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Phone Battery Draining Fast? Try Turning This Setting Off

Turning app refresh off can save your battery and your data.

We’ve all grappled with whether to close their background apps to save a phone’s low battery. Some people say yes, clearing the background apps boosts your phone’s performance and saves your data. Others, including executives with Apple and Google’s Android team, say no, background apps don’t take up enough of your phone’s resources to affect its performance.

You might be surprised to learn that both can be true. While background apps may not use your phone’s resources on their own, Android phones and iPhones will refresh background apps periodically by default. This uses your phone’s battery and your data. By stopping background apps from refreshing, you can conserve your battery and data, making closing background apps unnecessary.

Here’s how to stop your background apps from refreshing, helping your battery last longer and saving your data.

Stop background apps from refreshing on iPhone

If you have an iPhone, here’s how to stop background apps from refreshing.

1. Open Settings.

2. Tap General.

3. Tap Background App Refresh.

4. Tap Background App Refresh again.

Here you can choose to turn background refreshing Off, limit background apps to refresh when you’re connected to Wi-Fi, or allow background apps to refresh on Wi-Fi & cellular data.

If you select Wi-Fi or Wi-Fi & cellular data, you can also select which apps can refresh in the background. For that, follow the first three steps above. Then you should see a list of apps near the bottom of the page and select which can refresh in the background.

Stop background apps from refreshing on Android

If you have an Android device, here’s how to stop background apps from refreshing.

1. Open Settings.

2. Tap Network & internet.

3. Tap Data saver.

4. Toggle Use data saver on.

Data saver will stop background apps from using data unless your phone is connected to Wi-Fi. Some apps you’re actively using might not load things like images, unless you tap on the image, which can be annoying. You can tap Unrestricted data just below Use data saver, and this lets you choose three apps to have unrestricted data access even with Data saver on.

You can also allow certain apps to use background data. Here’s how.

1. Open Settings.

2. Tap Network & internet.

3. Tap Mobile network.

4. Tap App data usage.

5. Tap the app you want.

6. Toggle Background data on.

Now you can decide what apps refresh in the background, potentially saving your battery and data.

For more phone tips, check out how to clear your iPhone’s cache, how to clear your Android’s cache and how to clean your phone’s screen.

Technologies

Today’s NYT Mini Crossword Answers for Wednesday, Nov. 12

Here are the answers for The New York Times Mini Crossword for Nov. 12.

Looking for the most recent Mini Crossword answer? Click here for today’s Mini Crossword hints, as well as our daily answers and hints for The New York Times Wordle, Strands, Connections and Connections: Sports Edition puzzles.


Need some help with today’s Mini Crossword? I was doing great until I stumbled on 6-Across, but filling in the Down answers solved that for me. If you need the answers, read on. And if you could use some hints and guidance for daily solving, check out our Mini Crossword tips.

If you’re looking for today’s Wordle, Connections, Connections: Sports Edition and Strands answers, you can visit CNET’s NYT puzzle hints page.

Read more: Tips and Tricks for Solving The New York Times Mini Crossword

Let’s get to those Mini Crossword clues and answers.

Mini across clues and answers

1A clue: Place with ships and slips
Answer: DOCK

5A clue: Assignment for a delivery driver
Answer: ROUTE

6A clue: Way in
Answer: ENTRY

7A clue: What might leave stains on a gardener’s pants
Answer: SOIL

8A clue: Fearsome dinosaur, for short
Answer: TREX

Mini down clues and answers

1D clue: Person giving blood
Answer: DONOR

2D clue: Kind of belly button that 10% of the world has
Answer: OUTIE

3D clue: Shortcut for «cut,» for short
Answer: CTRLX

4D clue: Door opener … like 6-Across?
Answer: KEY

5D clue: «Oh, give it a ___ already!»
Answer: REST

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Technologies

Today’s NYT Connections: Sports Edition Hints and Answers for Nov. 12, #415

Here are hints and the answers for the NYT Connections: Sports Edition puzzle for Nov. 12, No. 415.

Looking for the most recent regular Connections answers? Click here for today’s Connections hints, as well as our daily answers and hints for The New York Times Mini Crossword, Wordle and Strands puzzles.


Today’s Connections: Sports Edition is a fun one. The purple category trusts that you know your pro teams, and that you can spot them out of context. If you’re struggling but still want to solve it, read on for hints and the answers.

Connections: Sports Edition is published by The Athletic, the subscription-based sports journalism site owned by The Times. It doesn’t show up in the NYT Games app but appears in The Athletic’s own app. Or you can play it for free online.

Read more: NYT Connections: Sports Edition Puzzle Comes Out of Beta

Hints for today’s Connections: Sports Edition groups

Here are four hints for the groupings in today’s Connections: Sports Edition puzzle, ranked from the easiest yellow group to the tough (and sometimes bizarre) purple group.

Yellow group hint: Great White North.

Green group hint: Famous baseball places.

Blue group hint: Alma mater groups.

Purple group hint: Hoops first.

Answers for today’s Connections: Sports Edition groups

Yellow group: Canadian NHL teams, minus the S.

Green group: MLB stadium landmarks.

Blue group: College conferences.

Purple group: Starts with an NBA team.

Read more: Wordle Cheat Sheet: Here Are the Most Popular Letters Used in English Words

What are today’s Connections: Sports Edition answers?

The yellow words in today’s Connections

The theme is Canadian NHL teams, minus the S. The four answers are Canuck, Jet, Maple Leaf and Oiler.

The green words in today’s Connections

The theme is MLB stadium landmarks. The four answers are Green Monster, Home Run Apple, McCovey Cove and Monument Park.

The blue words in today’s Connections

The theme is college conferences. The four answers are Ivy, Missouri Valley, Patriot and Sun Belt.

The purple words in today’s Connections

The theme is starts with an NBA team. The four answers are buckskin, heat check, Magic Johnson and sunscreen.

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Technologies

November Nights Are Dazzling With These 3 Meteor Showers. How to Watch Like a Pro

You won’t need binoculars or a telescope, but you will need to get away from city lights to see one of the meteor showers peak tonight.

Skygazers, get ready for an active night sky this week and next. Following the supermoon last week, we’ve also got three annual meteor showers happening right now: the Northern Taurids, which peaks Tuesday night; the Southern Taurids, which has already peaked but is ongoing through November; and the Leonids, which peaks early next week. 

While these showers aren’t as prolific as the biggest ones, including August’s Perseids and January’s Quadrantids, you can still marvel at meteors with a bit of luck and some tips we’ll provide.

Not everyone understands what a meteor shower actually is, but it’s fairly simple. Shooting stars are a common occurrence in space around planet Earth. According to NASA, 48.5 tons of meteoritic material hit Earth’s atmosphere every year. Sometimes, enough of that material comes from the same spot, and we humans refer to those as meteor showers. 


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Southern Taurids: Ongoing

The Southern Taurids shower, one of the longest meteor showers of the year, lasts for two months. 

Southern Taurids peaked on the evening of Nov. 4, spawning upwards of five meteors per hour during that peak, but is expected to hang around through this week and next. Southern Taurids is known for its increased chance of fireballs, which are meteors that are brighter than most. According to some reports, these fireballs can be brighter than the planet Venus when they streak across the night sky. 

All meteor showers are named for the constellations where they appear to originate, a spot known as the radiant. For the Southern Taurids, the radiant is in the Taurus constellation near the Pleiades star cluster, so that is where you’ll want to look for them. Taurus will be visible in the eastern sky shortly after sunset and end its evening in the western sky as the sun rises. 

Northern Taurids: Peaks Nov. 11-12

The Northern Taurids meteor shower is set to peak over the next couple of days, on Tuesday and Wednesday. It’s identical to the Southern Taurids, only with a later peak date. The origin point will be the Taurus constellation, producing an average of five meteors per hour with an increased chance of fireballs. 

The Leonids: Peaks Nov. 16-17

Of the three November meteor showers, Leonids should be the most active. It is fed by the Tempel-Tuttle Comet, which can produce some dense debris clouds, resulting in very strong showers. The Leonids meteor shower is set to peak this weekend, on Nov. 16 to 17. 

Some sources say that seeing as many as 15 visible meteors per hour is possible, while NASA estimates a more conservative three per hour under dark skies. It’s impossible to know for sure how active this shower will be until the peak occurs.

As the name implies, Leonids will appear out of the Leo constellation. Leo is visible in the eastern sky between midnight and 1 a.m. local time. 

According to the American Meteor Society, Leonids has produced some intense meteor showers as recently as 2002, but isn’t scheduled to do so again until 2031, 2064 and 2099 as the comet returns to the solar system. During these rare meteor storms, NASA says that it’s possible to see upwards of 1,000 meteors per hour. 

Tips for watching meteor showers

Here are some tips and tricks that will help increase your odds of spotting a meteor in November. 

Get away from light pollution

This is the most important guideline to follow. Simply put, city lights make meteors harder to see.

«Light pollution will definitely hamper your viewing of meteors,» Michelle Nichols, director of public observing at the Adler Planetarium in Chicago, told CNET. «The more light pollution you are under, the fewer meteors you’ll see.»

Nichols says that unfavorable conditions can reduce the number of meteors you see by as much as 75%.

Head to the countryside and find a spot that is as dark as possible. (There are other sources of light pollution that humans can’t do anything about, like the moon.)

The Southern Taurids peaked during November’s full moon, which is also a supermoon, meaning it shares the maximum amount of light pollution you can get from the moon. If you’re going to skip any of these showers, the Southern Taurids is probably the best choice. The other two showers will have much more favorable celestial conditions. 

Don’t take any equipment

Meteor showers typically have an origin point, but you won’t need binoculars or telescopes. 

«You want to just use your eyes,» said Nichols. «Binoculars or telescopes both look at ever-smaller pieces of sky, and you want to be able to look around at the entire sky.»

Meteors are very fast, and a magnification device may obstruct your ability to see the whole path. Nichols says that Taurids meteors tend to travel at 17 to 18 miles per second, while Orionids may travel as fast as 41 miles per second. 

Also, meteors don’t last for a long time. 

«Look for short-lived, quick streaks of light,» Nichols says. «Meteors tend to last a fraction of a second to maybe a few seconds for the longer-lived ones.»

Nichols also notes that much of the material falling to Earth’s surface is «only about the size of a grain of sand.» As such, the streak humans often see isn’t the meteor itself, but rather the «glowing, superheated air that surrounds that bit of comet material» as it plummets toward Earth. 

Dress for the occasion

Unless you live in the Deep South, it’s likely to be cold outside in November. Dressing for the occasion means you’ll be able to stay out longer, even if it’s chilly. 

«When you go outside, dress warmly in layers, even if it’s not terribly cold where you are,» says Nichols. «You’ll be out there for a while, and at night, you may easily get chilled, especially if it’s damp out.»

Nichols recommends bringing an extra chair to put your feet on to keep them off the cold ground, especially if it’s wet, and also recommends against drinking alcohol, which causes blood vessels to dilate, causing the body to lose heat faster

Patience is a virtue

The phrase «it’s a marathon, not a sprint» is about as apropos as it gets for meteor watching. Showers are unpredictable, and every number you’ve seen in this article or elsewhere online is essentially an estimate. You’ll want to make sure to give yourself as much time as you can to get settled.

«Give your eyes at least 20-30 minutes to adjust to the darkness,» Nichols advises. «You may not see meteors right away. And when you do, they’ll be sporadic.»

If it were easy to spot meteors, then it wouldn’t be special. You can help yourself by reducing your phone screen brightness to its lowest setting to preserve your night vision, and by using flashlights, not big camping lanterns.

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