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Primate Labs founder John Poole has plotted the kernel density of Geekbench 4 scores for iPhone 6s models running iOS 10.2, iOS 10.2.1, and iOS 11.2, visualizing an apparent link between lower performance and degraded battery health.

iphone-6s-colors-800x586.jpg

The charts show that on iOS 10.2, the vast majority of iPhone 6s devices benchmarked similarly in performance. However, Poole explains that the distribution of iPhone 6s scores for iOS 10.2.1 appears multimodal, with one large peak around the average and several smaller peaks around lower scores.

In other words, after iOS 10.2.1 was released last January, the performance of a percentage of iPhone 6s devices began to suffer.

iphone-6s-geekbench-scores-800x396.jpg

In a statement, Apple said it made improvements in iOS 10.2.1 to reduce occurrences of unexpected iPhone shutdowns that a small number of users were experiencing. The shutdowns were reportedly caused by uneven power delivery from older batteries, which could cause an emergency shutdown of the devices.

While at least one report suggested that Apple tweaked its power management system in iPhone 6s devices, the company never disclosed what specific improvements it made to reduce the unexpected shutdowns.

A recent Reddit discussion, however, has reignited speculation that Apple is intentionally slowing down older iPhones to maximize power efficiency and stability when battery capacity has degraded, and reduce voltage-related shutdowns, and the Geekbench charts and Poole himself lend credit to that theory being true.

"The difference between iOS 10.2 and 10.2.1 is too abrupt to be just a function of battery condition," he said. "I believe ... that Apple introduced a change to limit performance when battery condition decreases past a certain point."

The charts show that the number of iPhone 6s devices with lower Geekbench scores was even more pronounced on iOS 11.2, which is likely because the software update is around one year newer, which means that the battery capacity of many iPhone 6s devices has likely continued to deplete as expected.

iphone-6s-ios-11-2.jpg

Interestingly, even the iPhone 7 may be starting to be affected. While the distribution of Geekbench scores for the device on iOS 10.2, iOS 10.2.1, and iOS 11.1.2 appear identical, the results change with iOS 11.2 and start to resemble the iPhone 6s' degraded performance starting on iOS 10.2.1.

What this all means is that Apple may be intentionally slowing down older iPhones to maximize power efficiency and stability when battery capacity has degraded, as speculated, seemingly without publicly acknowledging so.

It's important to remember that all lithium-ion batteries naturally lose some of their ability to hold a charge over the course of a few years. Given the iPhone 6s was released in September 2015, the device has been available long enough that some users should consider replacing their battery regardless.

Apple charges an out-of-warranty fee of $79 to replace the battery of all eligible iPhone models in the United States. iPhone 6s users can contact AppleCare or schedule a Genius Bar appointment at a local Apple Store using the Apple Support app.

Apple did not immediately respond to our request for comment about the Geekbench findings. We'll update this article if we hear back.

Article Link: Geekbench Results Visualize Possible Link Between iPhone Slowdowns and Degraded Batteries
 
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I am VERY surprised macrumors did an article on this! WOW! In all honesty I assumed this site was an Apple apologist run site. Props to MR!

I am one of the affected with an iPhone 6s 32GB that just turned a year old on the 26th of November. So battery degration "over a few years" is hogwash.
 
As with the last thread...did the people testing do a full reboot between tests?

I ask because the last massive thread had people posting scores, only to find a return to normal benchmarks after rebooting.
So just reboot your phone every 30 mins and you’re good? I can’t count the number of times I was rebooting and adjusting settings until replacing my battery fixed the issue (at least for now)
 
This proves planned obsolescence exists. Some iPhone 7 models have been slowed down on iOS 11.

Poole believes that Apple added a software adjustment for iPhone 7 with iOS 11.2, similar to what it did to correct the iPhone 6s shutdown issues with 10.2.1. He goes on to share Apple may have created a misleading “third state” of slower iPhone performance without any notification that could convince users to upgrade their devices earlier than planned.
 
This proves planned obsolescence exists. Some iPhone 7 models have been slowed down on iOS 11.
It can fit with the narrative of it, and can provide more evidence for it, as the article suggests, but that's not proof by itself.
 
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I have an iPhone 6s Plus and have noticed that in certain situations, my screen does not go fully bright... it says it's at max brightness, but actual brightness is not at the maximum it sometimes is. I've actually seen my screen go from fully bright to 50% of what it was a few seconds before while the "brightness control bar" is still at max.

Considering the screen takes up a lot of battery power, I'm not surprised they are doing this.
 
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I am VERY surprised macrumors did an article on this! WOW! In all honesty I assumed this site was an Apple apologist run site. Props to MR!

I am one of the affected with an iPhone 6s 32GB that just turned a year old on the 26th of November. So battery degration "over a few years" is hogwash.
actually your battery might just be bad. my iphone 6 battery was down to 67% after only one year of usage.
 
iPhone X is the last time I'll buy the most expensive phone model.
It's great, but not THAT much greater. At the end of the day, it's a disposable item.
1.5 years from now, Apple will treat it as old crap and do crap like this to it.
The $300+ premium I paid will mean literally nothing.

Should've bought an iPhone 8.
 
This proves planned obsolescence exists. Some iPhone 7 models have been slowed down on iOS 11.

what? No it doesn't. An attempt to maintain stability due to degrading batteries would be the opposite. Until battery technology improves, this is a thing unfortunately.

So to be clear, an attempt to slow down the iphone solely to make new iphones attractive is NOT what this article is saying.
-d
 
iPhone X is the last time I'll buy the most expensive phone model.
It's great, but not THAT much greater. At the end of the day, it's a disposable item.
1.5 years from now, Apple will treat it as old crap and do crap like this to it.
The $300+ premium I paid will mean literally nothing.

Should've bought an iPhone 8.

I love my 8+. I can use it all day and it's at 85% by 5pm.
 
I don't have a problem with power management routines reducing CPU speed to compensate for low battery capacity - what I have a problem with is Apple HIDING WHAT THEY DID, and not allowing the user to have a choice. That's pretty shameful.

Apple, put a setting in the dang battery settings that allows a user to choose "longer battery life -vs- better performance". A 3 or 4 position slider would be perfectly adequate.
 
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