I owned an iPhone 6 for two years. During the second winter I spent with it, whenever I'd go for a run in the cold, the iPhone would shut down at some point mid-run, even if I'd charged it fully right before I left my house. There was no way to turn it back on without connecting it to power. It was beyond frustrating.
Now I know why it was happening. My iPhone, which I was using to track my run via GPS, stream music from Amazon or Spotify over cellular, and relay social-media "cheers" to me as audio notifications via the Nike+ Running app — not to mention all the other everyday background stuff an iPhone does — was, at some point, pushing the processor hard enough to demand a lot of current from the battery. And my battery, which was over a year old at this point, simply couldn't handle it, certainly not in the cold. It had a panic attack and shut down.
SEE ALSO: A hands-on review of the iPhone XApple directly addressed this problem when it released iOS 10.2.1 in January 2017. That was too late for me — I had moved on to the iPhone 7 by then — but presumably thousands of early morning runners with old iPhones in the Northern Hemisphere were grateful.
That is, until this week.
After Reddit users kicked off a discussion about slower iPhone performance in older models, Geekbench founder John Poole appeared to confirm what everyone thought: Many of the older iPhones score lower (sometimes much lower) in benchmarks than a brand-new model. And it's clear that specific iOS updates were introduced to limit performance, at least in certain conditions. In a statement emailed to Mashable on Wednesday, Apple essentially confirmed this was the case.
Ultimately Apple did the right thing: This is a feature, not a bug.
This seems outrageous — as Poole says in his post, "We expect battery capacity to decrease as batteries age, we expect processor performance to stay the same."
Let's holster the pitchforks for a second, though. The "certain conditions" are the detail this hinges on. Apple is clear that the OS will scale back processor performance so it won't tax the battery with "peak current demands," and that it only does so in cold conditions, when the battery has a low charge, or when they batteries are old.
Let's also be clear what benchmarks are: a set of tests to push a processor to its limits to assess how it compares to other phones and chips out there, not an assessment of overall experience. Most day-to-day activities rarely push your iPhone to "peak."
What will you experience if you do? The iPhone will spread its power demands out over a slightly longer period of time, which could mean encountering some lag. In my morning-run example, I probably would have heard a song pause for a few seconds, or the Nike+ app might have been slow to respond. God help me if I asked Siri for anything in that moment.
But compared to an out-of-the-blue shutdown? I'll take it. I'd agree with Matthew Panzarino at TechCrunch that this isn't "throttling" per sesince it only scales things back at peak conditions. Let's call this what it is — performance limiting. The point, though, is that ultimately Apple did the right thing: This is a feature, not a bug.
Certainly, Apple could have been more transparent about this, and it could stillbe more transparent. (I'd like to know what percentage Apple considers a "low" battery, and how many charging cycles constitutes an "old" battery.) While Apple's culture of secrecy is still brilliant marketing, in situations like this, it doesn't help. As this ordeal shows, Apple can't change the laws of battery chemistry, but it could change the conversation with its customers — if it would just have one in the first place.
文章
3639
浏览
71247
获赞
4
Amazon workers in U.S. test positive for coronavirus in 8 warehouses
Amazon workers in eight warehouses across the U.S. have tested positive for COVID-19, the WashingtonHow to avoid common IRS scams during tax season
It’s that time of the year again: tax season. While some of you are preparing your tax returnsRyan Reynolds' tweet about auditioning at Marvel is classic Ryan Reynolds
If Ryan Reynolds has never won a caption competition, the only possible explanation is that Ryan Rey'OK Boomer' is the burn that unites generations — even boomers
Perhaps it is for the best that not even meme experts know who first posted the generational burn ofApple could debut its new laptop chip in a Macbook Pro this year
A few weeks after Apple announced it would start developing its own silicon chip for Mac computers,Watch this man's emotional reunion with his dog who was lost for 3 years
You're definitely going to want a box of tissues close by for this one.Ontario man Mike Plas was atInvestigation reveals driver in fatal Tesla crash playing phone game
Federal investigators found that a man who died in a Tesla crash was playing a video game at the timThe optimal way to remotely watch Netflix with friends
With many European and American cities in quarantined coronavirus lockdown, the world's hottest clubApple unveils iPadOS 14 with search and Apple Pencil upgrades
During its Worldwide Developers Conference on Monday, Apple announced tons of new features for the iShady meme says 'stop talking sh*t' and proceeds to talk sh*t
Need a way to tell people to stop talking shit about something when you really just want to talk shiGoogle asks tens of thousands of U.S. workers to stay home amid coronavirus fears
As concern about the coronavirus continues to build, many workplaces are encouraging people to workAmazon workers in U.S. test positive for coronavirus in 8 warehouses
Amazon workers in eight warehouses across the U.S. have tested positive for COVID-19, the WashingtonThis flaming cocktail belongs in 'Harry Potter'
Some mixologists double as magical wizards.Bartender Joe Cobbe recently lit up his feed and our liveTesla Model 3 named top EV in 'Consumer Reports' annual list
The "Top Picks for 2020" are in from Consumer Reports and Porsche fans aren't going to be happy abouThe tech product that made Bloomberg rich is a symbol for his campaign
As billionaire and former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg attempts to buy (and meme) his way i