Simple Way to Improve Your iPhone’s Battery Performance by 15%

It can’t be said enough: Uninstalling the Facebook app does some wonderful things for your phone
Simple Way to Improve Your iPhone’s Battery Performance by 15%
A member of the Israeli startup StoreDot demonstrates a bio-organic charger system which they are developing that can recharge a smartphone battery in just 30 seconds at their laboratory in the Tel Aviv on April 9, 2014. (Jack Guez/AFP/Getty Images; effects added by Epoch Times)
2/8/2016
Updated:
2/8/2016

It can’t be said enough: Uninstalling the Facebook app does some wonderful things for your phone. Last week we pointed to some tests that showed uninstalling Facebook from your Android phone could improve its battery life by as much as 20% and now there are new tests that show you can get a similar battery boost by uninstalling the app from your iPhone. Specifically, The Guardian’s Samuel Gibbs has found that “uninstalling Facebook’s iOS app and switching to Safari can save up to 15% of iPhone battery life.”

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Gibbs recorded his typical battery life for a week before uninstalling the Facebook app and then using Safari to access the social networking website online. After a week of using the phone without the Facebook iOS app installed, he discovered that his battery performance was on average 15% better and he had a lot more storage on his device as well.

“At the point I had deleted the Facebook app it had consumed around 500MB in total combining the 111MB of the app itself and its cache on the iPhone,” he explains. It goes without saying that you won’t have that particular issue if you just access Facebook through Safari.

Best of all, Facebook’s mobile site lets you do almost everything you can do through its mobile app, although some features such as Instant Articles aren’t available. Even so, if you aren’t a heavy Facebook user and you want to give your iPhone an instant battery boost, uninstalling the Facebook iOS app seems like a prudent move.

This article was originally published on BGR. Read the original article.