Apple engineers contacting iPhone 4S owners to solve battery life puzzle

iPhone 4S battery life Schiller

Phil Schiller of Apple introducing the iPhone 4S battery life: he didn’t mention the standby time – and now engineers are contacting some customers who have problems

Apple engineers are contacting some iPhone 4S owners to try to solve problems with battery life on the new device, after some people have seen dramatic drops in longevity compared to previous models.

One owner has told the Guardian that Apple contacted him directly and asked him to install a monitoring program on the phone to try to diagnose the problem, which is so far unexplained.

In its data sheet for the iPhone 4S, which was released earlier this month, Apple quietly noted that the standby time for the new phone would only be 200 hours – compared to 300 for the iPhone 4, and 250 hours even for the original 2007 iPhone. The company did not offer any reason when asked why by the Guardian, but noted that other lifespans such as 3G talktime were as long or longer than previous models.

One owner who was contacted by Apple told the Guardian: “My battery life was extremely poor – 10% drop in standby every hour. I noticed that the usage figure was roughly half that of standby, even when the phone was not being used, so I assumed something was crashing or running in the background. I switched off all the new features including Siri and location services, but it was still really poor. I also tried setting up a clean phone with no apps but it is still really poor.

“I then got a call from a senior [Apple] engineer who said he had read my post and was ‘reaching out’ to users for data and admitted this was an issue (and that they aren’t close to finding a fix!) and asked lots of questions about my usage and then asked if he could install the file below and that he would call back the day after to retrieve the info. I extracted the file from my Mac after a sync and emailed it to him. He was incredibly helpful and apologetic in the typical Apple way!”

Users of the iPhone 4S have been surprised by how rapidly the phone’s battery appears to drain, especially compared to the iPhone 4. The 4S incorporates a more powerful dual-core processor, the A5, than the iPhone 4, but the same amount of RAM. According to iFixit, the iPhone 4S has 5.3 watt-hours’ capacity – 0.05Wh more capacity than the iPhone 4.

In some cases the short life has been blamed on corrupted contacts imported from Apple’s MobileMe or iCloud services, or from Google’s Contacts list; deleting and then reinstalling them sometimes seems to fix the problem.

The problem has generated huge discussions on Apple’s support boards, with some people finding that backing the phone’s contents up to their computer and then restoring it improves the life.

The Guardian’s own tests on an unrestored iPhone 4S using Google Contacts and MobileMe suggest that the phone drains fastest when mobile data is switched on, while Wi-Fi usage makes little difference to battery consumption. Neither location services, which try to orient the phone based on Wi-Fi and mobile data information, nor the voice-driven “assistant” Siri, appear to affect battery drain particularly.

Sprint, Verizon Will ‘Unlock’ iPhone 4S for International Calling, If You Ask

Last week Apple unveiled its first “global” iPhone in the United States. The iPhone 4S, which hits stores this Friday, will support both CDMA and GSM wireless standards to accommodate all three of its U.S. carriers: AT&T’s GSM network and Sprint/Verizon’s CDMA networks.

CDMA technology, the standard used by Sprint and Verizon, has a minor presence around the world compared with GSM (Canada, Mexico, New Zealand, China, Taiwan, South Korea, parts of the Caribbean and Latin America all have CDMA networks). To accommodate using the iPhone 4S in non-CDMA countries, Sprint and Verizon have confirmed they can remotely unlock the SIM card (the part of the phone that uses GSM tech) of your iPhone 4S and allow you to use it overseas if you subscribe to one of their international add-on plans.

What Sprint and Verizon’s “unlocked” iPhone 4S really is

The real question, which has caused utter confusion all Wednesday morning, is whether or not you’ll be able to physically switch out the iPhone 4S’s micro-SIM card as you can do with other global phones like the BlackBerry Bold and Motorola Photon 4G. If so, iPhone 4S users would be able to purchase cheaper, prepaid micro-SIM cards bearing local numbers and substantially lower voice, data, and texting fees.

The answer is complicated. A Verizon customer-service rep I spoke to said, “I don’t know; we won’t know until we get the phones” while a Sprint customer-service rep claims you’ll be able to replace the micro-SIM card with a non-Sprint card. However, this sounds unlikely as it would make virtually every Sprint iPhone 4S a prepaid device. Furthermore unless you’re on the original 2007 iPhone, Apple software updates have disabled unlocked SIM functions.

Officially, Sprint PR reps told me their iPhones will come locked and that you cannot physically remove the card, though you will be able to unlock the SIM card to roam on the networks of Sprint’s international partners. On Verizon, you’ll be able to do the same, but you have to be a customer in good standing for at least 60 days first, said Verizon spokeswoman Brenda Raney. Verison also said that iPhone 4S owners will be able to remove the pre-installed micro-SIM card. (Sprint and Verizon both offer international roaming plans if you want to keep your current number while traveling abroad.)

AT&T’s iPhone 4S

On the other hand, AT&T is the only U.S. GSM network provider of iPhones, so technically its iPhone is already equipped to connect to overseas GSM networks (GSM is the standard in most of the world). Like with Verizon and Sprint, AT&T iPhones lock their micro-SIM card slots, forcing customers to use AT&T’s international plans from its global wireless partners.

Apple’s official unlocked iPhone 4S

Last Friday Apple took preorders for an unlocked version of the iPhone 4S, though it charges $649 for the 16GB model, substantially more than the $199 subsidized versions offered by its three carriers. The biggest benefit to buying one of these devices is T-Mobile prepaid. However Apple won’t be shipping these until November.

Not sure which carrier is right for you? Check out PCMag’s voice and data plan comparison chart for AT&T, Verizon, and Sprint. At this point, Sprint is the only carrier offering unlimited data on the iPhone.

Apple officially unveiled the iPhone 4S last week.

The iPhone 4S is aesthetically identical to the iPhone 4, but on the inside, it boasts Apple’s new dual-core A5 processor, a super-charged camera, iOS 5, and Siri-backed voice recognition, among other things. For more, see PCMag’s hands on with the iPhone 4S and the slideshow below.

UPDATE: After this story was initially published, Verizon told us that iPhone 4S owners would be able to remove their micro-SIM cards if they so wished.