
The little-known iPhone trick that can make your battery last MUCH longer
But there is one little-known trick that could keep your iPhone alive for much longer.
And it will be especially useful for people who are in lots of group chats.
All you need to do to boost your device's longevity is to place it face down when it's out of your pocket or bag.
Placing your iPhone face down on a surface prevents the screen from lighting up every time you get a notification.
The phone will still vibrate or make a sound when you receive a notification, but the screen won't wake up and drain your battery.
This feature, called Facedown Detection, was introduced in 2015 with iOS 9, and uses ambient light and proximity sensor to make the screen go black based on surrounding light levels.
This is the same technology that turns your screen off when you hold it to your ear so you don't accidentally hang up during a phone call.
The screen lighting up is one of the biggest draws on your phone's battery life.
So, if you want your phone to last as long as possible, it's important to reduce this to a minimum.
Even though an individual notification only lights the screen up for a second, over time, this can mean your phone is on for a much longer period.
A 2023 study conducted by Common Sense Media found that about half of girls aged 11 to 17 receive over 230 notifications a day.
Some teenagers in the study received up to 5,000 notifications in a 24-hour period.
That means your phone screen can end up being on almost constantly, draining a lot of power.
Unfortunately, Apple doesn't have any way of preventing the screen from waking up when it receives a notification.
Other than turning your iPhone face down, the only other option is to limit the number of push notifications you receive.
You can either do this by placing your phone on Do Not Disturb and stopping all notifications, or changing individual apps' notification settings.
To do this, go into Settings on your iPhone, select 'Notifications' and then select an app's icon.
From here, you will be able to prevent the app from sending notifications by turning off 'Allow Notifications'.
Alternatively, you can minimise how often you get notifications by scheduling a notification summary.
This will send you a collected summary of any notifications that would have appeared before a set time.
To do this, go to the 'Scheduled Summary' tab under notification settings and turn on Scheduled Summary.
Tap 'Continue', select the times you want to receive the notification summary, select the apps you want to be included, and then select 'Add Apps'.
Now, when your iPhone is set to 'Focus' mode, all notifications will be delayed until the scheduled summary to prevent you from being interrupted.
If that still isn't keeping your battery from draining, you could also try turning off location services.
This is because your GPS hardware requires more battery to run and its impact can often depend on the strength of the signal and the location's accuracy.
For example, if you're using Google Maps to share your location with someone else, the app is likely to be accurate, causing more drainage on your battery.
It's therefore advised to turn off your location when you're not using it by heading to the privacy and security section in settings and clicking on 'location services' where you can turn the feature off.
How to stop apps from secretly draining your iPhone's battery
Certain apps could be draining the battery of your iPhone - and tracking these down can help your cellphone last longer.
Phone repair expert Kewin Charron, from tech repair company Back Market, told DailyMail.com that iOS makes it easy to hunt down high-drain apps.
Charron said, 'The first step is to understand which apps consume the most battery. From here, users can start to prioritise the apps they use regularly and purge any that are taking up unnecessary space.'
Certain apps - like streaming video or graphic-intensive games - are always going to use a fair bit of power, Charron said, but sometimes fairly simple apps can be draining your battery, and you should track these down and disable them.
To find your phone's battery usage list, on iOS devices, go to Settings > Battery and look for a list of apps along with the percentage of battery usage for each over the past seven days.
Some apps may run in the background even when you're not actively using them. This drains the battery causing you to charge your phone more often.
Over time, this can actually reduce the lifespan of your phone.
To combat this, look for apps which are very active in the background, and deactivate 'background app refresh' for each ones.
On iOS, you can selectively enable or disable background app refresh for specific apps in settings to reduce background activity.
To do this, go to Settings > General > Background App Refresh, and then select Off on individual apps as required.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Reuters
38 minutes ago
- Reuters
Some of the big US investments being made in AI and energy
WASHINGTON, July 15 (Reuters) - American companies rolled out a series of big ticket AI and energy investment pledges on Tuesday, part of a push by U.S. President Donald Trump to maintain America's edge in the booming technology sector. Here are some of the biggest announcements timed around the Energy and Innovation Summit at Carnegie Mellon University, which is expected to include $90 billion in investments in and around Pennsylvania. Alphabet (GOOGL.O), opens new tab-owned Google has struck a $3 billion deal with Brookfield Asset Management for electricity generated from two hydropower facilities in Pennsylvania. The tech giant will also invest $25 billion in data centers across Pennsylvania and neighboring states over the next two years, Semafor reported on Tuesday. Asset management firm Blackstone (BX.N), opens new tab plans a $25 billion investment in data centers and energy infrastructure in Pennsylvania, its President and Chief Operating Officer Jon Gray told a panel at the summit. On Monday Meta Platforms (META.O), opens new tab Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg said his company would spend hundreds of billions of dollars to build several massive AI data centers, including a multi-gigawatt data center dubbed Prometheus, which is planned for Ohio. Cloud infrastructure technology company CoreWeave (CRWV.O), opens new tab plans to spend up to $6 billion on building a new artificial intelligence data center in Pennsylvania, the company said on Tuesday. The pledges come amid a surge in investments for AI startups, a sign that the field continues to thrive even as venture capital firms are struggling to raise money, a report from PitchBook on Tuesday showed.


Times
42 minutes ago
- Times
Meta to spend ‘hundreds of billions' on AI data centres
Mark Zuckerberg has said that Meta Platforms will spend 'hundreds of billions of dollars' on building data centres to power artificial intelligence, including one with a footprint almost the size of Manhattan. Its first 'multi-gigawatt' data centre, which will be called Prometheus, is set to come online next year, the billionaire technology executive wrote on Threads, his social media platform, while another, called Hyperion, would scale up to 5 gigawatts over 'several years'. 'We're building multiple more titan clusters as well,' he said. 'Just one of these covers a significant part of the footprint of Manhattan.' • Business live blog — today's latest news He pointed to a report from SemiAnalysis, an industry publication, that Meta was on track to be the first AI lab to bring a gigawatt-plus supercluster online. The American technology giant is 'focused on building the most elite and talent-dense team in the industry', Zuckerberg wrote. The world's largest technology companies have stepped up efforts to attract top engineers with multimillion-dollar pay packages to fast-track work on machines that could out-think humans on many tasks, part of an AI arms race that has gripped the industry. Sam Altman, the boss of OpenAI, claimed that Meta Platforms had started to make 'giant offers' to a lot of OpenAI staff to beef up its own roster of engineers. The announcement from Meta came as President Trump joined executives from some of America's largest technology companies at a summit in Pittsburgh, ahead of an expected push in the coming weeks to make it easier for power-generating projects to connect to the grid, and also provide federal land on which to build the data centres needed to expand AI technology, Meta, which owns Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp, had 'the capital from our business' to fulfil its data centre ambitions, Zuckerberg insisted. However, investors have become increasingly sensitive to the billions of dollars that the largest technology groups are ploughing into AI infrastructure, highlighted by the DeepSeek episode earlier this year. Advancements unveiled by the Chinese AI start-up wiped hundreds of millions off the market value of Meta Platforms, Amazon and Nvidia, the chipmaker. Zuckerberg's company, which has a market value of $1.8 trillion, was once seen as a leader in open-source AI models. The California-based business was co-founded as Facebook by Zuckerberg, who changed the name to Meta Platforms in 2021 to shift the company's focus to the metaverse. However, it is fighting the perception that it may have fallen behind in the AI race, after its initial set of Llama 4 large language models, released in April, fell short of performance expectations. It has also delayed the rollout of Behemoth, its main AI model, which had been scheduled for release in the same month.


The Independent
an hour ago
- The Independent
Texas Governor refuses to release ‘intimate' emails between him and Musk
Texas Governor Greg Abbott is refusing to release emails exchanged with billionaire Elon Musk, citing their "intimate and embarrassing" nature and lack of public interest. The Texas Newsroom, in collaboration with ProPublica and The Texas Tribune, requested the emails to investigate Musk's influence in the state. Abbott's office initially charged a fee for collating the emails but later declared them confidential after the payment was processed. Elon Musk's lawyer, representing SpaceX, also argued against their release, claiming they contain commercially sensitive information that could harm the company. The decision on whether to release the emails now rests with Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton, who has yet to issue a ruling.