Anything annimated like a video wallpaper... or something that constantly requires connection to your wireless data will put a heavy load on your battery usage.
OP i was having this same issue and what i did was recycle the battery .. Since jailbreaking i got 3/4 of the day with moderate text and emails and calls now that ive let the battery completly die then charge it back up.. now my battery life is a 1 1/2 days..
OP i was having this same issue and what i did was recycle the battery .. Since jailbreaking i got 3/4 of the day with moderate text and emails and calls now that ive let the battery completly die then charge it back up.. now my battery life is a 1 1/2 days..
Do you close your apps after you have finished with them?
If not then just double tap the Home button and youll see those apps that are open to close them just hold one of the apps (like you would when you want to delete an app off your springboard) and when they start to shake just click cross done
Do you close your apps after you have finished with them?
If not then just double tap the Home button and youll see those apps that are open to close them just hold one of the apps (like you would when you want to delete an app off your springboard) and when they start to shake just click cross done
Only apps that run in the background can potentially drain battery. But 99% of app cannot run in the background, they are only paused in RAM. Multitasking in iOS is basically nothing like it seems.
Only apps that run in the background can potentially drain battery. But 99% of app cannot run in the background, they are only paused in RAM. Multitasking in iOS is basically nothing like it seems.
It's simple. Just type in google "how iOS multitasking "really" works".
You will find that killing apps in the switcher is basically pointless. Even to free RAM. iOS frees RAM automatically when the phone needs it.
The only way to "truly" make apps background is with a Cydia tweak called Backgrounder.
You will find that the apps in the switcher bar are nothing more than your list of recently opened apps, and that is it......they are not draining battery or using RAM.....well they are using RAM, but only to keep them suspended/paused until you return to the app again, and are not constantly using RAM but just enough to keep them paused until iOS thinks it has been there too long and quits it's paused state.
iOS is smart enough to do this "automatically", therefore, quitting apps in the switcher bar really pointless. Tho I do it just do it simply to keep it clean. But I know it's not really helping my phone function or conserve battery in any way.
If an app is paused in memory for too long, and your phone needs more RAM, it goes to the app that has been sitting there the longest and terminates its "paused" state.