I just know this is probably a simple answer but I've just spent an hour and can't find where to allow my daughter's android phone to go into battery saving mode. Every time she tries to it tells her that Kasperskey Safe Kids won't let her. Is there a way to give permission for her to control that? :s

I suspect we probably put the settings to 'allowed' when we first went through the app permissions when initially setting everything up (I don't remember as that was a couple of years ago). I would have just assumed it was for things like power saving modes, layouts etc on her phone. Not anything that we would have wanted to stop her doing.


Anyway, I'm going to try reinstalling it and if it doesn't work I'll get the information suggested and come back to you. Thank you again for trying to help us work this out.


Battery Power Saving Mode Download


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Ive had the S9+,S20+,and now S22 Ultra. and i feel PS mode doesn't do anything whatsoever.in fact ,theres times i feel it possibly drains battery like 10% faster tbh. anyone else feel this way?? when i hear "power saving mode" i think of a mode that saves at least 15% battery just by turning it on. making my SOT go from 6hrs to an easy 8hrs+. But again,i see No difference.

In menu 4 of the Q2 system, there is an option for power saving > power saving mode with options of 3, 5, and 10 seconds. I've had this set to 10s, auto power off to 2 min, and all displays auto off to 30s since I have owned the Q2M, and I've been quite happy with the battery life performance, I can easily last a day of shooting for 300+ shots.

BUT sometimes the camera waking up again from power saving mode is too slow and I miss a shot. I wish this mode had like a 30s or 1 min feature, cuz sometimes it's annoying when the camera powers off so quickly when you're working a scene, in this instances I have to keep 1/2 pressing the shutter to make sure the camera stays awake.

So I want to adjust, and maybe get rid of the power saving mode all together, and only keep auto power off to 2min and killing the display entirely as I never use it to take pictures, I do that all in the EVF. I only use the display for settings and photo review.

Does anyone know if FP4 has a maximum power saving mode? similar samsung?

Or does anyone know id there is an app for this?

The current battery server is not that effective, I want to reduce my power usage dramatically and just use a few apps.

The regular and extreme power saving modes are native Android features. Android 11 only has the regular option and Android 12 has the regular and extreme power saving option. I personally never really noticed much difference between the 2, since the screen and active data connections drained most of the battery. With a Pixel 3, which has a small battery, you look for any solution to extend that battery life. Best solution I found was to not use the phone And of course iPhones are superior in terms of battery efficiency.

You could use the flight mode and turn on GPS manually. Anything else should stay offline and save power.

Your maps can be downloaded before your trip. Open Street Maps is more detailed for topographic maps and hiking trails anyway and offer an option to download maps for a whole country. So no connection is needed.

For the use of a messenger of course you need to switch off the flight mode. But in the mean time you can enjoy the hike without beeing interrupted by bugging ads or calls from your boss

Thanks everyone for your reaction.

I will most likely do what ElKrosso suggested, and will let you know about the results.

My previous phone was a Huawie P30 and the battery performance was fantastic, and ultra power saving made a big difference.

I have an Acer e5-576g laptop. I used this laptop as a PC and it is always connected to AC power. Up until recently my battery even though it was weak worked and because I was always charging it was always 100%. Recently my battery completely died and the laptop no longer works without ac power.

Now the problem I am facing is even though I have disable the power saving modes on Windows 11 I believe there is an in built power saving mode in the laptop which is causing it to run on low power mode. I think how this works is if the battery is lower than 5% it goes into this mode and since my battery is dead it probably is assuming it as 0% and refuses to go out of this mode. The battery is not removable although I have disabled and uninstalled the battery drivers from the device manager.

I'm using the app on a Galaxy Note 5 with the latest Marshmallow release and updates. PA consistently stops playing a podcast after a minute or so while the device is set in power saving mode. This never happens in normal mode, nor could I reproduce the problem with another streaming audio app.

Another solution: this is either an Android 6 setting or hardware specific, but go to the Battery setting, choose Battery usage, then More options, and Optimize battery usage. Scroll to Podcast Addict, and turn off optimization. This should also work for any app that gets interrupted by power saving mode.

It doesn't matter that another app isn't killed in the same way as Podcast Addict. Nothing can be done do prevent this.

The purpose of the Power saver mode is to limit the battery usage by any mean. If the device finds out that Podcats Addict uses battery, then it will kill it.

However I can't find the setting and l've tried to reproduce it on my watch by going to the "walk" activity screen, where it says "waiting for GPS", but never hitting start. It eventually times out and goes back to the normal watch screen without entering battery saver mode.

I've had this happen too. The other day I noticed that the watch was suddenly displaying a minimal face and it took me a while to work out why, and to find the menu to disable battery saving mode.


I've had this happen too. The other day I noticed that the watch was suddenly displaying a minimal face and it took me a while to work out why, and to find the menu to disable battery saving mode.


It's just happened again now. I know that I didn't have any activity tracking (walkling, cycling etc) turned on. The battery is 70% charged, so it's not being triggered when the battery gets below a threshold charge. I last looked at the watch an hour or so ago, and I haven't touched it since then, apart from to rotate my wrist just now to turn the display on and saw that the display was minimal again (dim brown hands, no other gauges such as battery, number of steps, heart rate, date).


It looks as if both I and 5710117 might be getting apparently random, un-commanded setting of battery saver mode.

My watch is the Venu2 - the one which has a face that is about 40 mm diameter.


I too wish there was a way of disabling battery-saver mode altogether. My battery lasts about 6-7 days with battery saver turned off.


Has there been any response from Garmin technical support as to why this keeps happening? Either the watch is starting an activity when the user didn't want it to, or else battery saver is being triggered by something else. Either way, something needs to be fixed.

iKeirNez posted an excellent answer that confirmed a suspicion of mine. This still happens on lower end devices you can buy that have 5.1.1. I have a list compiled of the devices which I know of that suffer from a camera crash when on power saving mode, but I have not yet checked for all the possible keys that relate to power saving mode.

I can't say I was involved in reviewing this user's guide, but I am involved for reviewing them for other products I support as part of my role. I bring this up because I don't know if I agree with the statement that this is a "power saving display" in terms of actual, quantifiable amounts of energy being saved when the display is off but I think the reference in calling it that, as well as many other features of this UPS, revolve around this being a more green and efficient UPS than previous generations. Regardless, it appears that this power saving display mode is available in online mode only. This works with the Master By Controlled outlets energy saving feature too which I do think saves a lot more energy than keeping the display off.

This is actually a feature - the idea is that a user can have their display turned off as a user preference and beeper muted - if this was the case, they'd never know the UPS was on battery. Thus, the display is forced on to let the user know this. And I don't know the exact figures here or evidence to back up my opinion, but I don't think the UPS LCD is a major power hog and that in the long run, it would affect the runtime of the UPS severely enough to be concerned - again, all my personal opinion and experience there.

Thank you for your answer. I think this still seems like an engineering oversight. Even if just to make the user feel better about it, it seems to make sense to be able to kill the display while on battery. Generally, unless I was sleeping, I would know if the power was out, and could therefore assume the UPS is on battery, so it seems unnecessary to require the display to automatically be always on. (I should still be able to manually kill it when present). And if I wanted an update on how many minutes were left, it seems reasonable that I should be able to just hit the display button once to check it, and let it go out a minute later, like it does when on power saving mode with utility power.

I understand an LCD screen doesn't sound like a power hog, but why would they have a power saving mode for it, if it wasn't? And why design it only for during times when one has utility power? Could it be that it is that much of a power hog that one would want a power saving mode to cut down on their electric bill? Using up 600 minutes worth of power in 13 hours seems like a lot for a battery that otherwise just sits around doing nothing, when nothing is hooked up to the battery outlets. 17dc91bb1f

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