Submitted by AutoModerator t3_123ismw in iphone
rcdrussell t1_jea08cg wrote
It seems as though my iPhone XS is finally out of commission. Took it to authorized service centers, no luck. It was my first ever iPhone (previously a loyal Android user) and I bought it not long after launch, so it's been almost 5 years since, if I'm not mistaken. Really loved and enjoyed using it while I had it.
Now that I'm in the market for a new phone, would you folks recommend the iPhone 14 Pro at this point in time? Specs-wise, I'd assume it's an obvious upgrade across the board since it's a few generations apart, but one thing I've been seeing as concerns about the 14 Pro is the battery life. I'm currently using a family member's old, spare iPhone SE to compensate in the meantime, and the battery life expectedly isn't great (2.5hrs screen on time before it hits 50%). I understand the Max is great with battery, but I'd rather avoid a big phone like that as much as possible as I need to carry a second phone (for work) with me most of the time.
As with my XS, I plan and hope to use my would-be new phone for years to come, hopefully even longer than 4-5 years.
dislikebuttonz t1_jeaiszm wrote
yes the 14 pro would be good for battery life
MangyCanine t1_jealbe8 wrote
Most people don't seem to have problems with the battery life: https://www.reddit.com/r/iPhone14Pro/comments/121qr80/battery_life_on_the_14_pro/ If there was a widespread battery problem with the 14 Pro, you'd be seeing a lot more complaints on posts like that.
That said, there can sometimes be general battery issues:
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Social media and music apps can be battery-sucking vampires. If you see poor battery life, check to see which apps are eating your battery (you should have had your iPhone at least a day before checking).
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Indexing. Not only does your iPhone try to find individuals in your photos, but they're also sorted into categories like animals, food, vehicles, art, music, and others. Your email and text messages are also indexed. Depending upon how much stuff you have, this can take anywhere from moments to a couple days or more, and this indexing will eat your battery while it's ongoing. Your iPhone will be a bit warm while this happens but it shouldn't get hot. Your battery life should return to normal after this.
This indexing happens at each major iOS upgrade (e.g., 15->16), but it can also sometimes happens during an intermediate X.Y upgrade. (It basically happens whenever Apple thinks it needs to happen.)
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Bugs. Bugs happen. For example when I upgraded from 16.2 to 16.3 (or one of the earlier point releases -- I forget which), my iPhone got hot pretty quickly after the upgrade, even though I wasn't doing anything with it (iPhones can normally get hot when playing games, for example). I did a soft reboot, and everything's been fine since.
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