![]() ![]() After this, the app will notify you to pull your phone off the hook. This slider decides the percentage up to which you want your battery to be charged. Head to the charging tab and you’ll notice a slider that you can move around the battery percentage. Once you reach the main screen of the app, you’ll notice it displays your battery percentage at the top of a circle and percentage. You may have come across this supposed fact somewhere, that charging the battery to a maximum of 80% (instead of 100%) you can increase its longevity by quite a bit. ![]() It will also introduce you to a research on battery lifespan. When you launch the app first, the app will walk you through a brief introduction to what it does. The ads aren’t exactly intrusive but they appear like cards looking similar to the other information it offers. I just happened to have used this one and it works. There are a number of other, similar apps on the Play Store and there is no reason why you can’t or shouldn’t use them. As Steve Jobs once famously said though, there’s an app for that. Natively on Android, you can monitor the battery status, but not the overall health. It would be a good idea to monitor your device’s battery health and follow certain precautionary measures to make it last longer. This is why at least Sony Xperia devices come with a built-in system that helps charge the battery a certain way. The phones do slow down on their own though and the battery is one of the few reasons. Fortunately, there haven’t been cases where Android OEMs were caught slowing down a phone deliberately. Well, guess what, Android smartphones have similar batteries, based on the same tech. The reason, at least according to Cupertino, deteriorating battery health on older iPhones. It wasn’t long ago that Apple was making headlines for the wrong reasons. ![]()
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