Apple's new iPhone 15,A Fair Haired Woman Who Spins And Pulls Out which runs on iOS 17, has a built-in battery health feature that limits battery charging to 80 percent, a feature that will optimize your battery's condition over its lifetime.
The option to stop your iPhone from charging above 80 percent is new — and it will definitely shorten the amount of time you can use your phone between charges, Tom's Guidereports. But it will also keep your iPhone's battery health higher for longer. It's your choice whether you'd like to use the new feature — it's kind of like deciding if you are more interested in longevity or current power.
According to The Verge,there are now three options under "Charging Optimization" in the Battery Health and Charging menu: Optimized Battery Charging, 80% limit, and None. This differs from the last-gen iPhone and previous iOS version, which only allowed users to choose Optimized Battery Charging. This iOS 13-born feature, which is also available on the new iPhone, uses machine-learning to understand your daily charging habits. And based on the data it gathers, it charges at 80% during your typical charging periods, but climbs to 100% just before you usually unplug.
This feature isn't available for everyone using iOS 17 — you musthave the iPhone 15 in order to use it. If you just can't live without the new iPhone battery feature, you can already preorder the 6.1-inch iPhone 15, 6.7-inch iPhone 15 Plus, 6.1-inch iPhone 15 Pro, and 6.7-inch iPhone 15 Pro Max. They start at the same prices as the phones that came before them: The iPhone 15, the iPhone 15 Plus, and the iPhone 15 Pro start at $799, $899, and $999, respectively.
Topics Apple iPhone
(Editor: {typename type="name"/})
NYT Connections hints and answers for May 10: Tips to solve 'Connections' #699.
5 things to fill the void now 'Game of Thrones' is over
'Sharp Objects': Who is the killer?
Elon Musk opens up about the personal toll Tesla is taking on him
Outdoor speaker deal: Save $20 on the Soundcore Boom 2
Anki's wild journey from WWDC star to consumer robot innovator
'Jurassic Park' returning to theaters for 25th anniversary
Introducing the most awkward three
Japan orders Google to stop alleged antitrust violations
Man catching a breeze on a subway grate is the king of summer
接受PR>=1、BR>=1,流量相当,内容相关类链接。