Date:20/02/18
A new report reveals the apps that are guilty of drawing the highest amounts of battery power, and could be draining your phone dry.
It turns out that some of the biggest offenders are hugely popular apps, including Facebook, Snapchat, and Netflix.
The research comes courtesy of mobile security firm Avast, which drew data from more than 3 million Android smartphone users.
The results were split into two different categories: apps that run when you start your phone up, and apps that you manually launch yourself.
Two of Samsung's apps take top spot, but other common apps include Google Maps, WhatsApp, and Facebook.
Google Maps regularly tracks your location to help provide better services, while Facebook and WhatsApp are constantly connected to the network to make sure you're notified about incoming messages.
There are also some apps that smartphone users intentionally launch that also drain battery, however.
So what can you do to reduce your battery life burn? According to Avast, it's just about changing your habits.
"If battery life is an issue, turn off push notifications from messaging apps or cut down on sending, or watching multimedia files while on the go, as these activities can drain battery life," the company explains.
These apps crush your phone’s battery
IS your smartphone always running low on battery life? A power-hungry app could be to blame.A new report reveals the apps that are guilty of drawing the highest amounts of battery power, and could be draining your phone dry.
It turns out that some of the biggest offenders are hugely popular apps, including Facebook, Snapchat, and Netflix.
The research comes courtesy of mobile security firm Avast, which drew data from more than 3 million Android smartphone users.
The results were split into two different categories: apps that run when you start your phone up, and apps that you manually launch yourself.
Two of Samsung's apps take top spot, but other common apps include Google Maps, WhatsApp, and Facebook.
Google Maps regularly tracks your location to help provide better services, while Facebook and WhatsApp are constantly connected to the network to make sure you're notified about incoming messages.
There are also some apps that smartphone users intentionally launch that also drain battery, however.
So what can you do to reduce your battery life burn? According to Avast, it's just about changing your habits.
"If battery life is an issue, turn off push notifications from messaging apps or cut down on sending, or watching multimedia files while on the go, as these activities can drain battery life," the company explains.
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