“Why Don’t You Turn Off Your iPhone And Go And Do Something Less Boring Instead.”
By Benny Har-Even in Editorial
Posted in Battery life, O2, iPhone, Apple on
Last week I was lucky enough to garner a iPhone 3G without having to have preordered via a chronically crippled website or by getting up at 4am to get to the front of a queue.
Instead I was invited by O2 to a one-on-one briefing with one of its device managers, - (a chap called Dominic), at the end of which I was handed an 8GB iPhone 3G to play with. Before you get too cheesed off at my jaminess, I was told it wasn’t to keep, but only a two week loan. Bother. However, when I get the call asking for it back, I am tempted to employ the old tried and tested, “aaaahh sooreee, I no speaka da Engliiss”, before putting the phone down.
To get to the chase though, I like it - a lot. But after a few days use, I have serious concerns regarding the battery life. In our first look review, we didn’t really have time to give it a serious battery test. However, as it stands, the facts are that I’m not even getting though working day before I have to recharge.
This morning I was careful to leave it charging overnight until I left for the office – but by 4:30 this afternoon I already had the ’20% battery remaining’ warning. This is not good.
Interestingly I have seen reports on the interwebnet that compared to other smartphones the battery life is actually the best of the bunch! However, clearly this is just for basic talk time – Apple says five hours over 3G, and I believe it.
However, the iPhone clearly isn’t going to just be used as a phone. Certainly not by me. I for one have been using it as, shock, horror, - an iPod, both listening to music and watching video. I’ve been browsing the web, which I’m pretty sure has been pushed as one of its selling points. I’ve also have it set up to check my Gmail account once an hour.
Now Apple clearly recognises that saving iPhone battery lifespan is an issue and has a page here that offers various tips on how to extend it. I’ll just paste the main headings here.
· Turn off 3G
· Minimize use of location services
· Fetch new data less frequently
· Turn off push mail
· Auto-check fewer email accounts
· Minimize use of third-party applications
· Turn off Wi-Fi
· Turn off Bluetooth
· Use Airplane Mode in low- or no-coverage areas
· Adjust brightness
· Turn off EQ
Obviously, some of these will be common sense to many people, but taken collectively, well, one could almost sum this up as – “Got an iPhone? Want more battery life? Well, don’t use it!”
Or as TV programme of my childhood would have had it, “Why Don’t You Turn Off Your iPhone And Go And Do Something Less Boring Instead.”
The thing is the iPhone is peerless at so many things that I want to use all of them – its browser, its music playing, its email checking. It even seems like a decent phone. However, even if other phones such as say, the Nokia E71, can do all these things, it won’t do them with the same style and panache as an iPhone.
No if I sound like a fanboi, I have firmly resisted getting an iPhone until now – and as I haven’t paid for this one, I still haven’t.
But if I’m going to be forking out for a contact that will cost me, £789 over 18 months (gotta have the 16GB), I’m going to have to think about whether I can live with charging every day. Will the iPhone battery even stand up to that level of charging?
Perhaps as the novelty wears off, I will be spending less time playing with the iPhone for the sake of it but when the fact it that I have to plug in before I leave the office, just to be sure that I have enough juice to get me home, it’s not an ideal situation.
So should I accept this and take the plunge anyway? I have a week and a half to decide.
Comment by Dan Jones - July 16, 2008 on 10:13 am
Surprising, mine isn’t half as bad. Got mine Friday, and finally got switched on the phone piece on Sunday.
My tips are definitely turn it onto airplane mode on the tube - this absolutely kills the battery on a long underground journey… I lost 25% of the battery on a 60 min journey underground on Sunday.
Yesterday and Monday though, I charged overnight - as I left home at 7:30am , I disabled wifi (which I use @ home), then went to office. 30 min journey, ipod on throughout. At work, used handset for 2 hours during day using Activesync push email to test the device for work - thats 2 hours of using email on the phone… sent some 15 emails in that timeframe, and received around 30. I also browsed some personal websites at lunch. (this is as I’m at work and have a work mobile for work calls so phone calls were on that).
ipod on way home again 30 mins.
Once home wifi went on and I made a 2 hour voice call once home at 8pm-10pm, - and for periods of the call was using the wifi to surf the web. Only once I completed the call and was watching some TV on iplayer afterwards did I get the first 20% warning. For me, the iPhones certainly got a better battery life than the phone it replaces (the n73). The N73 needed 2 charges a day if I used video (slingplayer) on the way to the London office in the morning. I’ll see if this is the case when I’m London bound next week and watch videos off the internal storage.
Note that at home I’m in a 2g area (being countryside), work is a 3g area.. so the call in evening was a 2g call…
I too hope the battery lasts the 18 months being charged once a day (twice on a busy day). Apple are right though - switch off the services you don’t need when not using them - it helps a lot with the battery. Be nice if Apple had a profiles feature to allow a home, work etc setting to setup the phone for each location quicker - rather than the current manually disabling bluetooth & wifi when not in car.
Comment by bennyh - July 17, 2008 on 3:20 pm
Good point Dan about Airplane mode – I’ve been using it when I’m on the train and it does seem to be making a big difference to the battery life – by 4pm my battery isn’t already keeling over.
It definitely pays to turn off those radios. However, it’s a little frustrating that to get through the day one has to micromanage the iPhone in this way – if you don’t you’ll always run the risk of being out of power when you need it.
Comment by Pecos Bill - July 18, 2008 on 7:55 pm
There are several third party batteries that you can plug in to the dock connector. http://arstechnica.com/journals/apple.ars/2008/07/18/several-backup-batteries-can-extend-your-daily-iphone-3g-use
including one from the Netherlands
Comment by bennyh - July 21, 2008 on 11:43 am
Being a first time daily iPhone user I wasn’t aware of these. I’ll look into them. Thanks for the heads up.
Comment by CWilson - September 23, 2008 on 7:24 am
What I dont understand is why people are willing to jump through hoops to use a device where the battery is obviously woefully under specified. Why should you have to turn things off to extend use time? If I had a an iPhone I would want to use the features when and where I wanted, without worrying about whether the battery would last the day, and I think it unreasonable for Apple (or any smartphone manafacturer) to assume otherwise. I certainly dont expect to turn bits of my car off to enable it to complete its daily functions, why should I accept this from a phone? This appears to be another example of people being blinded by the bling, and leaving their rationality and critical faculties asleep, letting hype and the ad man do their thinking for them.
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