It's obvious that most phone users are having serious battery problems mostly users from Nigeria, their problems are either from inferior and substandard batteries being produced by some battery manufacturers or from our poor electricity which is a problem on its own.
So, therefore, some experts in the tech field have brought out some solutions to the battery's problems, and most of the phone users have applied those techniques, they concurred and have also testified that the problem-solving method is working 101%.
These are some of the things to do so that you can save your battery from dying too quick..
1. Turn on Low Power Mode
This is the easiest way to save battery: turn on Low Power Mode, which was introduced in iOS 9. You might have gotten prompted to switch to the mode when your charge sunk below 20% here or there, but you can manually turn it on, too. To do so, navigate to Settings > Battery and switch it on, but you can also add it to your Control Center for easy access.
Low Power mode reduces display brightness, optimizes device performance, and minimizes system animations. Some apps like Mail won’t download content in the background. You can still text, make calls, and receive data – Low Power Mode just dials down the fancier perks until you switch it off or charge your iPhone above 80% battery.
2. Limit how much you're watching or playing
Okay, this might be a bit obvious, but it bears repeating: watching media on your iPhone drains battery at a speedy rate. Depending on your phone, watching an hour-long episode could take 5% or more off. The same is true for playing games, especially those that compete online, as the phone must work overtime to relay commands back and forth from the server.
The answer, sadly, is to watch and play less. If you must, make things less demanding on your iPhone: dial down the brightness, lower the resolution, and so forth. Opt for less intensive games like puzzlers instead of graphics-intensive titles.
3. Stop using location settings
While your iPhone’s capability to pinpoint your location using LTE, GPS, and sensors is indeed miraculous, it also drains your battery. If you’re low on charge, don’t keep the Maps app open and actively track where you are, or other apps that access your location.
If you need to use some of these apps – like, say, navigating manually in Maps – then you can turn off GPS by heading to Settings > Maps > Location > choosing Never.
4. Dial down the brightness
Brightly-lit screens drain battery faster than dim ones, and it’s pretty easy to dial down the brightness. You can quickly access this in the Control Center – it’s the vertical bar in the middle with the sun icon. Just tap and drag it down.
Of course, it might go right back up if Automatic Brightness is toggled on, which automatically raises the screen brightness based on the amount of light in the environment. Head to Settings > Brightness to turn it off. Then you can set the amount of light coming from the display and keep it there.
5. Switch to Dark Mode
A good way to reduce the toll of bright light coming from your display is to switch to Dark Mode, which was added in iOS 13: a PhoneBuff test showed switching over could extend battery life by 30%. This may vary between iPhones, since some have LCD screens and others use OLED screens, which display the color (or absence of color) black differently.
Turning on Dark Mode is easy: either open up the Control Center and long-press the brightness meter to reveal the Dark Mode button on the left, or navigate to Settings > Display & Brightness to turn it on manually. You can even set a schedule for the phone to switch over to Dark Mode at certain times of day.
6. Lose the LTE
Keeping your phone connected to a cell service depletes the battery as your phone constantly siphons data for texts, emails, and apps. It’s a bit of an extreme measure, but if you absolutely need to keep your phone alive – or if you’re going somewhere you won’t have cell service anyway – you can shut off 4G/LTE connectivity.
The easiest way to do this is in the Control Center – in the top left corner, tap the green button to turn off cellular connectivity. You can also dig into Settings > Cellular and turn off cell data broadly as well as Data Roaming, or you can toggle cell data on each individual app if you want to restrict some to updating on Wi-Fi only, say.
7. Turn off everything (but the phone)
If you absolutely must save battery and don’t mind shutting down everything but the iPhone itself, there are other ways to stem the drain. First, halt any background activity left: go to Settings > General > Background App Refresh, which you can either limit to Wi-Fi only or shut completely off.
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Next, to keep your screen from lighting up with app notifications, navigate to Settings > Notifications and set ‘Allow Notifications’ to off. As a final measure, turn on Airplane Mode to ensure no signals reach your iPhone, either by heading to Settings and activating it there or in the Control Center.