Free advice: Turn your phone's damn battery percentage off.

 

Free advice: Turn your phone's damn battery percentage off

Attention is a kind of love. 

Except when it's directed toward your iPhone and its unending series of notifications, at which point, if you're anything like me, is nothing more than a specific kind of anxiety unto itself: "Why am I staring at this thing so much, and why's it making me feel awful?"

To really fix this, you'd need a psychiatrist. But! One modest, simple change could help put a stop to this: 

Stop your phone from displaying the percentage of battery life it has left.

That's it.

That little number, affixed to the top-right of your screen if you've enabled it*, is a countdown clock of disaster and doom, kept minutes away from midnight only by the repeated jamming of a power cord into your device's greedy little maw. Seeing this percentage may invite obsessive charging; I find that stress starts creeping in around 64 percent. 

And sure, it seems like there's a logic to turning the percentage on. Knowing exactly how much battery life you have left helps you figure out when you'll need to haul ass to an electrical outlet. Say you're leaving the office with 30 percent left: You'll definitely have enough juice to browse the internet on your commute and make an emergency call if, for example, a wayward Humvee runs over your ankle and you need to go to the emergency room. You'll probably have enough to play a game in the ambulance! 

Leaving with 2 percent, though? R.I.P., friend. If that Humvee runs you over, you'll bleed out and die, alone — from an ankle wound — on the side of the road. 

But indeed, the logic is only seeming. The battery icon, without a specific percentage number, gives you all the information you need, but not enough to drive you Shining levels of crazy. Here's how it works:

- When you've got half your battery life left, the indicator will appear half-full; you'll make it home without a charge. 

- If it's red and nearly empty, perhaps plug your iPhone in for a few minutes before leaving.

Again: That's it.

What does a number offer you that this icon cannot? Nothing! Unless you're trying to diagnose exactly how much battery life having Snapchat open on your screen for five straight minutes will consume (the answer is one entire percent), there's no meaningful gain to the numerical value over the icon. 

We're trained, by our phones and the software they run, to obsess over numbers. How many likes did your post get? How many unread emails do you have? How many iMessage notifications did you miss while you were asleep?

"Convenience" excuses all these numbers, which are often designed to command your attention to the benefit of companies like Facebook and Apple. Social media apps profit when a number convinces you to spend more time in in your feeds, on their platforms. And tech manufacturers stand to benefit if you're so obsessed with your battery life that you buy new charging peripherals or, eventually, a new device.

And that's fine, kind of, as long as we've at least got some options. And indeed we do! Untether your mind from your phone. Disable the battery percentage indicator. Liberate yourself. 

[I also try to cut out "badge notifications," those encircled numbers you see on apps when they have something new to show you, but you do you.]

The overall idea here is nothing more than to be smarter (or: mindful, if you're like that) about how you approach the things in your life that generate endless, nagging data. Maybe you're not an anxiety-stuffed, phone-obsessed, fidget-spinning meatbag like I am; that's great! But if you suspect you might be, well, take a baby-step, and turn off one number at a time. You'll thank yourself.


* Yes, okay, I invited this. By default, your iPhone will simply show you a little battery icon that depletes over time. This is much better! It seems Apple knows a thing or two about designing an operating system that doesn't make you want to dropkick your own brain (sometimes). 

Comments

  1. As a literate adult I'd rather have a percentage diplayed, or even the actual amount of energy left in mAH, than this stupid picture.

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  2. That's what people get for buying iphones to begin with

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  3. Now hear me out if you owned a modern iPhone (x xs 11 12) or a good portion of androids you wouldn’t have this option therefore the argument kind of looses its stance

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    Replies
    1. True, what type of stress would this number give the guy if he could have 50+% in 20 mins

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    2. Most modern phones can do that not that I’d suggest it

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  4. Better yet - block clickbait posters Mashable, this then buy a phone with a decent charge controller so you get accurate battery state information.

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  5. What this article (or how much I've read of it) seems to ignore that 15% @ 3000 mAh isn't the same as 15% @ 6000 mAh

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    1. You aren’t supposed to be comparing it with other phones. It’s just so you know the percentage of the battery on yours . ;D ;D ;D

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    2. I'm comparing with my previous phones and changing charging habits accordingly :)

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  6. Bobby Rein - I knew I wasn’t the only one.

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  7. It has never phased me.... 1% left I'll still use it till it dies... Then eventually get it on charge before I goto bed

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  8. Draining lithium batteries is bad tho

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    Replies
    1. That's terrible for your battery

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  9. i think NO. If you had said that turning off this feature actually saved power or something, then yes this article would be of good use.
    But knowing precise batt percentage allows you when to charge precisely or not. People who overcharge are the ones who don't actually have this feature on.
    Mashable - please come up with better articles

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    Replies
    1. Overcharge is the wrong wording. Overcharging is when the voltage of the battery is over 4.2V, your phone's charging circuit won't let the battery go over 4.2V. Actually, now a days, when you get a brand new phone, your battery will be 100% at a lower voltage like 4.0V and over time they'll slowly increase to 4.2V to make it seem like your battery is holding the same charge as it did when you got it.

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    2. Phones dont ovecharge , after 100% it disconnect automatically , if fall to 99% it will charge again

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  10. No IDont Think - GIF

    https://media1.tenor.co/images/5ef0c3ed8c69c1c57fd47cf8d140b542/tenor.gif?itemid=17162888

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  11. If knowing your battery percentage stresses you out, throw your phone away. Makes about as much logical sense as this article. Maybe block out the expiration date on your milk jug too, knowing its bad before tasting could be stressful.

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  12. No i don't have a lot of trust with my lemon Samsung.

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  13. Thank you for sharing an article from two years ago!

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  14. Yeah. It's way better to not know.... Get the **** outta here with this ****!

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  15. Doesn't bother me at all since I bought a 10000 mAh phone. Play all day and hardly gets below 50%.

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  16. Its never a good idea to charge your phone again unless it under 40% ;)
    my phone is at 96% and has 21 hours and 35 min power left usually at 40% it stil has 9 hrs left ;) also if you want to save power when you don't use your phone for calls anymore or don't want to be disturbed put it in airplane mode which saves you about 50-60 % of battery life and you can do everything else on wifi :)

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    Replies
    1. okay... For starters that's false for lithium batteries. They love to be topped up. They are damaged by being drained. Second off airplane mode disables wifi on every mobile device ever made. This is by far the dumbest non political facebook post I've seen in ages. You literally have no idea what you are talking about.

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    2. wifi can be used in aeroplane mode

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    3. okay... For starters that's false for lithium batteries. They love to be topped up. They are damaged by being drained. Second off airplane mode disables wifi on every mobile device ever made. This is by far the dumbest non political facebook post I've seen in ages. You literally have no idea what you are talking about.

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  17. How will battery number will improve my life instead of battery life

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  18. I did that a year ago. It psychologically makes you ok and calm than seeing the percentage going down which gives a whole lot of stress to the brain

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    Replies
    1. The notch on my phone limits the number of icons that display, so I disabled the percentage number next to the battery and I do feel less stress from it.

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  19. Hey hey, it is by default on iPhone

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  20. If any one is smart enough there is an ideal feature called low power mode make the battery lasts twice as long

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  21. I don't have a iFasion so I don't need to worry :D

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  22. That's like saying to remove your fuel guage because ykno, it's too stressful to know when you gotta fill up. What ?

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  23. Let's all also disconnect our vehicle's fuel gauge o.O

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  24. the article was written in 2018 for old phones so it is irrelevant now as new iPhone by default does not show battery percentage.

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  25. yk honestly i get it. maybe it'd make me be more conservative about my phone usage bc i only have a vague idea of when it'll run out, instead of an (honestly at times, inaccurate) number. but i still cant because i work with my phone and need to know the percentage.

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