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Apple admits they deliberately slow down old iPhones You're not crazy. Apple has been slowing down older iPhones. https://twitter.com/i/moments/943591353891655685 https://www.cnet.com/news/apple-slow...attery-issues/ Quote:
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LOL on my IP6S I didn't update to the latest iOS and it runs fine smooth as butter while my ipad air got the update and now is slow as hell. So no I will be holding off the update as long as I can. |
dont get what the complaint is either your device shuts down unexpectedly cuz the degraded battery can't handle the power load, or your device runs slower but doesn't unexpectedly shut down. you should be replacing your battery every 2-3 years anyways. you can download a simple battery test app and see how degraded your battery is. I believe anything beyond 80% capacity is considered "bad". in my experience most people hit that mark around the 2 year mark if the device is used everyday. batteries only have about a 500 charge life cycle before the performance decreases exponentially. |
Wonder if this applies to Samsung as well... |
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For me personally, I'd much rather have my phone stay at the same snappy speeds instead of having the CPU throttled down on me. I can easily mitigate the crappier battery capacity by carrying a power pak or recharge the damn phone more frequently. And after the first couple of times of unexpected shut down, you pretty much know at roughly what battery percentage the phone might "unexpectedly" shut down anyway, so you just keep the battery charge beyond that. But with an automatically CPU throttled scheme, I can't unthrottle the CPU, and everybody hates slow-responding phones. And don't forget that especially with iPhones, each successive iOS version already makes the phone massively slower. (OK, maybe not massively, but at least noticeably.) |
Blows my mind how Apple fans are actually accepting this as a good thing. :facepalm: |
In other news, the sky is blue. Apple have always been screwing over users to try to force/trick them into buying new hardware. Remember when they artificially bloated the download of an update so that it was impossible to fit onto the smallest iphones? |
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My apps/pages take 10-15seconds to load at times, occasionally my phone will brick up and ill have it leave it for a min or 2 before it all the actions can "catch",and it down right just crashes my phone sometimes. This is with a new 7. It was worse on my 5 and from what i hear on the 6 too Quote:
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When I was using a Note 3, the battery lasted 4 hours after 1.5 years of use and yes even without an update it got terribly slow. The risk of "go full performance at cost of battery life" is a battery puffing up and going full Note 7. It's a result of compromises in battery tech, specifically Li-Ion. The main cost-effective, high capacity batteries we have today are Li-Ion and LiPo. LiPo has a high discharge rate but low cycle count whereas Li-Ion has a relatively low discharge rate but a much higher cycle count. With a new battery this lower discharge rate is more than sufficient for a phone, but when the battery ages combined with poor cooling, and more and more power hungry apps (snapchat's filters come to mind). Anyways if you have 6 or 6s take advantage of this program Apple is doing... https://www.apple.com/support/iphone...ectedshutdown/ I got a free battery on my old 6S. |
I thought everyone knew about this.. |
Thing is a lot of people are saying they're not doing it just for the battery, they're doing it partially because of battery and partially to slow down old phones. Who knows, people will believe what they want. That said, if you have a brand new iPhone 5 still in its original wrapping, will it be slowed down right off the hop even though the battery has never been charged / drained? (reason is I have a family member with one kicking around as their backup for when theirs dies) |
I can understand throttling the cpu in a 2 year update. But this is every year! I personally don't own an iphone but the rest of my entire family sticks to it. From what i can tell, throttling happens to both ios and android for the same reasons mentioned above; lithium batteries can't sustain the same level of consumption over a period of time. Another thing to consider is that ios requires more battery consumption to run snappy than an android does, which is why people with a 2 year old android dont suffer as much as an ios user. Honestly its not that big of a deal, replacing the battery in an iphone is super easy. HOWEVER!!!! I've replaced batteries from a lot of my family and friends iphones and they STILL suffer slower performance when updating to the ios after their phone's initial software version. Granted, not as badly as they did with an old battery. Iphone is just blanketing their statement to cover their ass. Which is what every company does. It's just business. |
it's crazy there are many people defending it think about it: removable batteries used to be a thing they took that away so the life of the phone is now limited to the finite cycles of the cells they offered replacement battery service, but once they do, the waterproof seal is no good so you're losing out on a feature. and now they want to throttle your device because of 'aging' battery? What level do they consider aged? 90%? I want to have the option of having my phone run nearly as fast as it was brand new, and for the hardware to scale for the tasks without compromises. I can live with a slightly shorter battery life, esp now with wireless charging becoming more prelevant and with wifi charging probably not too far out, battery life is becoming less and less of a concern. If an app or operating system shuts down unexpectedly because of older battery, that should be addressed from a software perspective. Imagine buying a car, and they limit how fast you go once your tire or gas runs close to replacement/empty (they probably already do this for electric cars), how would you feel about the company controlling what you do with the hardware you own? You can void my warranty but don't limit my options. Unless an aged battery poses a serious safety concern, this is a BS move and Apple should be condemned for it. Guess I won't be updating my iPhone X after 2019, I mean I kinda already expecting for them to pull this move but now it's finally out in the open. |
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When it has the latest Samsung firmware 4.4.2, the battery only last for 9hrs before it goes completely dead. Nothing was installed, only whatsapp, google apps, Bluetooth and Wifi. If I flash it to the original 4.1.2 firmware, it can last for 20hrs. If I flash it to Lineage 14.1 + aftermarket kernel, it lasts for 2 days. sure the battery will go bad after 2-3 years, I would definitely flash to a clean aftermarket rom and replace the battery. |
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that's what will happen, not your assumed "snappy speeds". the battery literally cannot handle those snappy speeds cuz it's degraded. not that it just doesn't hold a much as a charge. it literally cannot handle the power demands and just shut down. lol your little plan of doing your battery pack thing and memorizing when the battery level will shut down isnt shared by all the super casual technology dumb people that won't care to learn or want to plan what you have done. they just want a phone that works. |
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I know I can attempt a DIY battery replacement, or pay some mobile phone "repair shop" to do the battery replacement for me. But it seems to me that manufacturers are going out of their way to make the battery replacement extra difficult. Especially with high end phones being $800+ (or easily $1k+ for the Note 8 / Pixel 2XL / iPhone X etc.), it boggles my mind that people are OK with being forced to literally replace the phone simply because the battery doesn't cut it anymore. It's like being forced into replacing the whole damn car just because the OEM tires are worn out. |
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but wouldn't it make more sense to limit the amount of background processes running or just shut you out of resource-intensive apps with a warning that you do not meet the min. requirement? instead of making you crawl 10 seconds just opening up Safari? That's basically how it felt when I was trying to use an iPhone 4 two years ago. I mean if trying to sell you new phones wasn't their #1 priority 4Head I don't know, I've seen many interesting things Apple try to pass off previously that I just scoff at, but this recent revelation just rubs me the wrong way |
At $800+ for a phone, if they're only going to last ~2 years before the mfr nukes it then you're going through $400+/yr just in hardware. For a phone that can barely do sweet fuck all. I'll stick to my cheap phones and spend the difference on a computer which is actually capable of doing things. Quote:
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1) They aren't telling people that their 2 year old phone is being downgraded 2) They don't give users the option of maintaining high performance on the phone they purchased. I know I'd rather run my phone into the ground than have it run like a 5 year old piece of shit 3) They don't give users the option of not upgrading the OS 4) Batteries aren't easily replaceable Basically this is a stealth downgrade of something people are paying a LOT of money for, only a couple years ago. No information, no choices, nothing. It's ridiculous. As expected, there's a lawsuit forming, and I would be amazed if Apple doesn't lose it or settle. Here's hoping their customers get a good deal out of it. |
I hate Apple for this reason.....or any phone that doesn't have removable battery. Bf kept updating my IPad Mini and now the POS lags like crazy, cuts in and out of wifi and the touch calibration is messed up. The last update he did also makes my Ipad go on mute??? And I cant change it using the buttons or app volume....I have to turn it on and off a few times just so it works. He ended up buying me a used older regular IPad that's hasn't been updated and it works perfectly. I think it's the last model that uses the wider charging plug just before the lightning plug came out. Only downside is volume is not as loud as my iPad mini. I never update any of my Apple stuff cuz I'm convinced it's how Apple is keeping consumers in the market. Ive never had any issues with any products when I dodge the updates. Why would we keep buying new versions of shit if the models we buy can last 10 years? I had an IPhone 5S for work that was only 2 years old and it did the random shut down thing and it would heat up...I made an appt with Apple and they do battery diagnostic or w/e and all they do is try to get you to buy another 5S or upgrade lol. I asked if they could just change the battery and they said nope not an option. My bf previously had an LG Keybo for 10 years and it never gave him problems. I gave him my personal 5S that I've had since 2014 and it's already shut down on him 3-4 times since last year. At the cost of Apple products personally I don't find it worth it. It's just going to fuck up after a couple years anyway when they release new models. |
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I wonder if this is only for devices running on battery. What about apple devices plugged in running in kiosks and photo booths? |
in order to qualify for the $79 battery replacement, apple will run a battery diagnostic on your iphone and it must fail. mine wouldn’t fail. long story short, i had another issue and in the end, they gave me a new 6+ for $200, so i’m happy. (out of warranty too!) with regards to ios updates slowing down the iphones, i’ve notuced it happening since the 4S got the multitask feature. since then, i never update my ios. |
what technology isnt slow after 3 years of use? unless youre buying high end shit, a sub $1000 laptop, pc, tablet, etc. will all be substantially slower after 3 years Personally ive never had a problem with apple slowing devices because im always in an upgrade cycle every 2 years or so, but to expect an iphone 5 to work very well when we are into 8/X territory is a little much imo.. Blanket IOS updates wouldnt be possible and the people with the 5 would probably be bitching that they are losing out on the functionality of the new IOS if they werent part of the update |
^ My NES loads up Contra just as fast as it did when I was a kid. |
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