Best battery saving apps for android

The most important feature for Android mobile is battery life. Recently, an survey revealed that 56% of Android buyers, 49% of iPhone buyers and 53% of Windows Phone buyers said that battery life was an important reason for them while selecting a particular device.

DU BATTERY SAVER丨POWER DOCTOR

DU batter saver is a free app that can be used to increase your device battery life upto 50%. With DU Battery Saver’s smart pre-set battery power management modes, one-touch controls and healthy charge stage features, solve battery problems and extend your battery life. It really stands out from the crowd with its great ease of use and very powerful functionality.

Visit Website :- Duapps.com
Download Android App :- DU Batter Saver 

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EASY BATTER SAVER

Easy Battery Saver is the easiest energy-saving application which helps you to extend your battery life and optimized your mobile hand-on experience.It is a powerful manager app specifically designed to extend battery life and optimize using habit.It saves your battery by intelligently dealing with phone’s network connectivity, screen time out and screen brightness

Download Android App :- Easy Battery Saver

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JUICEDEFENDER – BATTERY SAVER

JuiceDefender – Battery Saver is a powerful yet easy to use power manager app specifically designed to extend the battery life of your Android device. Packed with smart functions, it automatically and transparently manages the most battery draining components, like 3G/4G connectivity and WiFi.

Download Android App :- JuiceDefender – Battery Saver

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BATTERY SAVE BOOSTER

Battery Save Booster is a battery saving app that provides which way to increase the battery lifetime of your android based device with only 1 click. It has a feature which provides notification about your battery level

Download Android App :- Battery Save Booster

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2 BATTERY – BATTERY SAVER

This app  extends many extra hours to the battery life by managing Internet connection intelligently and in the background. It does this by a smart algorithm to turn the Internet connection on/off. It can also reduce the screen brightness by using a built-in screen filter and even turns off the screen automatically when you put the phone into the pocket or on the table.

Download Android App :- 2 Batter – Battery Saver
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COMODO – BATTERY SAVER

Comodo Battery Saver lets you device battery last a whole lot longer and slashes how often you need to put it on charge. It’s intelligent optimization feature, energy saving tweaks are automatically applied as your battery moves towards exhaustion. The application lets you quickly switch between power saving modes and to disable power-hungry applications with a single tap. Comodo Battery Saver also generates alerts when, for example, the battery needs to be unplugged from charge and gives you a detailed breakdown of exactly which applications are using the most power.

Download Android App :- Comodo – Battery Saver

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SNAPDRAGON BATTERY GURU

Snap Dragon Battery Guru automatically uses your smartphone and adjust the smartphone settings and improves over all user experience by intelligently making changes that optimize device functionality in phones
Visit Official Website :- FaqSnapdragon
Download Android App :- Snap Dragon Battery Guru

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ONE TOUCH BATTERY SAVER

In One Touch Batter Save app you can enable Power Saving Mode with a single touch. The Power Saving Mode deactivates your WiFi, GPS location system, Bluetooth, vibration, background light and activates Silent Mode to increase the battery life.

Download Android App :- One Touch Battery Saver

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DEEP SLEEP BATTERY SAVER

Deepsleep battery saver constantly puts the device to deepsleep mode while screen off. During deepsleep mode, Wifi, 3G are turned off, background apps are stopped. It then constantly wakes up in order to download email, sync Facebook status, etc,. It’s defined by deepsleep frequency and woke up duration

Download Android App :- DeepSleep Battery Saver

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Speed chargers – Good or Bad?

One thing all our portable electronics have in common, whether smartphone, tablet, phablet, or wearable; or Android, Windows Phone, or iOS, is the battery. Unlike desktop computers that get their power through a plug in the wall, all of these devices have to carry their own power source onboard, and battery capacity hasn’t really kept up with the rest of the tech inside our devices. To combat this, OEMs have tried to introduce new ways to keep our portables charged. From SoCs that are more energy efficient, more power conscious code, Qi wireless chargers, and now we even have speed chargers to help us get a quick boost right when we need it – well, almost.

Charging a battery isn’t a fast endeavor. Sometimes it seems like it takes as long to charge a battery as the usable time you get out of it. Luckily that’s more perception than reality, but it underscores just how slowly batteries charge. Recently, however, various manufacturers have begun to ship “speed chargers” that promise to give us oodles of run time on just a short charge. This seems contradictory, and flies in the face of what most would pass off as “good care and upkeep” for our batteries.

Now, however, companies like HTC and Motorola are coming out with “Turbo Chargers” that promise to cut charging time drastically, some even promising to give you an extra six hours of battery life from just 15 minutes of charging.

No, it’s not sorcery, it’s science! Looking at the fine print on the charger that comes packaged with the Nexus 6, for example, you’ll see various ratings on it:

  • Standard Output: 5v, 1.6A
  • Turbo 1 Output: 9v, 1.6A
  • Turbo 2 Output: 12V, 1.2A

Other chargers have ratings of 1.5A and even 2A. Shouldn’t this cause problems? In short, yes. Yes it can – if your device can’t handle it.

Motorola Turbo Charger

As long as you’re using the charger that came with your device (or an approved accessory), you don’t have anything to worry about. As long as you’re charging from a computer’s USB port, you’re safe. Once you branch out into the wild world of third-party chargers, that’s where you need to do a little homework. You don’t ever want to exceed the ratings of your device, going below them (at least on amperage) isn’t going to hurt. It’s when you go over that’s cause for concerns.

Voltage, amperage, and resistance are all interconnected. The higher the voltage, the less loss you’ll have (electricity flows more efficiently at higher voltages), but higher voltage can be dangerous, too. Similarly, amps can be dangerous – even moreso than volts. Since everything is interconnected, you need an intelligent charge controller to monitor the battery and adjust the incoming voltage and amperage accordingly.

Apply the same thinking to your battery and its charger and you’re on the right track. These new speed chargers work with a chip in your device to help regulate the flow of electricity into the battery. They start off slowly until they get a feel for how it reacts to being filled, then fill more quickly in the middle. Finally, they slow down and trickle to top it off.

Will this shorten the expected lifespan of the battery? Probably not, thanks to the extra intelligence in the charging circuit. However, it should be reiterated, even though our devices use similar charging ports, before you use a charger, make sure your device is rated to handle what it’s dishing out. Failure to do so will very likely shorten your battery life. However, if you simply use the one that came with your device, you’ll be just

 

 

Get More Runtime From A Single Laptop Battery Charge

 

Get More Runtime From A Single Laptop Battery Charge

 

Laptops are fantastic for their portability, but the inevitable downside for a lot of systems is that their battery charge doesn’t last long. Don’t fear, because this guide will offer tips on how to get more from a single charge.

Not only do some laptops offer poor time performance from a single charge, but you’ll also find that your battery gets less efficient over time. It isn’t always cheap to buy a replacement either, which makes it even more important to get the most from your battery in day-to-day use.

This guide will focus on Windows tips for extending your battery from a single charge, using tools built into the operating system. For information on how hardware affects battery life check our in-dept, hardware battery saving guide.

Adjust Your Battery Warnings

There’s nothing worse than realising that your battery is low before you’ve had a chance to do anything about it. One way of becoming more aware of how your battery is doing is to adjust the battery warnings that Windows gives.

To do so, search for edit power plan on your system and select the result. From here select Change advanced power settings and a new window will open. At the top of this window you can select which power plan to edit, but it’ll default to the one you’re using.

power options Get More Runtime From A Single Laptop Battery Charge

Scroll the list until you reach Battery and then expand the options. You’ll now be able to adjust at what battery percentage levels Windows will notify you through Low battery level. You should adjust this to what works best for you, but something like 25% will probably be suitable. Be sure to ensure that the Low battery notification is set to On.

You can also adjust the Critical battery level, which is when your computer will hibernate in order to save your current state if you hadn’t already done so from the previous warning. Again, vary this depending on your use, but 10% is a safe choice.

Don’t Sleep, But Hibernate

When finished with their current session, many laptop users will simply close the lid, which typically puts the device to sleep. Although there’s nothing wrong with this, your battery is draining even while in sleep mode.

Perform a system search for change what closing the lid does and select the result. This will take you to a window that will allow you to do exactly that, along with what pushing the power button does.

The default state for closing the lid is usually sleep, but this probably isn’t the best choice. Sleep still retains some power in order to keep everything quickly accessible when you load the laptop back up, so you could come back and find you’ve lost a good chunk of battery.

 

A better alternative is to change this to Hibernate from the dropdown. Hibernation remembers your state, but it completely powers down the system. This will mean that there’s no chance of your laptop being awoken from anything on the system. You might have shut the lid on your system and found that it boots itself up later to perform an update or scheduled task – hibernate doesn’t allow this.

However, bear in mind that hibernation does mean the computer needs to boot up again, which in itself uses power. Nevertheless, if you’re not going to be using your computer for hours then this is still a better option than sleeping.

Moreover, if your system runs on a solid state drive, you should probably disable hibernation because it could damage your drive.

Turn Down The Brightness

A report on Windows 7 from Microsoft engineers showed that the screen of your laptop is where over 40% of the power goes. As such, you need to be very frugal with your display output, if you want to conserve the juice.

The best way to conserve power on the monitor is to turn down the brightness. Although looking at a bright laptop screen is far preferable to a dim one for certain work, the former choice will be relentlessly sucking the power.

brightness options Get More Runtime From A Single Laptop Battery Charge

Perform a system search for power settings, select the option and it’ll bring up a new window. There will be a slider at the bottom that allows you to alter the screen’s brightness, which is useful for a quick fix, but let’s go one step further.

From this window, click Choose when to turn off the display from the left-hand navigation. From here you can choose when to Dim the display and Turn off the display. If you want to be truly efficient, set the dim to the lowest possible setting (1 minute). Set the turn off time to something that suits you, but 2 minutes will do.

To quickly adjust brightness on the go, you might be able to use keyboard controls. Alternatively, press Windows key + X  (Windows 7) or Windows key + I (Windows 8 & 10) to bring up a menu or sidebar that contains the brightness slider.

Ditch Extraneous Programs

Are you sure that you’ve only got the programs you need running? While one or two extraneous applications loaded in the background might not cause much issue, a number all mounted up is a sure fire way to sink your battery into the red pretty quickly.

Press Ctrl + Shift + Esc to open up the Task Manager. Switch to the Processes tab and you’ll see a list of everything that is running on your system. The higher the Memory, chances are the higher the drain on your battery. Select a process you want to stop and click End Process.

 

Bear in mind that some of these programs may be automatically set to run on system start up. It might make sense to remove them from that list altogether if you don’t actually need them. For advice on what programs you can probably ditch, along with how to disable them from start up, check out our Make Windows Start Faster guide.

Although ending the process will save your battery, you shouldn’t actually start uninstalling anything until you’re plugged back into the mains. It’s always useful to tidy up what you have installed, but that’s going to suck power you want to keep.

Unplug Any Devices

Everything external that you have plugged into your laptop will use a lot of battery – even your mouse. It’s more efficient to stick to the trackpad if you can. The same goes for anything else you’ve got connected up, like speakers or USB toys. It should go without saying that you should definitely not be charging anything else (like your phone) through your laptop.

 

Take the same approach for your Wi-Fi adapters. If you’re not connected to any Wi-Fi networks, it’s worth disabling the adapters. Perform a system search for view network connections and select the result. Then right click your wireless connection and Disable. Although it may not actually be connected, it’ll still be using battery.

Get Saving Power!

Hopefully these tips have helped you in the way of saving your laptop’s battery from running dry in a single session. It can be a huge hassle to run out of battery life when your charger isn’t handy, so follow the advice above in order to get every last drop you can.