Here is the solution
You can reduce the consumption of Battery
By applying dark wallpapers
Because
This disactivates pixels of your screen where its pure black
As pixels are not in work
It doesn't consumes battery
Thx
Related
On my old Nokia when the battery got below 10% the backlight would automatically reduce to minimum brightness to save power. On my Touch HD it happily blasts away at full brightness until 0% when it croaks.
Is there an application that will dim the light at a pre-defined %age level of battery power?
Idea from https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.style_7.clockwidget_7mobile
Thanks to Style7.
Small memory usage.
Small battery drain.
http://pc.cd/6tc
Just curious. How many of you are seeing screen-burn in on your phones?
I use CF.Lumen to adjust the screen to be warmer at night. I notice some darker areas/burn-in with CF.Lumen enabled and the screen brightness dimmed to super low levels (using CF.Lumen's built-in darkness slider for Sleep mode)
What I notice is a sort of dark spot at very low brightness, and a sort of dark shadowy line running down the screen close to the left side. It's kinda annoying but I really only see it when I have text on the screen (and I'm trying to read text) at lower-than-stock dimness levels. I'm slowly getting used to it. At first I panicked thinking that my screen had burned in already at a few months of use, but when I have CF.Lumen off and I have the stock brightness slider set all the way to 0, I don't notice any lines or weird dark spots.
Then again, 0 brightness using the stock brightness slider is still VERY bright if you're coming from iOS's Accessibility settings. Android has poor screen filter settings and few good screen filter apps outside CF.Lumen and f.lux and I doubt Android 12 will change that.
So, are any of you experiencing screen burn-in? OLED burn-in is something that always has me worried. I try to avoid OLED phones for this reason, because I'm paranoid.
OLEDs have a finite lifespan. The brighter they burn, the shorter they last.
The higher energy blue emitters have the shortest life span, while red the longest.
Darker screen wallpaper, dark mode and less white icons/headers helps reduce wear.
Use manual brightness control and avoid going over 50% whenever possible. Don't use in direct sunlight... this is a killer.
Move icons and widgets periodically on the homescreen. Avoid prolonged white screen viewing and apps that are dark mode illiterate.
These practices also increase battery life substantially.
Use Screen Test to see if any damage is present.
After over 1.5 years of heavy usage and one battery replacement, my AMOLED display on my Note 10+ shows no signs of damage. How you use it day to day/what you view with it makes a big difference in display longevity.
So, I like standard aod, all time on. Clock moves, but battery percentage is always on same spot and it is white...
Is there way to remove it from aod and is there danger to destroy screen with it at all?
Thanks.
And one more question - is there some mod to change white balance and rgb strength in natural display mode?
Thanks
Don't think that's actually possible.
And is fixed battery percentage danger for screen?
I wouldn't worry about it.
Even if the phone is not in battery saving mode, it turns off animations, lowers the screen refresh rate and lowers the screen brightness as if it is in battery saver mode. Notification bar becomes transparent as attached. Can you help me.
Device : xiaomi 13
Miui Global 14.0.4