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4 battery myths (and why they're not true)

4 battery myths (and why they're not true)

Yahoo5 days ago

We all depend on batteries. From our phones to our flashlights, all of us need these tiny energy storage devices to get things done every day. Few of us know how they work. And battery technology keeps changing.
It's not surprising, then, that so many of us believe battery myths. From storing batteries in the freezer to overthinking how much they are or aren't charged, here are a few untrue things you might believe about batteries along with the truth.
A relatively common belief is that storing your household batteries in the fridge or freezer can extend their lifespans. The idea here is that chilling or freezing batteries can slow the chemical processes that cause them to lose charge over time, even when not in use. I can't find any scientific research that backs this claim, though, and every major battery manufacturer advises that batteries be stored at room temperature. Duracell states on their website that storing batteries in the fridge or freeze 'will not…increase storage life'.
And it turns out there are actual downsides to putting your batteries in the fridge or freezer, mostly condensation. Energizer explains that putting batteries in the fridge 'can in fact harm batteries if condensation results in corroded contacts or label or seal damage due to extreme temperature storage.'
Now, this isn't to say that temperature doesn't matter. Storing batteries in a consistently hot place—for example, in your attic or in the basement next to your furnace—will result in reduced lifespans. Your standard battery is designed to be stored in a dry place at room temperature, between 68 and 78 degrees Fahrenheit.
You've probably heard that it's not a good idea to constantly charge your phone to 100 percent, and as such, a bad idea to charge it overnight. And the thing about this myth is that it's actually true—or, at least, it was. The reason it's mostly a myth now is because device manufacturers have taken it upon themselves to do the work for you.
Let's back up. Modern laptop and phone batteries are lithium-ion, and like all rechargeable batteries it can only withstand so many recharging cycles. You can increase the lifespan of your battery by keeping your charge between 40 and 80 percent as much as possible. That's according to Battery University, a website with all kinds of information about batteries provided by Cadex, a consultancy that helps large companies like Amazon and Motorola get more out of their batteries. It is particularly bad to store a fully charged or fully depleted battery.
This is where battery optimization comes in. This is a software feature that charges your phone up to 80 percent and doesn't fully charge until you're likely to unplug your phone. Such software typically keeps track of your daily routine and charges so that the battery will typically be around 80 percent right up until you need to use the battery. On the iPhone this feature is called optimized battery charging and on Android devices it's called adaptive battery. If you have this feature enabled, you can charge your phone overnight without worrying—the software is doing everything it can to keep your battery healthy.
Many people, when the battery is dying on their phone, will manually 'close' as many applications as possible. The idea is that those applications are taking up resources and closing them will allow the battery to last longer. The problem: this isn't how phone operating systems work. Both Android and iOS suspend applications you're not currently using, as reported by multiple outlets from Quartz to HowToGeek.
That's not to say there's nothing you can do to get a little bit more juice out of a dying battery. On most phones the screen is the thing that uses the most energy, so turning down the brightness can do a lot. You can also leave the screen completely off as much as possible. Finally, both iOS and Android offer a battery saver mode, which can be found in the settings. Enabling this will stop applications from updating in the background, meaning things like emails won't be downloaded automatically and your battery will last longer.
Some people think it's a good idea to fully discharge batteries before charging them fully, an idea that has its roots in history. Nickel-cadmium batteries were common in the 20th century, and at some point during their lifespan, the story of the memory effect became household knowledge. The rough idea was that if you charged such batteries before fully depleting them, they'd have less charge over time. This wasn't exactly true.
According to an article in the Journal of Applied Electrochemistry, the origins of this idea was extremely specific to the aviation and aerospace industry, where batteries were routinely depleted to exactly 25 percent and then fully charged. The effect occurred after repeating this hundreds of times, which isn't something that happens in standard household use. And even in the original scenario, engineers were able to negate the effect with a few software tweaks. Put simply: Memory is a real thing but it doesn't apply to the AA batteries in your remote control.
And, in any case, most modern rechargeable batteries don't use nickel-cadmium. The memory effect has never been found in lithium-ion batteries, so even if the effect was real in the household context, it doesn't apply to modern devices.

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Max quietly added 50% more commercials to your stream
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Max quietly added 50% more commercials to your stream

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Cisco Live 2025 Touts Cisco's Platform Advantages For Enterprise AI
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Forbes

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Cisco Live 2025 Touts Cisco's Platform Advantages For Enterprise AI

Cisco president and chief product officer Jeetu Patel presents at Cisco Live 2025. At last week's Cisco Live in San Diego, CEO Chuck Robbins said that it would be the most important Cisco Live ever and announce more innovations than ever. Having attended a ton of these events and followed the company closely for many years, I can tell you that the show mostly fulfilled that promise. More than that, it reinforced Cisco's areas of strategic focus in infrastructure, the modern workplace and digital resiliency. It's clear that Cisco is working hard to leverage its platform advantages across networking, security, observability, compute and even silicon to support agentic AI workloads. This should help customers simplify operations while maintaining the highest levels of network security and AI safety. As I pointed out in my analysis of the Cisco Partner Summit held late in 2024, Cisco was very deliberate — perhaps a touch slow — in establishing its overarching AI strategy. By now, though, I'm impressed with how quickly the company has been moving to bring this strategy to fruition. Let's dig into the details of what Cisco is doing, and what it could still do better. (Note: Cisco is an advisory client of my firm, Moor Insights & Strategy.) Cisco's Strategic Imperatives, Per Robbins And Patel Early on, Robbins made the fundamental point that networking is critical for AI to function, and will be a big factor in enabling AI growth going forward. Beyond that, agentic AI will be adequately secured only by applying security to the network. In this context, Robbins scored a direct hit on Cisco's competitors when he pointed out that 'None of our network friends have security and none of our security friends have networking.' He believes (and I agree) that this puts Cisco in a unique position to help integrate security into the network, which I think is going to be especially important in enterprise IT. AI is growing like wildfire against a backdrop of global turmoil. Robbins said that geopolitical dynamics are a big concern for Cisco, noting that AI competition isn't just between companies, but between nations as well. Whether companies or countries, everyone has FOMO, and everyone feels like they need to move fast. (He said that 85% of enterprises believe they must 'do AI' in the next 18 months.) This reminds me that most of my conversations at this year's World Economic Forum in Davos were spent discussing countries' needs for a disconnected, sovereign AI cloud. The need is there. A new type of infrastructure will be required to realize the potential of generative and especially agentic AI. According to Robbins, we need a similar kind of advancement in infrastructure that happened when the internet became ubiquitous in the 1990s. It's worth pausing here to reflect on how important that period of technology was for turning Cisco into a networking juggernaut. 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He also reiterated a point he had made in the 2024 Cisco Partner Summit — that AI is foundational to Cisco's products, so customers can expect it to be built right in. While I think that's an accurate thing to say, I would also suggest that by now it's not such a point of differentiation. The Need For AI-Ready Infrastructure Patel went into more detail about the massive, even exponential, buildout of datacenters underway right now. He said that Cisco is foundational in building out these new datacenters. For datacenters to support large-scale agentic AI, they need a new architecture that can support the constant high levels of AI model activity that agentic creates. This is unlike generative AI chatbots, where the activity spikes up and down. Patel believes that the company can take advantage of the opportunity based on the experience it has gained from many years of serving hyperscalers/CSPs, neoclouds and enterprise customers. In support of my praise for Cisco's impressive speed lately, Patel touted the 19 major datacenter innovations the company has launched just within the past six months. At Cisco Live, it announced the unified Nexus Dashboard, which creates 'one brain for all of our data center fabrics,' according to Patel. There was also plenty of talk about the company's partnership with AI bellwether Nvidia. Among other aspects of the pairing, Cisco switches are completely integrated into Nvidia architecture, and Nvidia NeMo models can be secured with Cisco AI Defense. As I have said before, I am a recovering product management and product marketing executive, and I always challenge tech companies to describe their product realization process. While Cisco gets criticized for its 'legacy' roots, Patel has very much changed the product culture there. Fewer layers and faster time-to-decision. Most of the new software underlying AI was developed by small teams with six to eight members. 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The contrast between 'within minutes' and the industrywide 45-day average to patch a vulnerability is striking, to say the least. You can read more in this analysis from my colleague Will Townsend, who's an expert on networking and cybersecurity. Our colleague Matt Kimball, who has a long background in datacenters, will also be publishing his analysis soon. Networking And Equipping The Workplace Of Tomorrow This part of the presentation bridged various aspects of networking for enterprises, where Patel said the priorities were operational simplicity, scalability and — once again — security infused into the network. He got some cheers when he announced that Cisco's Catalyst switches are now unified with its Meraki network platform; there's now a single dashboard for managing these along with all of Cisco's next-gen devices. From my perspective, this is a nice example of Cisco's growing emphasis on easing the customer/user experience. In that vein, there was also an impressive demo of the new AgenticOps platform, which includes a multiplayer management console called AI Canvas. Will Townsend wrote much more about this in his article, praising its 'dynamic and real-time view into the inner workings of a customer's infrastructure expanse' to manage the network assurance, observability and remediation supplied by other Cisco tools. The live demo showed a user fetching data on a network outage and making UI widgets in real time to manage it. The engineer using it walked through troubleshooting, then inviting other users to help — with an autogenerated AI summary of what had been done so far. The AI model recognized missing data and looked for it, and then it was easy to apply a patch straight from the dashboard. Even a non-engineer like me could see immediately how helpful this console would be. 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