San Francisco Chronicle

Apple slows iPhones as batteries get older

- By Geoffrey A. Fowler

Apple is taking heat for a discovery about old iPhones: As their batteries age, Apple’s software slows them down.

The phenomenon, discovered by Reddit members and acknowledg­ed Wednesday by Apple, throws gasoline onto a long-standing conspiracy theory that iPhones slow to crawl as a sly way to persuade us to buy new ones.

That sounds upsetting — but be mad at Apple for the right reasons. Apple is correct to make its software smart about managing old batteries, which can act unpredicta­bly. Apple is wrong, however, not to make it easy and inexpensiv­e to replace old batteries.

“Our goal is to deliver the best experience for customers, which includes overall performanc­e and prolonging the

life of their devices,” said an Apple spokeswoma­n.

Worn-out batteries are a fact of gadget life. Lithium-ion becomes less capable after hundreds of charges, which can result in phones randomly shutting down. Apple said it changed its software last year for the iPhone 6, 6S and SE to “smooth out the instantane­ous peaks only when needed.”

Apple could have been a little more transparen­t about its practice. (Its latest major update, iOS 11.2, does the same slowdown to an iPhone 7 with a dud battery.) But the larger problem is it leaves the impression that customers should buy a new phone when all they really need is a new battery.

The iPhone doesn’t start flashing an alert when your battery is in trouble — it just starts to curtail your phone’s processing power. There might be a warning message if you dig into the settings menu for the battery. You can test your battery health for yourself with apps such as Battery Life.

Replacing your phone’s battery might make a huge difference. Repair site iFixit, which sells replacemen­t batteries and other parts, says it’s seen performanc­e boosts of 100 percent in old iPhones given battery transplant­s.

But replacing a battery can be expensive: Apple wants $80 to do it in a store. There’s no charge if you paid up front for AppleCare Plus coverage and have a battery Apple thinks warrants replacing.

You can buy a new iPhone 6 battery for as little as $20, if you’re willing to do surgery on your phone. (Warning: It’s not easy.) Or some mom-and-pop shops will do it for far less than Apple. Taking either approach would void Apple’s warranty.

Why not design phones in a modular way, so owners could just slide in new batteries? As recently as 2014, Samsung’s flagship Galaxy S5 phone came with an easily swappable battery. That style went out of favor as phone makers moved toward thinner, water-resistant, more durable designs.

The battery replacemen­t problem is an example of why a growing community of gadget lovers is calling for laws to ensure consumers have a legal “right to repair” their own electronic­s. Laws proposed in a handful of states would help prevent tech companies from locking down devices with software and make repair manuals available to the public.

Guess who has lobbied against those laws? Tech companies, including Apple.

The Apple spokeswoma­n didn’t respond to questions about replacing batteries or its view on right-to-repair legislatio­n.

 ?? Christina Koci Hernandez / The Chronicle 2007 ?? This iPhone was shiny and new in 2007, but phone batteries don’t exactly age gracefully.
Christina Koci Hernandez / The Chronicle 2007 This iPhone was shiny and new in 2007, but phone batteries don’t exactly age gracefully.

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