jeudi 23 août 2012

Re: [apple-iphone] fast battery discharge on home Wi-Fi

 

It isnt iCloud????
 
I noticed when I take a photo now, then look at it, I have to wait a few seconds, and the busy round thing is whirring. I expect as I am on wifi, Photostream is uploading it? Is it possible that you have iCloud set in such a way that it still hasnt uploaded everything, and that the battery life is in fact data transfer over wifi?
 
Just a thought


________________________________
From: Ken Bandy <kbandy@iatse30.org>
To: apple-iphone@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Thursday, 23 August 2012 2:06 PM
Subject: RE: [apple-iphone] fast battery discharge on home Wi-Fi


 

Thanks for the suggestion, Patrick. I had done the "forget this network"
thing once before, but I did it again. I'm not sure what's going on,
because when I'm at home, with the Wi-Fi turned on on the iPhone, when I
select the "settings" app, it will "stall" on a blank screen of the
background of the settings screen, no print or anything. This will come up
for a few seconds, and then it goes back to the home screen. If I have
Wi-Fi on at home, and I want to go to the settings screen, I need to reboot
the phone, and then go to the settings screen before the Wi-Fi boots up.

This thing has really got me perplexed! Bear in mind, this all started a
few weeks ago. Prior to that, there was no problem. I would have the Wi-Fi
turned on all the time without any excess drain.

Thanks to all.
Ken

-----Original Message-----
From: mailto:apple-iphone%40yahoogroups.com [mailto:mailto:apple-iphone%40yahoogroups.com] On
Behalf Of Patrick W
Sent: Wednesday, August 22, 2012 2:54 PM
To: mailto:apple-iphone%40yahoogroups.com
Subject: Re: [apple-iphone] fast battery discharge on home Wi-Fi

Something I would do is remove the settings from my iphone for that
particular wifi hotspot and set it up as new.

Settings, WiFi, click the blue arrow to the right of your home network and
select Forget this Network.

Turn off wifi, turn on wifi and then re-connect to the router and test from
there.

On Wed, Aug 22, 2012 at 5:52 AM, Ken Bandy <mailto:kbandy%40iatse30.org> wrote:

> **
>
>
> Thanks, Clark. Your observation and suggestions make sense. I'll give
> them a try.
>
> Ken
>
> Sent from my iPad
>
>
> On Aug 21, 2012, at 11:10 PM, Clark Martin <mailto:cmmac%40sonic.net> wrote:
>
> >
> >
> > Sent from an iPhone, don't ask whose.
> >
> > On Aug 21, 2012, at 2:38 PM, "Ken Bandy" <mailto:kbandy%40iatse30.org> wrote:
> >
> >>
> >> To re-iterate, if I turn the Wi-Fi on the phone off at home, it
> >> doesn't discharge rapidly. Very puzzling! Does anyone have any
> >> thoughts as to
> what
> >> I could try to do to remedy this?
> >>
> > Either your WAP (base station, router) is running amok or you have
> > some
> heavy traffic on your network..
> >
> > First, see if your WAP has any diagnostics which will let you see
> > how
> much traffic is on the network. If nothing else observe the light
> activity on your router. Try shutting down every device on the network
> except the WAP and phone. Watch the traffic to see if it drops
> significantly when one device is shutdown. After that, disconnect the
> Internet connection from your router.

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

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