iOS 10.3.3 – Battery Life on iPhone and iPad

iOS 10.3.3 has a battery autonomy for iPhone and iPad that does not differ much from that offered in iOS 10.3.2 for the rest of the iDevices.

iOS 10.3.3 was launched this week by the Apple company for all iPhone, iPad and iPod Touch compatible, the operating system being already downloaded by many people. Yesterday I talked to you about the iOS 10.3.3 problems, and today I'm also talking about battery life on iPhone and iPad, and a test that you can see below explains quite well what we will see in the update.

iOS 10.3.3 does not substantially affect battery life on iPhone or iPad, neither for better nor for worse, so the experience of using our terminals should not be much different. We are talking about a battery autonomy that in iOS 10.3.3 will be very similar to that offered by iOS 10.3.2, but this after a few days after installation and after you get used to the fact that using it more, you consume energy from the battery faster.

iOS 10.3.3 was initially criticized by some iPhone and iPad users due to the fact that the battery autonomy is lower than that of iOS 10.3.2, but the reality is different. There is a possibility that iOS 10.3.3 will offer you a slightly lower autonomy than that of iOS 10.3.2, but it is unlikely that the difference will be noticeable for you, so I would not worry too much about this after installing the update.

iOS 10.3.3 – battery life on iPhone and iPad

iOS 10.3.3 was not presented by the Apple company as bringing a major improvement in battery life on the iPhone or iPad, so you shouldn't expect anything like that after installing the update. In general, the Apple company does not boast of improvements to the autonomy of updates for iPhone and iPad, and iOS 10.3.3 is part of this category, so the experience will not be different.

iOS 10.3.3 can currently be installed using the system Software Update, Software Update of iOS, or using the iTunes program and a dedicated ipsw.