The company acknowledged that a "small number of customers" are
experiencing poor battery life on iOS 5 devices. Although Apple was
vague about the root of the problem, it acknowledged that there are
several bugs affecting the autonomy of its mobile hardware.
Unfortunately, it didn't offer any tips on how you can mitigate the
issue until a patch is released, but the update should arrive in the
next few weeks.
Some users believe that iOS 5's location service is running when it's
not supposed to be, while others blame the new notification system.
Based on Apple's comment, both could be correct. Users report mixed
success in boosting battery life after disabling iCloud, location
services, as well as the weather and stock widgets on the notification
screen. For whatever it's worth, I'm running iOS 5 on a 3GS with no
discernible issues.
Alongside that announcement, Apple has released iOS 5.0.1 beta
(build 9A402) for developers. The releases notes mention the upcoming
battery life tweaks along with multitasking gestures for the original
iPad, bug fixes for Documents in the Cloud, improved voice recognition
for Australians using dictation as well as various security
improvements. There's also a new way for developers to specify files
that should remain on-device.
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