Thursday, May 26, 2016

Do YOU have 'low battery anxiety'?

http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2016/05/24/22/3494E24C00000578-0-image-a-2_1464124990440.jpg

Americans are becoming power hungry!

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When it comes to choosing between hitting the gym or charging their smartphone, a survey of 2,000 Americans by LG found one in three people are likely to skip the gym.

  • 32 per cent of us will 'drop everything' to head home and charge phones
  • 17 per cent of males missed match on a dating app because phone died
  • 60 per cent have blamed a dead phone for not speaking to a loved one
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It's midday, and your phone's battery is dangerously close to the 20 per cent mark.
If you're like the majority of people, that red icon will leave you feeling panicked, annoyed and hunting for a spare charger.
LG has dubbed this condition 'Low Battery Anxiety' and says that nearly 9 out of 10 people suffer from the fear of losing power on their phone.
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The survey found 41 per cent of people fear missed calles the most when faced with a dead battery. And 17 per cent of males missed a match on a datting app because their phone died before they could swipe

LOW BATTERY ANXIETY: SYMPTOMS

- Asking a total stranger to charge their smartphone
- Arguing with a significant other or romantic interest because of unanswered calls or texts
- Ordering something at a bar or restaurant just to use their power outlet
- Secretly 'borrowing' someone else's charger
- Owning three or more smartphone charging cables
The company polled a random sample of more than 2,000 adult smartphone users in the US earlier this year. 
When it comes to choosing between hitting the gym or charging their smartphone, it found one in three people are likely to skip the gym.
But millennials tend to have it worse – with 42 per cent likely to skip the gym when choosing between working out or charging their phone.
Smartphone users will even 'drop everything' (32 percent) and make a U-turn to head back home to charge their phone.
'Chances are Low Battery Anxiety is ruining relationships; a loved one you believed was 'ghosting' you could simply be exhibiting classic symptoms,' the company wrote in a statement.
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When faced with only a few minutes of power, half of smartphone users will use the remaining time to text, while 35 per cent will use their last moments to make a phone call
The survey found 60 percent of people blamed a dead phone for not speaking to a family member, friend, co-worker or significant other if their battery was low.
And what's more, one in three people have gotten into an argument with a significant other or romantic interest as a result of unanswered calls or texts because their smartphone was dead.

BATTERY COMING OUT IN 2020 THAT COULD HOLD 40% MORE ENERGY

Sony is working on lithium-sulfur battery and a magnesium-sulfur battery that they say will be able to carry 40 per cent more energy than the traditional batteries. 
Sony tells Nikkei that it's working on a battery that uses sulfur at the negative electrode (and plain old lithium at the positive one) to provide an energy density per unit volume of 1,000 Wh/L. 
or comparison, most conventional lithium-ion batteries have an energy density of around 700Wh/L Read
The research also found 41 per cent of people fear missed calls the most when faced with a dead battery.
And 17 per cent of males missed a match on a dating app because their phone died before they could swipe.
When faced with only a few minutes of power, half of smartphone users will use the remaining time to text, while 35 per cent will use their last moments to make a phone call.
Around 46 per cent of people say they feel embarrassed to ask a total stranger to use their charger, but would anyway because the anxiety of a dead smartphone is too great.
More than 60 per cent of millennials will turn off their smartphone, and half will refrain from taking photos in hopes of prolonging their battery life.
If you do find that your phone is constantly flashing ‘battery low’, an Engineer has four simple tricks to extend its life.
'If you've ever traveled out of the country, you've probably had to turn every feature off your phone except for calling and texting,' Paul Shearing, a chemical engineer at the University College London told DailyMail.com
'Turning off the extra features ensures your battery will last longer, because there are a lot of hungry apps that are draining your battery without your realizing it.'
Shearing explained that a smartphone uses a lot of power just to keep apps up-to-date.
Turning off the 'background refresh' setting on these apps can save that power for keeping your phone alive, and the same goes for notifications.
Another trick to improving your battery life is to make sure your phone never gets too hot.
A smartphone is a mini-computer and has the same parts except for a cooling fan. When your phone is overheating the CPU chip is also operating full force, which uses a lot of your battery life.
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Around 46 per cent of people say they feel embarrassed to ask a total stranger to use their charger, but would anyway because the anxiety of a dead smartphone is too great
http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2016/05/24/21/3494C1AA00000578-3607598-The_survey_found_60_percent_of_people_blamed_a_dead_phone_for_no-m-59_1464123204307.jpg
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The survey found 60 percent of people blamed a dead phone for not speaking to a family member, friend, co-worker or significant other if their battery was low

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