Since when does biggest battery equal best battery life? It's not how much capacity that matters - it's how a device uses that energy (read: efficiency).
[citation][nom]jacobdrj[/nom]I always buy extended batteries for all of my phones as soon as they become available. 3500 mah should be the standard MINIMUM.To h*** with teeny tiny batteries! I want more JUICE!!![/citation]
Agreed. I'm currently using a 5400 mah battery on my Samsung Note and I can't imagine myself downgrading to anything under 3000 mah.
[citation][nom]ikyung[/nom]Agreed. I'm currently using a 5400 mah battery on my Samsung Note and I can't imagine myself downgrading to anything under 3000 mah.[/citation]I bet your note is nice and svelte too.
[citation][nom]ikyung[/nom]Agreed. I'm currently using a 5400 mah battery on my Samsung Note and I can't imagine myself downgrading to anything under 3000 mah.[/citation]
You might as well as carry a tablet with the weight you're carrying around.
My Samsung Omnia 7 comes with a pathetic 1500mAh battery. There are options to upgrade it to 1800 which is pretty pathetic also. I could get the 3600mAh version, but you need a special case extended and you might as well be carrying a brick.
[quotemsg=10426604,11,254945]My Samsung Omnia 7 comes with a pathetic 1500mAh battery. There are options to upgrade it to 1800 which is pretty pathetic also. I could get the 3600mAh version, but you need a special case extended and you might as well be carrying a brick.[/quotemsg]
My HTC 7 Trophy comes with an even more abysmal 1300mAh battery..
Thing barely lasts half a day..
I need a new phone =/
[citation][nom]tearsana[/nom]You might as well as carry a tablet with the weight you're carrying around.[/citation]
im not strong, my hands are barely able to grip at times due to pain, and with that i still find it very hard to tell the difference between 1lbs and 5lbs.
god knows im not very strong but thats not the point.
[citation][nom]schwizer[/nom]Isn't the standard voltage 3.7V? If it is, the 4.35V will also add to that since 3500 mah are not the same at 3.7 and 4.35V.[/citation]4.35V is the maximum charge voltage for this Li-polymer battery. Charging the battery to this voltage will drastically shorten its service life. Actually any voltage above 4.20V stresses the battery and compromises safety.
looks amazing based on the descriptions and photos that I have seen over the internet. The selling factor will be the long battery life. Most smartphone batteries can only last up to several hours, but this one has 29-hour battery l
ife enough to do a lot of things with your smartphone.