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richdotnet OP t1_j9r21g2 wrote

Yeah i've seen so many people say this and it seems to be true.

But will keeping some apps that you only use once or twice a day on the background for the whole day, drain more battery than you opening and closing it just when you need it. See what I'm saying?

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doogm t1_j9r8hml wrote

No. Apps in the background are almost always in a suspended state and don't use processing, and iOS limits them to very few processor cycles - basically to check for new mail notifications, etc.

There is little reason to close apps in the background except if the app is acting up somehow.

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