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I somehow feel wealthy when my phone and headphones are both at 100% charge together
(self.showerthoughts)
A "Showerthought" is a simple term used to describe the thoughts that pop into your head while you're doing everyday things like taking a shower, driving, or just daydreaming. A showerthought should offer a unique perspective on an ordinary part of life.
I want my phone to gaslight me that it's at 100% when it's really at 80% to maximize battery life.
I don't think that's a feature though.
The latest android versions on quite a few phones allow you to stop charging at 80%.
On my phone it's: settings->battery->charging limit.
It may be different on your phone so maybe just search for "80" in the settings menu.
I have mine stop at 80%, but it'd be cool if it would still show that as being 100% ... just to make my brain feel nicer about it
Thanks for the tip!
Dunno how widespread the feature is, but my Sony Xperia can charge to 90% sand leave it there.
IT CAN MAKE SAND???
Don't tell Anikan.
Is that from the B-movie remake of star wars called Universe Fight?
Something looked off haha. I was going to double check the spelling but I didn't follow through.
MacBooks delay charging past 80% because in most cases you don’t actually need it, and it’ll extend the battery life. You can disable it in settings if you want though, I use Al Dente instead to manage my battery.
iPhone 15 and newer do the same.
iPhone XR already did this. Looking at the history, the feature may have been present as early as iPhone 6. Although that may have come with a retroactive IOS update.
I stand corrected, looks like it was iOS 13 and newer that offered support for this, so it could go all the way back to the SE.
I thought iPhones did that secretly for a while and a it was a big scandal.
Apple got in trouble because they made the processor in the phone get slower as the battery got older, not for any of these 80% battery optimization things (which they also support now, but it was added after their scandal of slowing the processors down)
They also didn't inform the user, so there was no way an average user could know they could restore their device's old performance with a simple battery replacement
Most phones do, to a certain extent. The percentage it gives you is just an estimate because you can't really tell how much energy is in a battery until you discharge it all; you can only tell how much is going in and how much is going out, and make an educated guess from there. Generally, that guess is close enough to reality that it doesn't make any real difference, so the percentage still serves its purpose. I'm grossly oversimplifying, but that's the gist.
Most phones these days will usually only charge up to like 95% of the actual capacity of the battery, and will call that 100%.