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With Push Notification Off you can safely save 50% of your battery life (yeah, it sucks that much). I still don't get how somebody at Apple get it a "green light"...

Somehow that doesn't sound realistic to me.:confused:
 
Somehow that doesn't sound realistic to me.:confused:

Well, Push + Beejive = red battery in 8h without using Beejive at all. If I turn Push Off I can get 2 days of battery life without intensive usage (no gaming).

It's sad truth, I hoped that they would at least change the battery capacity on 3GS, but it's basically the same model. :(
 
Finding what's causing the drain

Hi guys,

On the basis that there's an App for everything, is there an app which will show 'what's running on the iPhone'?

I know we are not into M*S* multi tasking or whatever they call it, but isn't there something which can show this sorta thing up?

If not then here's a niche....

;)
 
Hi guys,

On the basis that there's an App for everything, is there an app which will show 'what's running on the iPhone'?

I know we are not into M*S* multi tasking or whatever they call it, but isn't there something which can show this sorta thing up?

If not then here's a niche....

;)

You can use memory sweep (free) or one of the other memory apps.
 
You can use memory sweep (free) or one of the other memory apps.

i took a snap shot of my usage and battery amount left and ill do the same thing tomorrow and saturday... So when I go into the apple store for my appt. i have proof that my battery life sucks
 
i took a snap shot of my usage and battery amount left and ill do the same thing tomorrow and saturday... So when I go into the apple store for my appt. i have proof that my battery life sucks

I have push email and push notifications on for BeeJive, Sportacular, eBay, and task2gatherer and it does suck away battery. I get like 4 hours of usage and 1.5 days of standby on a full charge.
 
I have push email and push notifications on for BeeJive, Sportacular, eBay, and task2gatherer and it does suck away battery. I get like 4 hours of usage and 1.5 days of standby on a full charge.

What's really sad is that the Motorola phone I am about to get rid of doesn't get NEARLY this much battery life. It just beeped "low battery" at me and I haven't even used it to talk today. Just a few texts.

Don't forget how far behind we were only a few years ago.
 
What's really sad is that the Motorola phone I am about to get rid of doesn't get NEARLY this much battery life. It just beeped "low battery" at me and I haven't even used it to talk today. Just a few texts.

Don't forget how far behind we were only a few years ago.

Amen.
 
I tend to experience similar battery life with my iPhone 3GS with the original post starter.

About 5~6 hours of usage and about 16 hours of standby time.

Contrary to many information online, I tend to have all my settings on.
For example, I have my screen brightness to 100%, Fetch my emails every 15 minutes, location service on all the time. I do use Wi-Fi whenever possible, but most likely when I'm outside I use 3G for talk and data.
I even read all the newspaper articles and do necessary searches with the phone.

I actually don't complain. Just wish the battery would last longer. I know having all those settings drains battery quickly, then I thought why own a device and turn off or adjust to lower settings instead of running at full capability.

Think of it this way.
It's not a phone with a computer capability. It's a computer with a phone capability.
I know it's just some terminology word play, but I never owned a notebook computer that lasted any more than five hours. So thinking that way, puts me at ease. (I know, it's not the best advice/information, but still.)
 
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