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I am pretty OK with phones that last half a day with intensive usage seeing as I almost always carry a USB charger. One that can charge my phone several times over due to its large battery.
 
My entry level Windows Phone
...and that basically negates all arguments by Buouysel.

As long as a phone lasts me for 10 hours with heavy usage, I'm fine. I'm never more than 10 hours away from my home or car charger.
 
...and that basically negates all arguments by Buouysel.

As long as a phone lasts me for 10 hours with heavy usage, I'm fine. I'm never more than 10 hours away from my home or car charger.

My point is that Android is so inefficient currently. If I don't use my phone at all I bet it would last a week. It lasts nearly two days with moderate usage. My last Android device could sit on my desk at work, not used at all and would drain the battery to 30% in just 8 hours.
 
Search Ars Technica for the HTC One (M8) for Windows review. It kind of demonstrates that Windows Phone just makes a phone live much longer under normal circumstances. It is funny how even a software swap is enough to squeeze in several extra hours' worth of battery life with everything on full throttle while browsing the Internet. "Power saver" on Android does go ahead of WP, but at a huge cost - really slow phone, anyone?
 
"Power saver" on Android does go ahead of WP, but at a huge cost - really slow phone, anyone?

You meant, as in underclocking? If I recall correctly, underclocking can make any hardware less power consuming while sacrificing some performance, which is why I don't use it. I don't overclock my phone, either.
 
You meant, as in underclocking? If I recall correctly, underclocking can make any hardware less power consuming while sacrificing some performance, which is why I don't use it. I don't overclock my phone, either.

Yeah, exactly that. Makes me wonder what kind of record WPs can set if Battery Saver also underclocked the CPU.
 
My point is that Android is so inefficient currently. If I don't use my phone at all I bet it would last a week. It lasts nearly two days with moderate usage. My last Android device could sit on my desk at work, not used at all and would drain the battery to 30% in just 8 hours.

That could just be your last phone - if mine's at 100% when I leave for work and I don't touch it all day, I leave work at 95-90%.

Thomas was being really rude though. :/
 
A wedged background process can, and probably will kill the battery life of any device, no matter what OS it is running. Updates are your friend...and so is judicious rebooting.
 
My point is that Android is so inefficient currently. If I don't use my phone at all I bet it would last a week. It lasts nearly two days with moderate usage. My last Android device could sit on my desk at work, not used at all and would drain the battery to 30% in just 8 hours.

There are lots of confounding factors though. What're the battery sizes (mAh) between the two phones? Processor strength? Screen size? Screen resolution?

People praised the iPhone 4 so much because of its unparalleled battery life, despite it having a small battery. Yet, it only had a 640 resolution iirc and a tiny screen, and lacked anything beyond 3G radios
It's not fair to compare and contrast without noting these differences
Note: See iPhone 5S and iPhone 6, 6 has a bigger battery, but larger screen and higher resolution
Therefore, I'm sure the battery life will actually be the same, despite a bigger battery. But I'll wait for GSMarena to perform their endurance tests

Search Ars Technica for the HTC One (M8) for Windows review. It kind of demonstrates that Windows Phone just makes a phone live much longer under normal circumstances. It is funny how even a software swap is enough to squeeze in several extra hours' worth of battery life with everything on full throttle while browsing the Internet. "Power saver" on Android does go ahead of WP, but at a huge cost - really slow phone, anyone?

This was known before the M8 Windows Phone, or a least it should have been
Take two phone with identical resolutions, screen sizes, and batteries (or make proportions to even them out) and you have yourself a fair comparison
Windows Phone has been the best for battery life since Windows Phone 8 came out
I compared a bunch of phones by their listed 3G battery lives on GSM networks, and divided the standby hours by the mAh battery size, making sure that I compared phones with the same clock speed and sscreen size (and resolution), and kept getting the best numbers from Windows Phone
 
This was known before the M8 Windows Phone, or a least it should have been
Take two phone with identical resolutions, screen sizes, and batteries (or make proportions to even them out) and you have yourself a fair comparison
Windows Phone has been the best for battery life since Windows Phone 8 came out
I compared a bunch of phones by their listed 3G battery lives on GSM networks, and divided the standby hours by the mAh battery size, making sure that I compared phones with the same clock speed and sscreen size (and resolution), and kept getting the best numbers from Windows Phone

8.0 is actually pretty awful in terms of standby power usage; things worked out for the most part with 8.1, at least with Lumia handsets.
 
I recently download iOS 8.0 expecting some drastic changes from the previous release, but I really can't see much worthy of a whole new release. There's a couple of new apps, smarter features etc but there's no real changes that have an impact like iOS 7.0 did. Slighty disappointed to say the least.
 
I recently download iOS 8.0 expecting some drastic changes from the previous release, but I really can't see much worthy of a whole new release. There's a couple of new apps, smarter features etc but there's no real changes that have an impact like iOS 7.0 did. Slighty disappointed to say the least.

Well, you can't expect a massive UI overhaul every year.

I am really glad Apple has decided to open its doors a little more with iOS 8. Finally able to type on my iPhone using the Swype keyboard without any jailbreak required. Overall, iOS 8 is still better than the abomination known as iOS 6.
 
New OS + first day of playing around with it = expect some things to not be up to expectations simply because you're actively playing around with it.
 
Well, for some odd reason, span title tags aren't showing up in Google Chrome on my desktop, but they show up on Google Chrome on my laptop. Weird...

Check extensions one-by-one. Try visiting the same page after all extensions are disabled.

If not, reinstall.
 
Congrats! I guess, Samsung *bleh* lol.

Speaking of Tablets, I went to use my Nexus 7 '13 last night, and the little plastic siding next to the glass was chipped at a corner, like a whole corner was missing. Made a mistake of letting my brothers ever use it, since they already scratched the back close to when I first got it. I'll try to see if I can fix it, but ugh.
(We do have cases, but they don't keep them on. And they suck since their 'generic 7" tablet' cases.)

In other news, I guess iOS 8 is nearing half of devices, big shocker there. I feel sorry for Apple users, as soon as their not supported by the latest update, no more new stuff for them, app support drops, no new features. Android you get app support, new features, ect on ICS or even Froyo.
 
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