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When your connection arrows are light-gray you are not exchanging data. Data is transferred only when the arrows go white. So essentially you are always "connected" to the internet...you're just not activiating that connection.
Another way to look at it: Lets say your garden hose is always connected to the faucet (internet). Does that mean that there is water (data) flowing through the hose? No. You must turn the faucet on (start an app that connects to the internet)...then there will be water and it will flow through the hose. That's a bit goofy sounding...but accurate. late, Coz
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Last edited by CozBoogie; 11-06-2007 at 07:53 PM. |
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Some Good info Coz..I Always Looked @ the conection Arrows and woundered why they where shaded.gray..
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Another add on question. Is there a significant battery drain if I leave my data connection running even if I do have active apps using the net? It would just save the time of having my phone dial the connection and me turning it off all the time.
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Quote:
Actively turning off your connection will not save on battery life. Your phone is designed to optimize battery performance regarding data connections. You can do more to conserve/extend battery life by dimming your screen and/or turning off your keyboard. late, Coz |
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I thought this kind of thing was causing a battery drain on my phone. I would connect with PIE to check something, then shut down PIE, but leave the connection up. It would be grayed out, but still connected.
2 hours later, it would still be connected, but nothing else had been run that used the internet. In these cases, I found it to drain the battery more rapidly than when I would manually disconnect after use. |
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