Welcome to a Samsung Camcorder Battery specialist
of the Samsung Digital Camera Battery
Roughly a month ago Samsung released a new phablet model with a very interesting screen. Dubbed as the Galaxy Note Edge, the device sports 5.6-inch Super AMOLED display. But it’s the secondary right-side curved edge screen that captures the curiosity of many tech watchers.
Since this model is launched under the South Korean giant’s premium Galaxy line, the Note Edge has more to offer than just its unique display. It’s powered by a fast 2.7GHz quad-core Snapdragon 805 processor and furnished with a 16-megapixel rear camera with OIS, autofocus, and LED flash.
State-of-the-art features are meaningless if a device has a weak battery with like samsung SB-L110A Battery, samsung HMX-H106 Battery, samsung HMX-H100 Battery, samsung SMX-F30 Battery, samsung IA-BP85SW Battery, samsung VP-DX10 Battery, samsung SB-L110G Battery, samsung VM-C5000 Battery, samsung VP-D5000 Battery, samsung VP-M110 Battery, samsung VP-M2100 Battery, samsung VP-X110 Batteryto back them up. Therefore, Samsung packed the Galaxy Note Edge with a Lithium-ion battery with an adequate 3,000mAh capacity. But if you want to make it last longer, follow some tips we provided below on how to extend and maximize the battery life of the Galaxy Note Edge. We got those from browsing through this XDA thread and from U.S. carriers T-Mobile & Sprint which offered their own battery tips for subscribers who availed of their new Note Edge bundled
This new curved phablet model has an Ultra Power Saving mode that can conserve power by limiting the performance of the CPU and some apps running in the background. You can enable it by going to Settings > System > Power saving > then switch on Ultra Power Saving mode.
Disabling background data will not only save you battery life, it will also decrease your mobile data usage. Do it by heading to Settings > Network Connections > Data usage > tap on the Menu key > then tick the box next to “Restrict background data.”
If you’re not using your Galaxy Note Edge for any task that requires Internet connection, it’s more power-efficient to use 2G rather than 3G or 4G LTE. With it, you can still send and receive calls or SMS but require less battery consumption. Do it by navigating to Settings > Network Connections > More Networks > Mobile Networks > Network Mode > then choose “GSM only.” You can put it back to 4G LTE by tapping on “LTE/WCDMA/GSM (auto connect)” or “WCDMA/GSM (auto connect).”
Most third party applications you’ve downloaded from Google Play may still use a significant amount of battery life even when you’re not using them. If you don’t want to uninstall them, you may want to temporarily disable those that you’re not using by navigating to Settings > Applications > Application Manager > choose the “Downloaded” tab > select the apps you desire and tap on Disable.