Tuesday, January 13, 2009

Charging the iPhone




The iPhone has a built-in, rechargeable battery that fills up a substantial chunk
of the iPhone’s interior. How long one charge can drive your iPhone depends
on what you’re doing—music playback saps the battery least, Internet and
video sap it the most. But one thing is for sure: Sooner or later, you’ll have to
recharge the iPhone. (For most people, that’s every other day or so.)


You recharge the iPhone by seating it in the white syncing cradle that came
with it. You can plug the far end into either of two places to supply power:
Your computer’s USB jack. Just make sure that the Mac or PC won’t go
to sleep or turn off while the iPhone is plugged into it. Not only will the
battery not charge, but it may actually lose charge if the computer isn’t
turned on.
The AC adapter. The little white two-prong cube that came with the
iPhone snaps onto the end of the cradle’s USB cable and plugs into a
standard power outlet.
If the iPhone is unlocked, the battery icon in the upper-right corner displays
a lightning bolt to let you know that it’s receiving electricity and charging the
battery. If it’s locked, pressing the Home button wakes it long enough to show
you a battery gauge big enough to see from space.
In general, you can use the iPhone while it’s charging. The one exception: If
the battery charge is really low, it may have to soak in several minutes’ worth
of power before it can turn on.