1:
Keep Display Brightness Low
The large display on the iPad
requires a lot of power to backlight, so reducing the brightness of that display
can help significantly when aiming to prolong or preserve battery life.
Fortunately this is really easy to adjust now with iOS’s new Control Center
feature:
- Swipe up fro the bottom of the iPad to summon Control Center, slide the display brightness setting to as low as usable for maximum battery life
For nearly everyone, controlling
display brightness and managing brightness levels will have the single most
significant impact on iPad Air battery life (or any iPad for that matter). If
you do nothing else, focus on adjusting the display brightness. For indoors I
typically aim for 25%, and reading in dim light going for around 10%-15% can be
just fine. Of course if you’re using the iPad Air in direct sunlight you’ll
need to have it brighter, just be aware that 100% brightness is going to lead
to rapid draining.
2:
Disable Background App Refresh
Background App Refresh causes apps
to update even when they’re not in use. But the iPad (and other iOS devices)
are primarily used for a single app at a time, so who cares if an app is
updating in the background or not? If you care about battery life, you’ll want
to disable this feature:
- Settings > General > Background App Refresh > OFF
Note that even the settings for this
one says “Turning off apps may help preserve battery life” – just turn the
whole thing off. If you don’t care about battery life, well you can leave it
on, but this article is written for those who do. Many users also notice
setting this feature off will boost speed a bit, though it’s much less
noticeable on the newest devices with beefier processing capacities.
3:
Disable Automatic App Updates
Automatic app updates causes your
applications to update themselves automatically when a new version is available
on the App Store. Fancy feature, but like anything else that needlessly runs in
the background, it can unnecessarily use system resources and impact battery
life. Turn it off:
- Settings > iTunes & App Store > Automatic Downloads > Updates > OFF
Yes, you’ll have to manually update
your apps from the App Store like some kind of technological dinosaur that we
all were pre-iOS 7, but your iPad Air battery life should thank you.
4:
Lose the Motion & Zoom Transitions
The eye pleasing zooming and motion
effects sure look fancy, but like any other eye candy centric feature, it
requires resources to use. Thus, turning off the zoom and replacing it with fading transitions can have an impact on battery
life, plus it makes the iPad feel faster:
- Settings > General > Accessibility > Reduce Motion > ON
The fading transition effects are
still attractive, this is not much of a loss. Note that turning on Motion
Reduction also disables the parallax effect, which is the interesting effect of
the icons and background moving around as the device itself is physically
moved.
5:
Ditch the Fancy Moving Wallpapers
Just like the zoom transitions
require system resources to fly around on a 10″ display, Dynamic wallpaper does
too. Does it serve a purpose beyond eye candy? Not really, so if you’re
concerned about battery life, don’t use the (admittedly fancy) dynamic
wallpapers:
- Settings > Wallpaper & Brightness > Choose Wallpaper > Stills > anything that isn’t Dynamic
Beyond batteries, picking the right
wallpaper can also make a pretty big difference in the overall usability and appearance of iOS, aim for
something without a lot of clashing colors for best results.
6:
Turn Off Unnecessary Location Services
Location-based services are
notoriously battery hungry because they have to periodically check your
location for an event or notification to trigger. Turn off as many location
services as possible for best results:
- Settings > Privacy > Location Services > set anything unnecessary to OFF
- Settings > Privacy > Location Services > System Services > Frequent Locations > OFF
This is particularly important for
LTE enabled devices because location services will use the LTE band and GPS to
attempt to locate the device. That can lead to unnecessary battery drain if you
primarily use the iPad in a single location, like your couch.
If you use the iPad almost
exclusively at home, consider turning off all location abilities except for
apps like TV guides that use location just once, or for things like Siri and
weather, which will only use the location when requested

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