26 Matching Annotations
  1. Last 7 days
    1. Is Fast Charging Killing the Battery? A 2-Year Test on 40 Phones
      • Experiment Methodology: Researchers tested 40 phones over two years, completing 500 charge-discharge cycles using custom automation tools to compare the effects of different charging habits [00:01:11].
      • Fast Charging vs. Slow Charging: The study found that fast charging does not significantly harm battery health. After 500 cycles, the fast-charging iPhone group lost only 0.5% more capacity than the slow-charging group, while fast-charging Android phones actually showed slightly less wear than the slow-charging group [00:03:03].
      • The 30-80% Charging Habit: Maintaining a battery level between 30% and 80% reduced wear by 2.5% to 4% compared to full 0-100% cycles. While technically better, the researchers suggested the real-world benefit is limited compared to the effort [00:03:27].
      • Long-term Stability: Storing phones at 100% charge for a week showed no measurable change in capacity, reinforcing that battery degradation is a gradual, long-term process [00:04:13].
      • Battery Replacement Guidelines: Battery life begins to noticeably shorten when health drops to 85%, and the researchers recommend replacement when health reaches 80% to maintain a good user experience [00:05:01].
      • Performance & Throttling: Battery wear does not inherently slow down the phone's peak performance, but degraded batteries cause the system to throttle (slow down) earlier at low charge levels (e.g., at 11% instead of 5%) to prevent power failure [00:05:38].
      • Conclusion: The technical differences in battery wear from various charging methods are minimal. The best approach is to charge your phone conveniently and avoid trading "mental energy" for negligible battery gains [00:04:20].
  2. Oct 2024
    1. There should also be a Card-Tray, or abox with compartments in it, such as shown in thefollowing illustration. Of course the Tray might havean open top.

      Miles suggests using a Card-Tray (in 1899) with various compartments and potentially an open top rather than some of the individual trays or card index boxes which may have been more ubiquitous

      This shows a slight difference at the time in how an individual would use one of these in writing versus how a business might use them in drawers of 1, 2, 3 or cabinets with many more.

      The image he shows seems more reminiscent of a 5x3" library charging tray than of some of the business filing appliances of the day and the decade following.


      very similar to the self-made version at https://hypothes.is/a/DHU_-If6Ee-mGieKOjg8ZQ

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  3. Mar 2024
  4. Feb 2024
  5. Jan 2024
    1. The Charging This consists in its interior arrangement ofCabinet rows of pigeon-holes constructed on an inclineupwards so that the base of each horizontalrow of pigeon-holes is higher than its predecessor. Into thesepigeon-holes the charging shps are placed and there is a guidecard to each pigeon-hole marking the divisions of the charging slipsby giving the number of the slip which is to be filed immediatelybehind it.

      While slightly different in its physical configuration, the office charging cabinet (with a bleacher-like set up) is very similar to the similarly named library card charging tray.

      Which came first?

  6. Sep 2023
  7. Mar 2023
    1. http://www.shopbrodart.com/Library-School-Furniture/Adult-and-Teen-Furniture/Computer-Furniture/Card-Catalog-Trays-and-Cabinets/_/Brodart-Wood-Charging-Trays/?q=tray&s=MToyNTY6NDo6Ojo6OjA6

      Brodart Mini Single Charging Tray Mini single charging tray with 600-card capacity More Info Price: $76.76

      • Adjustable steel follower block with automatic lock
      • Felt pads on tray bottom protect desktop
      • Mini charging tray fits on your lap
      • 4"H x 4"W x 8"D
      • Holds 600 5"H x 3"W cards
      • Includes antimicrobial finish
      • Made in the USA

      This could be used for a modern day Memindex box for portrait oriented 3 x 5" index cards.

  8. Nov 2022
    1. during charging, whether wired or wireless, the battery itself doesn't heat up. In the case of wireless charging, only the copper coil inside the phone heats up

      Mas se a bobina esquenta, ela não acaba esquentando a bateria também porque está bem próxima dela?

  9. Dec 2021
  10. Nov 2020
    1. Express - 19 $ 🏃‍♀️ Skip the Review Queue 🕒 Published in 3 days 💌 Full Customer Support 💚 Support the team

      Wow, after seeing how this site works, I don't like much like it anymore.

      Esp. this below:

      Choose your preferred publish date - 9 $ Feature your project on top for 14 days and get an additional tweet - 19 $

      I hope there is/will be soon a more open/free alternative (like the "awesome" lists that use GitHub PRs instead of an opaque/proprietary submisison form).

  11. Dec 2019