{"id":16251,"date":"2023-04-28T11:53:08","date_gmt":"2023-04-28T01:53:08","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/batterytools.net\/?p=16251"},"modified":"2023-04-28T11:53:09","modified_gmt":"2023-04-28T01:53:09","slug":"does-true-tone-drain-battery","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/batterytools.net\/does-true-tone-drain-battery\/","title":{"rendered":"Does True Tone Drain Battery?"},"content":{"rendered":"
Apple has not officially confirmed whether True Tone affects battery life on the new iPad<\/a> Pro. But others claimed that True Tone helps save some battery life because its adaptive features adjust brightness and color temperature depending on your environment.<\/p>\n However, in some cases, users have noticed that turning off this setting does increase their battery percentage by several points. If you are interested in maximizing your device’s uptime, disabling the True Tone may be a good idea. After all, the battery-saving benefits are certainly not worth sacrificing screen quality.<\/p>\n Generally, the true tone in iPhone is worth using as it prevents eye strain and increases reading comfort. The color temperature setting on your camera<\/a> or phone’s screen makes whites look warmer or colder depending on the scene; this feature changes the white light that reaches a blue-sensitive layer in your eye called photoreceptor cones from being evenly distributed across all colors of light to being skewed towards producing less blueish hues. It means more red is against blue, activating different parts of your retina, so your eyes never have to switch back and forth between adapting to these two flavors of stimulus.<\/p>\n Additionally, it could last up to 18 hours before power-saving mode for those with a fully-charged device.<\/p>\nIs True Tone worth using?<\/h2>\n
Is True Tone good for your eyes?<\/h2>\n