I’ve gotten a few requests to look at the improvement in battery life caused by Apple’s iPhone 2.1 firmware update, I had some spare time between articles so I ran a few tests.

There were issues on some 3G enabled iPhones that apparently caused a lot of dropped calls and general unpleasantness when trying to use your new phone. I never experienced any of them personally so I can’t really complain about them, other than to say that it made others unhappy.

The 2.0 and later firmwares apparently fixed many of the source issues behind these problems, and the most recent firmware update (2.1) supposedly increased battery life. I just happened to apply that update before heading out of the house for the entirety of the day and most of the evening, so I got a reasonable chance to try it out.

My phone was nearly dead by 11PM when I got back home, but the test was hardly scientific. I had no idea how much I used it nor did I really have a good comparison point, so I went back and reran two of my battery life tests from the original article.

"To test [talk time] I played music back on a notebook through some headphones placed right at the mic on the iPhone 3G. The phone was flipped over on a table to trigger its sensor and shut off the display, thus simulating a real call. I called my Vonage deskline from the iPhone and got to listen to 50 Cent play over and over again for hours, a homage to what I did last year with the first iPhone. "

WiFi was disabled and 3G was enabled for this test.


The talk time test hardly showed any improvement. While there’s a 5 minute increase in talk time, by percentage that’s not very good and is most likely due to normal variance between runs that I can’t really control.

"Our web browsing test is slightly different from what we ran in the iPhone review. We used a total of 7 web pages, but of much larger sizes than our first test. The first page was simply a counter page, the second was our review of the Core 2 Duo E6750, followed by our article on AMD's Phenom introduction, an excerpt from our Quad FX article, our entire iPhone review, an article on Intel's Turbo Memory and our entire AMD Radeon 2900 XT review.

Each page was loaded by the browser and was set to forward to the next page (in the above order) after 10 seconds; the iPhone’s brightness was set to approximately 50%. All backlight timers were disabled. Bluetooth was enabled but not paired to any devices."

The web test fared a bit better - over 3G I saw a 10% increase in battery life. Apple can’t really create any additional battery life through software magic, but it would seem that the improvements users are seeing in battery life are mostly due to data usage and not voice.

My 3G test happens to be reasonably stressful as it is constant web surfing, which I doubt anyone has the patience to do on something with such a small screen regardless of how great its UI may be. In the end, real world battery life may go up even more but I’d say 10% is a fair increase for a simple firmware update.

Final Words

Am I happy? Not really. It’s great that there’s a bit more battery life to play with, but the device still needed a real hardware upgrade - not the simple addition of GPS or 3G. It needs a faster processor, and we know there are faster things out there today. The firmware update did fix some of the performance issues, but just as I mentioned in the very first iPhone review - the device needs to be faster.

While the original iPhone was something I had no problems recommending, the new one (and even the old one with new firmware) just seems to come with more caveats. That last point is particularly interesting to me as the new iPhone firmware seems to have addressed some of the major issues (e.g. 3rd party apps) users had with the first generation product, yet in many ways it’s more problematic. It makes sense when you look at how Apple launched the original iPhone: it focused on a handful of things it wanted to make sure worked perfectly, and chose to ignore the rest until a later time.

The iPhone 3G and its associated firmware seemed like bad timing. Apple needed faster, more robust hardware but the demand for an app store and 3G were too high not to update the platform.

The situation we’re in honestly reminds me a lot of the 2nd iPod. It had all of the goodness of the first one, but just wasn’t terribly impressive anymore. It took a while for Apple to make that virgin impact again with its iPod line and I wonder if we’ll see it happen so soon with the 3rd iPhone?

Until then, the iPhone is still my phone of choice, but as I mentioned in my iPhone 3G article: Apple’s second step was in the wrong direction. It’s far easier to take a clumsy fall walking down stairs than going up.

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  • silversound - Tuesday, September 30, 2008 - link

    I think iphone 3G is pretty fast compare to motorola GUI, samsung or even Nokia interfaces. Moto was the slowest for the phones i used. Its just a phone, how fast can it be, well at least cant beat any dual core computers lol :P
  • cheetah2k - Tuesday, September 30, 2008 - link

    Anand, you say the iphone needs a faster CPU... Well you of all people should remember that the CPU hardware in the iphone is capable of 620Mhz, however Apple have selected to have it sit around the +400Mhz mark for battery life reasons.

    I definately consider the iphone GUI faster with 2.1 firmware - 2.0, 2.0.1 and 2.0.2 were terribly slow and buggy.

    Lets see what happens with 2.2 firmware to be released shortly.
  • George Powell - Wednesday, October 1, 2008 - link

    On that basis could one overclock the iPhone?
  • mjohnson1212 - Tuesday, September 30, 2008 - link

    I upgraded from 2.0 to 2.1 and saw an immediate difference in standby battery life.

    I don't use my phone a lot during the day, a couple web pages and some emailing, and maybe a call or two.

    With 2.0 by the end of the day my battery would be at 1/4 to 1/3 full.

    With 2.1 my battery is 3/4 to almost full every night when I go to bed.
  • psonice - Wednesday, October 1, 2008 - link

    I've seen the same thing - I use the phone on and off during the day (phone calls, a bit of web + email, reading a book, playing a game perhaps) and at the end of each day the battery is definitely more full. It's now practical to charge every other day instead of daily in fact (this is with a first gen iphone).

    I think the test was somewhat flawed here.. it doesn't reflect real usage at all, and subjectively at least in real usage it seems hugely improved.

    Then again, I can't complain - I wouldn't want to spend several days using the phone in a fixed pattern either ;D
  • robp5p - Tuesday, September 30, 2008 - link

    I experienced the same thing - Massively increased standby times. For me, this is the true test. I never talk on my phone more than 1-2 hrs a day all put together.

    With the 2.0 firmware, I would be nearly dead by the end of each day with 1 hr of call time, email and a little web browsing. With the 2.1 firmware I can go for 2 1/2 days without recharging. <--- this is the real world test of battery life I care about.

    I would be interested in seeing a standardized phone battery test from anandtech that focuses more on this real world use case, rather than just 'how many minutes until it goes dead' marathon.
  • Connoisseur - Tuesday, September 30, 2008 - link

    Slightly unrelated to this article, but is there any way to do a comparison between the top of the line American phones vs. what's available in Japan? I keep hearing about how they're years ahead of us in terms of technology and features but I'd like to see real world tests and samples to see what kind of impact they'd make were they introduced into the US market.
  • psonice - Wednesday, October 1, 2008 - link

    I was in japan a while back, and had a good look around akihabara at all the latest phones and stuff. I'd say japanese phones look about 10 years BEHIND, not ahead.

    The phones have some very 'advanced features', like built-in TV (which works very badly from what I saw). But they're HUGE. And the interfaces... urgh! They've had mobile internet for years too, but it's all 'imode' mobile web, not proper internet. You'd have to pay me to use a japanese smart phone.
  • eraigames - Tuesday, September 30, 2008 - link

    PLEASE let this stereotype DIE. Japan is not the fabled land of technology. I live in Japan and this place is behind the times in soooo many ways. Japan was the first country to start with widespread use of cameras in cellphones. They also pioneered several popular essentially useless features like text messaging, the "virtual wallet" and the "smile sensor." Text messaging took off so quickly in Japan because we have to pay for every minute we call people as we do not have the handy free call-time plans other countries have. The virtual wallet is stupid and very limited. It mostly works with vending machines. The smile sensor means you can take a picture without hitting the button because it can sense when the subject is smiling.

    Japan was the first to champion widespread use of these phones but 10 years later and they are still peddling the same crappy behind-the-times phones. There are next to no smartphones in Japan. The best phone here BY FAR is the Iphone 3G. I hate Apple as a company and I hate most of their products but I have to admit that nothing here in Japan comes anywhere close to the iphone.
  • BenMc - Thursday, October 2, 2008 - link

    Amen! If I had the time, I'd like to make a video comparing side-by-side the performance of my "high tech" Japanese piece of crap (814SH) with my iPhone. I actually use my iPhone to browse the internet, read books, play games, instant message, email, keep a ToDo list, check google maps, etc.

    Some of these I can't even do on my Japanese phone and for those that I can, the performance and ease of use is sooo much better on the iPhone. I find "typing" with a number pad to be torturous.

    The Japanese make many wonderful things, but the iPhone, while it has much room for improvement is the best cell phone in Japan.

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