How To Maximize The Battery Life Of Your Android Phone

How To Maximize The Battery Life Of Your Android Phone


f-batterylife

The Android phone: it can do everything… except hold a charge. It’s a common rant: all the fancier phones seem to never hold enough juice to last more than a couple of days at a time. Some phones might even die midday despite just sitting there on your desk the whole time.

While this is definitely a big issue for a lot of Android users, you don’t need to get an extra battery just yet. A lot of Android experts have made it their goal to find the best way to conserve their phone’s battery. Check out a few tips below, these might just solve your battery woes.

1. Tweak your display settings.

Try lowering the brightness of your phone when indoors. More often than not, the light inside will be bright enough to see your phone’s screen clearly even with the backlight turned way down. Adjust it to a comfortable level though since you still want your phone to be useable. Turn off automatic brightness as well.

Hand-in-hand with lowering the brightness of your phone, you can also reduce the time until the screen turns off when not in use. Unless you plan to use your phone very often (for checking incoming mails for instance), try to put this at the lowest setting possible.

Another thing that helps is to use a dark, static wallpaper. That’s part of the reason many Android menus have a black background: it consumes the least amount of power and resources. Stay away from live wallpapers and choose a wallpaper that’s mostly black or just use a black background altogether.

2. Turn off wireless services you don’t need.

Your Android phone has lots of wireless radios, with some you probably don’t even use: Bluetooth, WiFi, GPS and more. Turning off some of these when you don’t need them will definitely help extend your battery life. For instance, you can turn off WiFi when you’re on the road or shutdown 3G if your office cubicle doesn’t have good reception. You can quickly toggle these on and off by using Android’s built-in power widget, your phone’s custom widgets or one from the Market like Extended Controls.

If want a quick and dirty way of shutting off everything in one go, put your phone in Airplane or Flight mode. You can quickly toggle this with a long press of the power button, or with one of the widgets I mentioned. It’s not for everyone but it’s helped me save some juice at times I don’t really need my phone’s wireless capabilities, like when I’m in a meeting or while I’m asleep.

3. Tone down data usage

If you don’t have a data plan and use your phone as more for calls and texts, then switching to GSM or 2G will save you some battery life versus the power-hungry 3G mode. Go to Settings > Wireless & networks > Mobile Networks > Network Mode and choose GSM only. Even if you do have a data plan, GSM is still a battery-saving alternative if you mainly use it to get your emails. Related tip: If and when you do need to surf the web, try to use WiFi whenever possible instead of 3G as well.

You can also disable autosync. Many social apps like Facebook and Twitter let themselves into your autosync preferences without telling you what they’re up to. Rein them in by going to Settings > Accounts and Sync, then tap the misbehaving app. Uncheck the boxes so that it doesn’t sync. Don’t worry, you can still sync those account manually if you need to.

You might also want to check your other social apps like Tweetdeck. They often have their own sync schedule in their settings which aren’t visible in the Android Settings.

Another way to save some power is to make your built-in mail app check less frequently. By default, it checks for new messages every 15 minutes which can be quite a strain on your battery. Make it check every hour instead or even better, let it update manually. If your email client is your lifeline, then set it to “push” instead so you still get instantaneous email access. Surprisingly, this always-on setting consumes less power as well. Not all Android email clients support push though but if you’re looking for one, use K-9 Mail or if you’re on Gmail, just use that app instead (it’s push email so you’re safe).

4. Uninstall pesky apps.

Some apps just don’t know when to quit, making them almost malware-like in their persistence to stay running. Remove them by going to Settings > Applications > Manage Applications. Just tap on the rogue apps and hit Uninstall to be rid of them. For particularly clingy apps, you might need to go to Settings > Location and Security (or Security for some phones) > Select Device administrators, and uncheck the app there to be able to uninstall them.

5. Temper your widget usage, especially those that use data.

Widgets are one of the main draws of Android, showing you the information you need right on your home screen. On the other hand, they are also notorious for draining power most especially those that connect to the internet. If the battery drain outweighs the convenience these widgets provide, just remove them from your home screen. You can check the info using the main app anyway.

6. Cool down your phone.

Keeping your phone in a warm place reduces its battery capacity over time. Avoid placing your phone in warm places like near a sunny window, on your car’s dashboard or on top of your computer monitor. Don’t hide your phone in your pants pocket all the time as well since us mammals are heat source,s too.

Also often times when charging or tinkering with it on your desk, you phone might get a bit toasty. Utilize a dock or stand to make it both easier to use and to let it cool down faster, instead of putting it flat on the table. I use an inexpensive but classy aluminum business card holder for my phone (like the one you see above), something you can easily get at any office supplies store.

7. Don’t use task killers.

Some outdated articles out there recommend you use task killers to save battery charge. My tip: don’t use them. You might be killing apps willy nilly but often what you really want is to remove runaway, CPU-hungry apps instead of those that are just sitting in your RAM. Killing those apps actually makes your phone consume even more power because those apps usually start themselves up again right after and drain power, instead of sitting happily in RAM ready to be used.

If you must use a task killer, get something that shows you CPU-usage instead of RAM (sadly, the one built into your phone doesn’t do this). Something like Watchdog Task Manager (Lite)will do the trick, which alerts you when an app goes above a certain amount of CPU cycles so you can kill it if needed.

8. Automate your power conservation.

If you’re the tinkering type, there are a lot of apps available that you can use to automatically change the settings we’ve mentioned above. Some of the go to apps are Juice Defender(easiest one to use) and Tasker (most customizable). Other apps that can help are Power Schedule (shuts off stuff at based on the time of day) and Llama (shuts off stuff based on where you are).

Conclusion

Until such time that Android phone manufacturers create a phone that lasts a week with heavy usage, you just have to be more mindful of the way your phone uses your battery. I’m not saying you use your Android phone less; on the contrary, you need your phone to sip less power when it’s not in use. That way, you have enough juice when you do need to use it. Your best bet is to automate the settings above and to remove the fancy stuff that you don’t really need, like live wallpapers and

Run iPhone Clone Run Android OS

Run iPhone Clone Run Android OS

iPhone clones are never going to be as good as the original… and after playing around with at least 15 or so in the past I can see why; clunky hardware.. crap GUI (despite the ripped off iPhone icon set) and even worse.. Windows Mobile at the core. That all changes with the Aphone A6, which by way of the Android OS drastically bridges the gap between the iPhone and its iFauxne cousins. Read on to see how good this phone really is and a video of us putting it through its paces.

To wet your appetite here are the Aphone A6 specs (according to the manufacturer):

Multi-touch Capacitance Panel
3.5inch TFT LCD Screen(260000 color)High Definition
GSM EDGE/WiFi Intelligent Cellphone
Google Android 1.5 OS
Dual-Core CPU(Fast at 300Mhz) by Infomax Technology Co
260MB FLASH、130MB RAM
Support(GMAP、Opera Mini、FTP、PC-class Web Browser)
Network Frame/Network Whiteboard/Weather
Support Net-communicate (Skype/QQ/MSN)
E-mail、 Office
Internal More Than20 Games and may download freely
G-safe TM
2 Million-pixel Camera
Support Bluetooth2.0 ,Mini-USB
Support TF Slot(2G-16G)

According to our sources (and until we rip apart this phone ourselves) this is purportedly the duel-core ARM processor from InfoMax at the heart of the device. Its notable also as we’ve only seen shanzhai phones from Marvell and now Infomax running Android… no sign of the ever popular shanzhai platform from MediaTek.

infomax

Here’s the video for you to get a first hand look at the device before we through put our opinions out there.



Device Build quality
Size is slightly larger than iPhone 3G or 3Gs, some bluish and highly visible discoloration on the back panel near some interesting looking speaker holes. The speakers sound loud and tinny. Typical of other iFauxnes we’ve tried.

Volume rocker switch is in the same place as on the iPhone, works fine but there is no mute switch. Another rocker switch on the opposite side side guides you back and forth through applications on the device.

You will note the Blackberry Pearl-like trackball, it feels good, responds well, seems totally pointless due to the high responsiveness of the touch screen, but might comfort some trackball loving users for better one handed navigation through apps.

In a strange move along the bottom of the phone they’ve gone to a micro-USB headphone jack and USB connection to the PC. The micro-USB cover strip is a bit crap, I could see this falling off at some point. They also tried to copy the USB charging plug of the original iPhone but they’ve kind of cheaped out here and it actually doesn’t function out of the box for us. We had to buy a special universal charger and shove the batteries into that device to get any power for our Aphone A6.

Speaking of batteries, the device’s back plate removes comfortably and easily. The Aphone A6 comes with 2 batteries… removable… decent enough battery life to count this possibly as a hardware advantage over the original iPhone which is NOT known for its own great battery life. The phone sucked about 25% of the battery life idling on standby over 24 hours and while we didn’t measure the juice used in the real world (yet) it SEEMS to be about normal compared with the real iPhone usage when playing around with apps and receiving calls.

Under the batteries the SD Card and SIM card slots are easy enough to access but the little metal clips that help position them aren’t too stable. If you’re not changing these items often it shouldn’t be a big deal though.

Where they didn’t cheap out and is very much appreciated is the touch screen. Its incredibly good. Its also where 99% of iFauxne clones perform poorly. So it was a pleasure to be swiping and pushing icons ONCE instead of four times to open and close programs and to move between screens. Its not a perfectly clear screen and some discoloration in the bottom left corner was revealed when in camera mode but it isn’t noticeable at other times.

Phone Calls
Phone call clarity was exceptionally good if a bit tinny. My original iPhone is not as clear and has a more muted sound. Very impressive.

SMS
SMS is fast and in terms of looks its one of the Apple iPhone GUI items that they’ve faithfully copied. The bubble-like conversation threads are as useful and graphically pleasing as the original.

OS Info
Android 1.5 and according to the device itself: Android Version number 05020004¬_76C15

IMEI
0000000000000 (er… no surprise here)

Applications
Weather forecast app looks very similar thanks to a redo (copy of Apple/Yahoo original) of the Google basic UI and functions pretty much the same.

The phone call dial pad is skinned to look like the UI from the original iPhone and the rest of the apps pretty much perform and look like they would on any other Google Android based phone.. Which is pretty good. If you know Android you know this phone.

Wi Fi was tested informally again but worked well browsing reasonably quickly, again comparable in terms of seed to the iPhone 3G (don’t know about the 3GS though).

Media Playback, Web Surfing
Our in-house device is on the road as we publish today but we’ll try and put it through more testing when we get it back later next week. I surfed around a little on the device using the Wifi connection and it was pretty much the same experience I’ve had on other Android based phones. Good but not quite as good as the Apple’s iPhone browser experience.

Conclusions & Pricing
Where other iPhone clones fall down this device stands up to the challenge. Its got a great, responsive screen and a good OS in Android. The copy of the Apple UI in the few areas where it’s used is good and the original Android UI is more than fine in most other cases. It's not as good as the original iPhone of course but its an impressive piece of work with only a few minor pieces of hardware that are poor quality, notably the USB port cover and the charger. Until we've tested it over time it's hard to say but the quality of the short experience we've had using with it as a phone has been good. Pricing is listed at uncontracted at 202 USD but its apparently not yet available in China for the domestic market.

Possible Advantages over the real iPhone
-If you’re an Android OS/app fan … then the software
-Removable battery (comes with 2)
-If you are a trackball fan, improved one handed phone navigation
-Removable/expandable memory (SD Card slot) could give you more memory than Apple's 32GB allotment
-If not into iTunes there are other ways to add content to your device by USB or the expandable memory (as an iPhone user I’m not an iTunes fan myself)
-For Chinese customers it’s got WiFi which the iPhone in China doesn’t have… that’s a huge plus

More Pics
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Disclaimer:*Shanzai.com is a news and reviews website, we do not promote specifically the purchase or sale of the products and services mentioned in our content.

Source LINK



The review is about iPhone Clone that runs Android OS not the fake one but the Real Android OS 1.5 and using iPhone themes / GUI on Android OS. I know someday someone gonna make it like that way.

Now you can have both, Google Android OS is free (open source project) and GOOD LOOKING OS and you have iPhone interface with all the function WiFi, Camera, Smooth Multitouch, Memory Slot, GSM, 3G, other network and the important is it more cheaper than iPhone.

Run Android 2.1 For Nokia S60v5 5233,5800,5230












Nexus One Android 2.1 Ui

(Used it on Nokia 5230)
Good:
- NEW! Tap on the Top icon messenger black icon and it will go to Notifications Bar home screen.
- Icon 72x72 for Thumb size (without using stylus pen to operate).
(In this video is difficult to hold camera while playing the phone)
- Google search Widget actually going to Opera Mobile 10 beta.
- 5 Different home screen (1800x460 wallpaper).
- Nexus One Launcher Grid and Home icon.
- Add your shortcut on Home Screen or Launcher by enable the gdesk menu (Fav icon).

Bad:
- The weather widget not functional.
- The notes always goes to original.
- Double tap / single tap for click.
- The apps of gDesk has little bug (crashing when fast rotating).

DOWNLOAD gDesk v0.33g
DOWNLOAD Nexus One gdd file.
DOWNLOAD Nexus One.Ui Source file icon, Home Screen and Wallpapers.

This Nexus One Ui gdd for gDesk is created by me Muffler and modify files source from TommyHacker. Spread the word... :)

Instruction:
- Download all the files above. (3 Downloads files).

- Extract all the file and save into your memory card. Example: d:/apps/gDesk
should have this sis file:
GDesk.0.33G.SIS
GDeskAgnViewS60.0.33g.SIS
GDeskClockS60.0.33g.SIS
GDeskInfoViewS60.0.33g.SIS
GDeskNotepadS60.0.33g.SIS
GDeskShortcutS60.0.33g.SIS (optional to install)
GDeskTaskManS60.0.33g.SIS

- Create new folder d:/apps/gdesk/GDD File
put Nexus One.gdd

- Install all the SIS file. (It better to hack your phone to bypass the certificate)

- After finishing install. Open gDesk and tap on the screen choose design.

- Tap again on the screen and choose load design.

- Find where you put the gdd file.

- Your done.

- If you have missing skin. Put the
Nexus One.Ui Source file icon, Home Screen and Wallpapers. into d:/+GDesk/
folder Home Screen.
folder Icon.
folder Wallpapers.

Recommended:
- After load the design.
-Tap on the screen and choose option tuk tick this option:
Replace Main
Full Screen
Left soft key: close
Hide title caption
Disable menu tap.

Information:
You can easily to turn back into Nokia Ui.
You can turn off the gDesk. (It just replace the home screen not fully replace the system Ui)