Low battery anxiety is one of the most widespread ‘pathologies’ of the modern era. Whether you’re halfway through an unknown journey with GPS on or in the middle of a workday abroad, seeing the battery indicator drop below the critical 20% threshold triggers palpable frustration.
Often the immediate reaction is to take immediate action by buying emergency power banks or frantically searching for a power outlet, but rarely do we stop to consider the real cause of the problem.
It’s not always the fault of aging hardware or of a defective battery: very often, the culprit is the software we choose to install.
A recent study conducted by Elevate, a well-known company in the telecommunications and networking sector, shed light on users’ digital habits, identifying a blacklist of apps that act as true energy parasites.
The analysis examined not only the time the user actively interacts with the screen, but also data usage and, above all, invisible processes that occur when the phone is kept in your pocket.
According to the data collected, many of the world’s most popular apps continue to run relentlessly even when we think we’ve closed them. Elevate calculated the monthly impact based on an average user, revealing consumption percentages that far exceed a single daily charge.
Here is the ranking of applications that have the greatest impact on battery life according to the study:
Elevate highlighted a crucial aspect that emerged from the study:
While we worry about screen consumption during video editing or watching a movie, we often ignore that apps like Spotify or social networks continue to exchange data, update feeds, and locate the position even when the phone is in standby.
This very ‘ghost’ activity is what leaves users with drained batteries by evening.
For those who do not want to give up these apps but want to end the day with their phone still on, experts suggest a few tips.
The first line of defense is the disabling of background updates (or ‘Background App Refresh’) for all non-essential apps, which prevents software from continually ‘waking up’ to download new content while we’re not using them.
It is also advisable to use Power Saving mode, which automates the limitation of secondary activities, and manage the screen brightness (manually or with an automatic sensor).
Finally, a often overlooked tip concerns updates: keeping the operating system and apps up to date can introduce code optimizations that reduce the load on the processor.
However, if battery life remains critical, the ultimate solution suggested by Elevate remains drastic but effective: uninstall the most power-hungry apps that are not strictly necessary for our daily life.
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