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iOS 11 Is Causing Massive Battery Drain Problems (betanews.com)

Mark Wilson writes: A study conducted by security research firm Wandera shows that iOS 11 is causing iPhone and iPad batteries to drain faster than ever -- much faster. The difference between iOS 10 and iOS 11 is anything but minor; batteries can drain in half the amount of time following the upgrade. Wandera's report shows how, on average, an iPhone or iPad running iOS 10 takes 240 minutes of usage to drain the battery from 100 percent to zero. With iOS 11 installed, this number plummets to just 96 minutes -- over twice as fast. Users have also complained about the issue.

5 of 158 comments (clear)

  1. article blames FaceID by YesIAmAScript · · Score: 5, Insightful

    One problem, no one has an iPhone X yet.

    It also says 'We suspect it is also a case of Apple fans wanting to test out all the shiny new features right off the bat.' and then the reporting on this reporting just ignores that and says the update is causing "massive battery drain problems".

    I want to know where they got the data. Do they have a lot of data? A little? What app are they using to monitor users' battery usage? I presume they are using some app of their own as a form of spy?

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    1. Re:article blames FaceID by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

      We see this EVERY time there is a major release and the problem goes away on it's own.

      Wanna know why?

      When the iOS upgrade happens it swaps out the OS, but leaves userdata more or less intact. After the OS upgrade is good background tasks clean up all the user data, databases, etc (And in a modern smartphone there is a LOT), and bring everything up to the current version

      This takes a lot of time. And power. After every major uprade your phone will get hot just sitting there chugging away at the gigs of photos, videos, music, etc. Happens every time.

      Apple really should tell users about it. Maybe but a notification on the lock screen saying "Post upgrade cleanup in progress you may want to plug in your phone"

      End users are idiots though. Probably cheaper to keep them in the dark and ignore these stories every major release cycle.

    2. Re:article blames FaceID by Archimonde · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Same story every time that part is true. What is also true is that even after a few days the battery drain is still there. And people can't downgrade anymore after first two weeks (of a new SW version release) so they are screwed.

      After that people complain and the usual response is "your battery was dead anyway" (which is false) and/or "buy a new phone, why are you so cheap".

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      Trolls are like broken clocks. They show the truth two times a day. The rest of the day they talk nonsense.
    3. Re:article blames FaceID by Anubis+IV · · Score: 5, Informative

      Not only did they incorrectly blame FaceID in the original article, they even acknowledged the actual cause right at the start, before leaping headfirst into a series of factually incorrect assertions. Right at the start:

      Battery drain is a common iOS problem that usually pops up immediately after a major iOS upgrade release. This is partly due to Spotlight re-indexing and other behind the scenes shuffling.

      I.e. We know exactly what's causing it, and it's a perfectly understandable problem that resolves itself after a few days, but let's author a report using data that we know is in no way representative of actual usage so we can stir up a storm over an "issue" that won't exist in about a week.

      As for the iPhone X stuff that you mentioned they got wrong, here's the relevant quote for anyone interested:

      New functionality in iOS 11 could also be responsible for draining the life out of your phone. Animoji and iPhone X’s FaceID hardware use face-scanning technology relying heavily on the camera which is a notorious battery sucker. The hardware enabling this advanced facial recognition (A11 Bionic GPU) in the iPhone X could be the reason there is such a dramatic difference in battery decay rate.

      They managed to pack a lot of wrong into that one paragraph, namely that:
      A) The iPhone X doesn't launch until November, so we can safely rule the iPhone X out as a factor.

      B) Animoji is an iPhone X feature, so we can safely rule Animoji out as a factor.

      C) FaceID is an iPhone X feature, so we can safely rule FaceID out as a factor.

      D) FaceID does not rely on the "notorious battery sucker" camera (it relies on an IR sensor like the Kinect's), so we can rule the camera out as a factor.

      E) The A11 SoC is not available on any iOS 10 device. Given that Wandera claims to have measured "the same device" draining in different versions of the OS, we can conclude that they didn't measure any A11 devices, so we can safely rule the A11 out as a factor.

      More or less, they said exactly what the actual cause was, then proceeded to lie through their teeth for no reason other than to make a salacious headline that would drive traffic their way.

  2. Just replace battery by stooo · · Score: 5, Funny

    Open it
    Replace battery
    Close it
    Done. It's easy.

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