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2010-04-30
, 20:34
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Posts: 992 |
Thanked: 995 times |
Joined on Dec 2009
@ California
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#22
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The Following User Says Thank You to egoshin For This Useful Post: | ||
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2010-04-30
, 20:49
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Posts: 118 |
Thanked: 38 times |
Joined on Apr 2010
@ California
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#23
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2010-04-30
, 21:11
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Posts: 2,050 |
Thanked: 1,425 times |
Joined on Dec 2009
@ Bucharest
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#24
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One note - I leave my N900 charging overnight and I know that it has MORE battery juice than I charge it at night and disconnect before going to sleep. N900 actually uses a charger power overnight.
So, dropping capacity to 80% overnight on charger is strange for me.
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2010-04-30
, 21:39
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Posts: 909 |
Thanked: 216 times |
Joined on Nov 2009
@ Bremen, Germany
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#25
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2010-04-30
, 22:44
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Posts: 80 |
Thanked: 33 times |
Joined on Apr 2010
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#26
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2010-04-30
, 22:45
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Posts: 1,141 |
Thanked: 781 times |
Joined on Dec 2009
@ Magical Unicorn Land
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#27
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well. As far as i know . it is best to drain your battery till its dead . and charge it till its full for about 3 to 4 times. That way you will use all its potential. I work with Laptops a lot and factories have explain that doing that will give you better life span and longer use.. I use to work for Hewlett packard . Don't know if batteries have changed..
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2010-04-30
, 22:45
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Posts: 15 |
Thanked: 7 times |
Joined on Apr 2010
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#28
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my theory:
staying connected to the internet is much better than permanently connecting/disconnecting. at least as far as wlan is concerned.
i think the whole process of connecting requires a lot of energy (just like starting your cars engine) so it pays out to keep an idle connection.
not sure if that counts for gsm-internet (especially on 3g), though.
right now i'm connected to my homes wlan for aroud 10 hours nonstop and there is no difference in batterydrain.
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2010-04-30
, 22:48
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Posts: 1,141 |
Thanked: 781 times |
Joined on Dec 2009
@ Magical Unicorn Land
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#29
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Is there some kind of application available that will make a (loud) sound when the battery is finished charging? Believe it or not, but when I'm asleep I can't tell if the little green light has come on to let me know I should take it off the charger.
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2010-04-30
, 22:58
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Posts: 80 |
Thanked: 33 times |
Joined on Apr 2010
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#30
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No need, the Nokia charger is smart enough not to keep charging when it is fully charged. When your N900 has a green light, that's because the battery told it that it is full. It also tells the charger, and in this state the charger is using virtually no electricity.
A simple way to illustrate this is to touch the wall plug after your phone has been charging for a few minutes (yellow light), it will be warm. Now touch it after the charging has been done for a few minutes (green light), it will be cool.
Newer chemistries do get bothered by small charges so Nokia has to choose between protecting the battery and letting you leave home with a low battery. They chose 80% and frankly it's fine. Could be 90, but in time battery will lose capacity and when "top" is 92%, it will destroy it cycling it 4 times a night. Also, if you leave it charging and doing something, it could cycle like 20 times overnight.
80 is good, leave it be. If you want to make sure it's full, leave it charging until LED is green. It's full then.
Also, battery charges faster from low to medium than from medium to full, as above some 70% or so the rate drops (Assuming Nokia can charge a battery right, and they do). So top charge at 40% while at work rather than overfilling it to 99.9 at home. 20 minutes in a charger will do wonders. Use a wall wart.
Last but not least, a little rant. Please, before starting a hints and tips page, make sure you check your facts. Ask around. Battery university has a must read.
N900 dead and Nokia no longer replaces them. Thanks for all the fish.
Keep the forums clean: use "Thanks" button instead of the thank you post.