The Myths about Android Phone

The Myths about Android Phone...




Long ago, in a small town, there was a boy who would hang up his cell phone with a hair dryer and even put it on the runway before taking off. People told him to stop, but he did not listen. So the passengers touched him and pulled him to the side of the wing, and he had a great airplane, and a warm welcome.

 Okay maybe not a duck tape thing. But let's take a look at some common myths about smartphones, and see if they are worthwhile or fake. 

1. Drain your battery completely before recharging. False. Batteries used on phones for about ten years agoreally last longer if you put them in zero before installing the phone. Lithium-ion batteries used these days prefer to get somewhere between 40% and 80%. If you usually release it expires before charging and be ready to replace the battery every six months or so. 

2. Your phone is safe without screen saver. Of course. Smartphones on the first touch screen need external protection from scratches, chips and cracks. Today, phone screens are powerful enough on their own. Two things they cannot stand on their own are sand and heavy stones. So, unless you spend a lot of time on the beach or put your phone in the concrete all the time, you’re ready to go without an ascreen protector.
3. You can dry the wet phone with a hair dryer. False and dangerous! Technically, you can dry your phone with an airdryer. But you don't really want it because it will burn your gadget. Phones don't like too much heat, just say. I wonder if there is another way to solve this problem. Rice maybe? 

4. If the hairdresser is too hot, just put the phone in a rice bag. False. Unless you have a water-resistant device, do not get in the bathtub, even if you always have a bag of raw rice. Rice can absorb moisture, but not inside your phone. And, worst of all, the starch from the rice goes into the cracks and takes the damage to the next level.

 5. All night charging is not good for your phone. False. Early cell phones actually did not want to be charged overnight. But fortunately they got more time wisely. Today's generation has more protection from chips and software that will not allow them to charge more than 100%. When they get to that point, the process will stop automatically. 

6. Closing background apps is a sure way to save battery. False. If you leave one application and start using differentone, the first one is stored in RAM so that it can reopen in the same state as the one you left. This versatile algorithm helps save energy. Also, when you manually close unused programs, you waste a lot of energy along the way. 

7. The more megapixels, the better the photos. False. How many megapixels are your phone's cameras on? One of my friends recently boasted a 48 MP. But if I look at his photos, I can tell one 12 MP one does a better job of photography. The reason is, it is the quality and not the quantity of those megapixels that are important from the start. When manufacturers insert some of those into the phone's camera, the sensor just can't handle them anyway. 

8. Do not place your phone next to a credit card. … Otherwise it will buy online and spend all your money. I'm kidding. This is also a lie: the myth is that the card will drain a person's energy if you keep it close to the smartphone. In fact, the magnetic field of your smartphone is almost as powerful as that. Refrigerator magnet - maybe, but not a phone. 

9. Using free public Wi-Fi for business practice. Of course. It’s a vacation saver where data roaming is expensive and you don’t want to buy a local SIM. But that is probably the only situation you can really use, and also with VPN monitoring. Never pass on your personal or financial information when using the free grid. That’s because they’re open to anyone, including hackers who jump into social media to steal data. Wi-Fi hotspots are worse off because they do not require connection verification. 

10. 4G consumes more data than 3G. False. 4G simply loads the same data values ​​faster than 3G. It uses more battery power however. It's the same with 5G. So if you need to save battery, you can save it to 3G unless you have to download something immediately. 

11. A fast charger can damage your phone. False. Fast chargers send a lot of electricity to your phone so it's full of juice again in half the normal time or very fast. Another started a rumor that it could damage his battery. In fact, the fast charger slows somewhere between 60 and 80 percent and completes the process at normal speed, so there won’t be any now. The only concern is the extra heat, but any battery life time anyway. 

12. The more RAM, the better the phone. False. Are you used to working on 5 apps on your phone at the same time? Unless you say yes, you don't really need to invest in a phone with 8GB of RAM (that's a random access memory, just to make it clear), because that's what's best for you. A 4 or 3 GB phone with a powerful processor works fast enough to let you switch from app to app and do other things. Also, it is equivalent to the latest apps. 

13. 4K display is exactly what onyour phone needs. False. 4K is ready for a larger display, similar to a TVor computer screen. As for your phone, it's a waste of money. The human eye cannot detect anything higher than 2K or full HD on such a small display. In addition, the Hardware of your phone should drive a lot of pixels, the battery that you use the most. 

14. Smartphones are a source of radiation. This is true, but it is a form of electromagnetic radiation that is completely safe for humans. And no, you can't cook an egg in the middle of a whirlwind - that's an urban myth. You will need about 7,000 phones to heat the egg just a little bit. By the way, if you stole an egg, you would say it was "immersed" .. ha

15. You cannot use your smartphone when charging. False! Completely safe to do so. One thing you should know though, is that it slows down the charging process. Do it yourself..