 2 - Nexus One/Nexus S Forum - Google Phone Forum
I'm still not sure which (if any) of these problems was the major contributor to my battery problem, but I went ahead and...
(1) Enabled USB Debugging
(2) Deleted all my alarms from the built-in clock (even though they were previously all inactive)
(3) Stopped syncing my Picasaweb albums by disabling it in my gmail account settings
I started out 7.5 hours ago at 96% and I'm at 70% now. This is much better than a few days ago when it seems like I'd be plugging the phone in at 50% or less around this time. I don't know the battery percentage where auto-shutdown happens, but it *seems* like I'm on track to do about 24 hours or more before running to 0%. I've had a text message or two, checked email five or six times, surfed nytimes.com a bit, peeked into Facebook twice, spent a few minutes looking at the map. Wifi off, 3G on, GPS off, Bluetooth off, I even have sync OFF now also.
Battery use is:
Display 39%
Cell standby 17%
Android OS 11%
Voice calls 10%
Android system 8%
Phone idle 7%
Facebook 4%
Maps 3%
OSMonitor 2% (a great app that details running processes, cpu load, memory load etc, which I had on for only about 5-10 minutes today)
One more minor point here: I never opened up the OEM Nexus S charger that came with my phone. Instead I've been using my old Blackberry micro-usb-ported AC charger and the aforementioned USB trickle charge from my desktop PC. Airplane mode every night while the AC charger was working. Just yesterday I opened the OEM charge and, boy, it seems to pump out the charge much faster.
Obviously this isn't very scientific - I'm changing too many variables to know what's helping the most here. And I've been so paranoid about battery drain rate that I honestly haven't been letting it get much below 50% recently before charging. Today & through the weekend I'll be trying to let my Nexus S go all the way to auto-shutdown before charging so I can quantify my results with these new settings. I'll reply to this thread when I have more data.
Just download Juice defender and you'll be set, my Nexus S last for 2 days with pretty heavy Drag Racing play.