At Home with Tech

Unlock the power of all your technology and learn how to master your photography, computers and smartphone.

Is It Bad to Fully Charge your iPhone Every Night?

With new iPhones, now you have the option to throttle back the battery’s charging limit to just 80%. Is that good? Let’s find out.

Once upon a time, rechargeable batteries, however magical at the time, came with ‘memory’ problems. If you kept topping off your device with a bit electrical juice every day without really using the rechargeable battery, it would ‘forget’ how to fully recharge.

Today, Apple says of its lithium-ion iPhone batteries, “You can charge your iPhone every night even if the battery isn’t fully depleted.”

Well, that’s progress. So, what’s the problem here?

Should You Charge your iPhone to 100% Each Night?
On the one hand, yes, our friends from Apple say it’s okay to charge up your iPhone’s lithium-ion battery every night.

On the other hand, Apple has now offered a new feature in its iPhone 15 line to limit charging to just 80% to help reduce the drain on battery life.

The reality has always been that full-charge cycles accelerate the eventual reduction of an iPhone’s lithium-ion battery’s lifespan.

In fact, fully charging up and completing discharging your iPhone’s battery… that’s actually bad. Charging up to just 80% will, in fact help your battery last longer.

The 80% Solution
Here’s how you activate the 80% Limit mode:
Click:

  • Settings
  • Battery
  • Battery Health & Charging

Choose between:

  • Optimized Battery Charging
  • 80% Limit (sometimes it still goes to 100%)
  • None

Apple’s default setting is – Optimized Battery Charging

The Value of Optimized Battery Charging
So, yes, you can choose the 80% Limit setting, but Apple also talks a lot on its support pages about how useful the Optimized Battery Charging setting can be to maintain your iPhone battery’s health.

How Optimized Battery Charging actually works… I do find confusing. Something about learning algorithms based on your use. The setting doesn’t always get your iPhone’s charge level back to 100%, and it can delay when the actual charging is happening overnight. (I think there could be some borrowed “Flux Capacitor” or “Borg” tech involved. Who knows.)

But it’s all supposed to be good for your iPhone’s battery. (And that’s all that really matters, right?)

Plus, the name implies it’s the best setting. It’s ‘optimized.’ And it’s the default setting.
What more can you ask for?

80% is Technically Better than 100%
So why is there now the 80% setting? Well, it’s not totally clear to me other than charging up to 100% is simply not optimal for a lithium-ion battery. (Yes, there’s some irony here.)

I imagine the 80% solution is technically best for your phone’s battery, but then you’re constantly denying yourself the dopamine hit when you see that 100% glow to start your day.

Optimized 100% is Better than Regular 100%
So ‘optimized’ charging is designed to minimize the inevitable long-term damage of the 100% solution.

Optimize. Yes. That’s the camp I’m in.

Live your life. Minimize the damage.

As nuanced as all this may feel, what is crystal clear is to never go with the third battery-health option – ‘None.’

Then, you’re just charging up… old school. You’ve got yourself the 100% solution with no benefits from optimization. Your iPhone’s battery will flame out (not literally) more quickly.

Optimize Me!
So where does all of this leave us?

  • Is it bad to charge your iPhone to 100% every night. YES.
  • Can Apple minimize that problem by optimizing it? YES.
  • Should you go ahead and keep charging every night in Optimized Charging mode? YES.
  • Is that better than the 80% Solution? PROBABLY NOT.

But where’s the fun in 80% of anything?
I want 100%!

Plus, I want it to be optimized, even if it’s just a word to make me feel better about making the wrong choice. Well, second best.

Happy charging.

How to Use AI to Easily Improve your iPhone Photography

AI can effortlessly and perfectly select the people in your photos to individually brighten and edit. Here’s how to access this superpower using your iPhone and Adobe Lightroom.

I don’t travel about taking family photos with my own team of lighting professionals and a heavy bag of prime lenses (I wish). I typically just use the camera baked into my smartphone, which as you know is my trusty iPhone.

Sure, I sometimes get more ambitious and bring my GoPro, my Panasonic Lumix LX-10 or Lumix ZS200 with its bigger zoom. But my iPhone 15 Pro Max has a great camera system. And best of all, it’s always with me.

So, like the rest of us, most of my photography is generated through my phone.

When the Light is your Enemy
Even though my iPhone’s camera skills are admirable, the world usually doesn’t present perfect conditions to capture an optimal photo. Often, the lighting is not quite right.

Your subject can often look dark. Sure, my iPhone can sometimes handle this challenge. But it has problems (as does any camera) when my subject isn’t as well-lit as other parts of the frame. A similar limitation develops when the background is too bright (such as when your subject stands in front of a window with sun pouring in).

Then you’ve got yourself a silhouette shot, which is the opposite of what you probably wanted.

Yes, you can try to reframe, but that’s not always possible. The only option is to snap the photo and then try to fix it in post.

The Former Limits of Photo-Editing Solutions
There are any number of photo editing software options where you can brighten your photo to pump up how your subject appears. (Your smartphone will do this in one click.) But that can often start to overexpose the other parts of your image that are already sufficiently bright.

Professional photo editing programs can enable you to just select a portion of your photo to enhance, but there’s not been a one-click solution… until recently.

How to Brighten the People in your Photos using the AI in Adobe Lightroom
I use Adobe Lightroom Classic to organize and enhance my photos. The software now offers the ability to perfectly isolate and select people in photos with just one click. Being able to accomplish that used to take years of training and practice with complex software.

But with the power of Adobe Sensei AI, Lightroom does all that for you. Then you can easily pump up how the people in your photo look.

Here’s how:

  • In Develop mode, click on the circular Masking Tool on the top right. That’s your entry point.

On the top of your options, there are three boxes you can click to select:

  • Subject
  • Sky
  • Background

The AI-powered Masking Tool immediately isolates a perfect cut out and adds a mask that you can brighten, darken or adjust in any number of ways. If there are several people in your photo, and you want to enhance the look of just one, you can click on ‘People’ to select that individual.

It’s amazing.

Two Examples of Lightroom’s Masking Tool in Action
Here’s one example of using the Masking Tool to pump up the light and color saturation of just the two people in my shot overlooking Exit Glacier in Alaska’s Kenai Fjords National Park.

Brighten the People

And here’s another example where I used the Masking Tool to brighten this somewhat hidden young moose I spotted while biking near Anchorage.

Brighten the Moose

It’s not a perfect shot but being able to actually see the moose more clearly with the help of AI certainly improves it.

  • A warning: Clicking-in more light onto your subjects should be a subtle enhancement. Otherwise, it will look fake. So, sprinkle in your extra light sparingly.

Add Buttery Bokeh Blur Using your iPhone’s Portrait Mode
Once, you’ve got your photo subjects properly ‘re-lit,’ then you can focus on editing the backgrounds in your shots. A relatively new AI trick you can use is adding in background blur or ‘bokeh.’

This nifty visual effect used to be achievable only while taking photos with a more traditional camera in bright light using the right lens and aperture setting. Now you don’t have to be an expert photographer to get some bokeh. AI can create the same effect in post!

An iPhone camera’s Portrait Mode setting is designed to do exactly that. The iPhone’s software in the Photos app isolates the background from your subject, allowing you to dial in your background blur. You can snap away and then later choose to add bokeh (as long as the photo was originally taken in Portrait Mode).

This feature has been a game changer for me.

  • Another warning: You might want to dial back the amount of your iPhone’s auto bokeh level setting (Yes, you can do that.). Sometimes, just a subtle background blur is all you need. Too much may make the background look like it’s a complete digital replacement.

Three Levels of Bokeh
Here are three examples adding different levels of bokeh in Portrait Mode on my iPhone. I took this selfie while I was shopping for a new pair of reading glasses. You don’t need to see the optometrist office background. So, I thought it was a perfect opportunity to blur it out. But how much bokeh is the right level? You decide…

Lens Blur in Lightroom Classic
Adobe Lightroom Classic can perform the same bokeh trick with its new Lens Blur feature. In one click, you can create a depth map of your photo using Adobe Sensei. From that point, you can tinker further to adjust the scope of the blur.

Is It Cheating to Use AI to Improve your Photos?
The technology to digitally adjust your photos has been around for years. But some of the tricks were complex to pull off. The big change now is AI can do much of the same work for you with just a few clicks.

Should you feel like all of this is somehow cheating? Are you not really a good photographer, because you couldn’t originally capture your shot perfectly, and you need AI to save you?

Please.

If you’re a Luddite, maybe. Otherwise, this is simple technological progress.

Time to get on board and use some AI-oomph to make your photos shine brighter!

My Biggest Discoveries I Blogged About over the Past Year

Here’s my At Home with Tech year in review. Below are the links to my key learnings and tech discoveries.

So yes, these next few weeks can all be about looking forward. The fresh start. The resolutions. The turning over a new leaf. But I like to think of this time of year as the next chapter that builds on the past. It’s not so much ‘the new’… as ‘the next.’

I try to carry it forward. That way, I can greet these annual cycles with the perspective of my past years’ experiences. Said another way, it’s important to look back as you look forward. Otherwise, a lot can get lost across the years.

That’s why I think it’s critical to package up the story of your past year in an organized photo collection (digital or book) or perhaps an edited video-clips overview.

You might also want to perform a mental review and acknowledgement of your other notable actions and learnings.

Take it in. Then lock it in, or let it go if need be.

At Home with Tech Year in Review

As you know, I document my thoughts on technology and family life each week. So, I’ll follow my own advice and offer this summary of my blog posts that reflect my big learnings across the past year. Please check out the links below that most interest you!

My Growth as a Parent

Working in our Post-Pandemic World

My Journey as the Family Photographer

My Role as the Family Archivist

How a tiny film-to-digital converter brought new life to my father’s old analog slides
How to quickly turn a scanned negative into a positive image on a Mac
How to use SmugMug as a family photo archiving tool
How to prevent your family’s identity from being washed away by time

Maximizing your Family Video Clips

My Family Vacation Tips

Best Practices for your iPhone

My Evolving Understanding of Apple Computers

Here’s to a Prosperous 2024
As always, thank you for reading my blog. I’m looking forward to sharing more with you in the year to come.

Happy New Year!