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Battery Pack Options for Juicing Up The iPhone 3G

kensingtonbattery

One week into the joys of iPhone 3G ownership, there are a few issues some of us (or many of us even) are still getting to grips with - and getting battery life where we’d like it to be is certainly on that short list.

So it’s good to see a couple of posts today with short rundowns of some extended battery options for the iPhone 3G, to help it give it a boost.  Geek.com has an article on this, with a couple of choices (though one is clearly not designed for the 3G and took some forcing to make work), and Gizmodo also has a good little list with a few handy battery helpers.

Most of the battery backs featured are relatively compact and bolt right on to the iPhone’s dock / charger connector.  I’ve been testing (and will soon review) one of them, the Kensington Mini, with the V1 iPhone, and liking it a fair bit.

If you’re not getting the results you want with battery life so far, you may want to peruse a few of those choices and see if they’ll work for you.

In the meantime, I’m also finding my battery life is improving with some tight management of when certain services are on.  More than anything, I’ve noticed a *huge* improvement once I scrapped Push and Fetch for email (and all the rest).  I turned it off completely a couple of nights back and have seen a much, much better performance hit than I got with any other efforts so far.

I realize that for many folks push may be a necessity or a dealbreaker - but I’m not trading stocks or doing anything that is so time-sensitive that I really require this.  I’ll take the much better battery life and check mail when I need to.

Have you got a good strategy for maximizing your iPhone 3G battery life worked out?  Will you be looking at any accessory options in this area?

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5 Comments so far »

  1. by TimmyGUNZ, on July 18 2008 @ 7:08 pm

     

    Does push really make a big difference? I would think that fetch would do more since it’s always making a connection, but Push should just be a small process running in the background waiting for a signal.

  2. by mas90guru, on July 18 2008 @ 8:17 pm

     

    Let me know what you like Patrick. I really like Mophie with the drawback being (a) it’s not yet 3G and (b) the build quality isn’t great - the back of mine started rubbing off. I can live with the build quality because I love that it has a rubberized feel to help me hold onto the iPhone. The added bulk doesn’t bother me which I was very surprised about.

    Apple made a mistake not building in a removable…

  3. by PatrickJ, on July 19 2008 @ 4:16 pm

     

    TimmyGUNZ - good point, Push is meant to be the far more efficient method in this respect, Fetch is likely the far worse culprit. Truth is, I just don’t need either - mail is not that time-sensitive for me just now. I can keep up fine with neither turned on.

    mas90guru - will do! I am fond of the Kensington Mini so far …

  4. by Ragart, on July 20 2008 @ 6:10 pm

     

    I’m a fan of extra power, but solutions like this one look like they take away some of the aesthetic appeal of the iPhone :(

    I saw another batt like this one that makes it look like a Nokia 8800 when attached, that one looked semi neat. You end up with a 7 foot phone though, hahahah.

  5. by PatrickJ, on July 20 2008 @ 10:22 pm

     

    Ragart - true, there’s a trade-off on aesthetics, but I think most of us are only going to use these when needed, not have them attached all the time kinda thing. I can live with that trade-off :)

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