Make Your Cell Phone Battery Last Longer
1-Turn the phone off. This will probably be the most effective and simple way of conserving your battery’s power. if you are in an area with no reception (such as a subway or remote area.
2-Stop searching for a signal. When you are in an area with poor or no signal, your phone will constantly look for a better connection, and will use up all your power doing so. This is easily understood if you have ever forgotten to turn off your phone on a flight. turn wifi and data off.
3-Do not follow the method of full charge and full discharge. Avoid letting your cell phone's battery run all the way down. Unlike nickel-based batteries (such as the NiCd or NiMH rechargeable AA batteries seen in most supermarkets), lithium-based batteries are designed to be charged early and often, and letting them get too low can damage the battery. With Lithium batteries, doing shallow discharges and frequent charging prolongs battery life.
4-Switch the vibrate function off on your phone, using just the ring tone.
5-Avoid using unnecessary features. If you know it will be a while before your phone’s next charge, don’t use the camera or connect to the Internet. Flash photography can drain your battery especially quickly. GPS, wifi ad bluetooth drain battery resources, turn it off if you are not using them.
6-Turn the brightness of the display to the lowest setting possible.
7- Use GSM rather than 3G - Using your phone in 3G / Dual Mode will drain the battery quicker than if you just use GSM mode - have a look at your phones spec and you'll see it will quote two different battery life times - normally 50% more for pure GSM use.
8- avoid using moving or animated pictures or videos for your background. Animated backgrounds will drain the battery faster.
9-Use a black background whenever possible. AMOLED screens use a lot less power displaying black instead of white.
10-If your phone is connected to your email, make sure it's not set to check your email every 15 minutes or half an hour. This means that every time it checks, you lose a little battery. Set it to where it doesn't check automatically, and you'll save a lot of battery.
11-When using a car charger, do not charge the battery when the inside temperature of your car is hot. Wait until the car has cooled before you plug in the phone.
12-Check to see if your phone has a "Battery Save" option. If so, you can turn this on to increase the life of your battery.
13-See what's sucking the most juice. Navigate to Settings > Battery to see an organized breakdown of what's consuming your phone's battery. Applications and features will display in a descending list of battery hogs. If you see an application you barely use or a feature you never use, you'll want to uninstall the app or turn off the feature.
14-Dump unnecessary home screen widgets and live wallpaper. Just because they're sitting on the home screen, seemingly inactive, doesn't mean they're not consuming power. This goes for widgets that poll status updates in the background.
1-Turn the phone off. This will probably be the most effective and simple way of conserving your battery’s power. if you are in an area with no reception (such as a subway or remote area.
2-Stop searching for a signal. When you are in an area with poor or no signal, your phone will constantly look for a better connection, and will use up all your power doing so. This is easily understood if you have ever forgotten to turn off your phone on a flight. turn wifi and data off.
3-Do not follow the method of full charge and full discharge. Avoid letting your cell phone's battery run all the way down. Unlike nickel-based batteries (such as the NiCd or NiMH rechargeable AA batteries seen in most supermarkets), lithium-based batteries are designed to be charged early and often, and letting them get too low can damage the battery. With Lithium batteries, doing shallow discharges and frequent charging prolongs battery life.
4-Switch the vibrate function off on your phone, using just the ring tone.
5-Avoid using unnecessary features. If you know it will be a while before your phone’s next charge, don’t use the camera or connect to the Internet. Flash photography can drain your battery especially quickly. GPS, wifi ad bluetooth drain battery resources, turn it off if you are not using them.
6-Turn the brightness of the display to the lowest setting possible.
7- Use GSM rather than 3G - Using your phone in 3G / Dual Mode will drain the battery quicker than if you just use GSM mode - have a look at your phones spec and you'll see it will quote two different battery life times - normally 50% more for pure GSM use.
8- avoid using moving or animated pictures or videos for your background. Animated backgrounds will drain the battery faster.
9-Use a black background whenever possible. AMOLED screens use a lot less power displaying black instead of white.
10-If your phone is connected to your email, make sure it's not set to check your email every 15 minutes or half an hour. This means that every time it checks, you lose a little battery. Set it to where it doesn't check automatically, and you'll save a lot of battery.
11-When using a car charger, do not charge the battery when the inside temperature of your car is hot. Wait until the car has cooled before you plug in the phone.
12-Check to see if your phone has a "Battery Save" option. If so, you can turn this on to increase the life of your battery.
13-See what's sucking the most juice. Navigate to Settings > Battery to see an organized breakdown of what's consuming your phone's battery. Applications and features will display in a descending list of battery hogs. If you see an application you barely use or a feature you never use, you'll want to uninstall the app or turn off the feature.
14-Dump unnecessary home screen widgets and live wallpaper. Just because they're sitting on the home screen, seemingly inactive, doesn't mean they're not consuming power. This goes for widgets that poll status updates in the background.