லாக் (LOCK ) செய்யப்பட்ட DONGLEகளை அன்லாக்(UNLOCK) செய்யாமல் வேறு SIMகளை பாவிப்பது எப்படி? | HOW TO USE OTHER SIM ON A LOCKED DONGLE WITHOUT UNLOCK IT.


ஒரு தொலைபேசி சேவை வழங்குனரின் Dongle ஒன்றை வாங்கும் போது அதில் உள்ள பிரதான சிக்கல்களில் ஒன்று அவற்றில் வேறு நெட்வேர்க் சிம் பாவிப்பது முடியாத காரியம். அதற்கு அதனை அன்லாக் செய்ய வேண்டும்.ஆனால் அப்படி செய்யாமல் வேறு நெட்வேர்க் சிம் பாவித்து இணைய இணைப்பை மேற்கொள்ள ஒரு வழி இருக்கிறது...

இதற்கு தேவையான ஒரு மென்பொருள் அனைவரும் அறிந்த Nokia PC Suite ஆகும். இதை வைத்து என்ன செய்வது என்று யோசனை வருகிறதா? கீழே கூறப்பட்ட வழிகளை பின்பற்றவும்.

Download Nokia PC Suite 

1.உங்கள் Dongle கணணியில் இணைக்கவும்

2.உங்கள் Dongle க்கான மென்பொருள் தானகவே செயற்பட தொடங்கி Invalid SIM என்ற ஒரு பிழை செய்தி வரும். அதனை பொருட்படுத்தாது அந்த மென்பொருளை மூடவும்.

3.இப்போது Nokia PC Suite மென்பொருளை திறக்கவும். அதில் சென்று File > Connect To Internet என்பதை தெரிவு செய்யவும்

4.இப்போது Settings சென்று உங்கள் புதிய இணைய சேவை வழங்குனருக்கான Configuration செய்யவும்.

5. APN (access Point Name) என்பதில் உங்கள் சேவை வழங்குனரின் APN கொடுக்கவும். தெரியவில்லை என்றால் Google உதவியை நாடவும்.

5. இப்போது Connect செய்து இணையத்தில் நுழையுங்கள்..

How to Upload Facebook Profile picture without crop..



Try this

1. Instead of inputting the desktop site in the address bar (https://www.facebook.com/) change it to mobile site (m.facebook.com)

2. If you are already logged in, just click on photos, select the photo you want to make as profile picture.

3. Click confirm. Then your new profile photo will be updated without cropping. (This is for the photos already uploaded in your albums or any photos tagged in your timeline. For photos not yet uploaded, you can simply click on upload photo)


I did it and it works!



நீங்களே உங்கள் ஆப்பள் தொலைபேசிகளை மிக குறைந்த செலவில் அன் லாக் (UNLOCK)செய்ய ஒரு வழி | UNLOCK YOUR I-PHONE FOR A CHEAP PRICE.

iPhone unlock

உலக மக்களிடையே மதிப்பான ஒரு விடயம் என்றால் அது ஆப்பள் மொபைல்(i-phone) போன்களை பாவிப்பது தான். ஆனால் அதனிலும் பெரு மதிப்பான ஒரு விடயம் அந்த தொலைபேசிகள் Lock ஆகும் போது அதனை Unlock செய்ய ஆகும் செலவு தான். நமது ஊரில் உள்ள ஒரு மொபைல் திருத்தும் கடைக்கு சென்று அதனை Unlock செய்ய கேட்டால் ஆயிரக்கணக்கில் சொல்லுவார்கள். அதன் செலவு i Phone மாடல்களை பொறுத்து வேறுபடும். ஆனால் இதனை நாமே குறைந்த செலவில் செய்ய முடிந்தால்... இதோ அதற்கான வழி.இதற்கு உங்களுக்கு முன் அனுபவம் தேவையில்லை மென்பொருட்கள் பற்றிய அறிவு தேவையில்லை




Geevy SIM
இதற்கு உங்களுக்கு உதவும் Geevy Sim என அழைக்கப்படும் ஒரு சிறிய கருவி அல்லது அடாப்டர் ஆகும்.Geevy Sim என்பது உங்கள் Sim Card அளவிலேயே காணப்படும் ஒரு சிறிய அடாப்டர் ஆகும். இதன் மூலம் தான் உங்கள் ஆப்பள் தொலைபேசியை Unlock செய்ய போகிறோம்.





எப்படி??
முதலில் கீழே காணப்படும் தளத்திற்கு சென்றோ, அல்லது வேறு தளங்களிலேயோ சென்று ஆன்லைன் சொப்பிங் மூலம் உங்கள் iPhone மாடலிற்கு ஏற்ற Geevy Simஒன்றை வாங்கி கொள்ளவும்.ஆன்லைன் சொப்பிங் உங்களுக்கு செளகரியம் இல்லை எனில் உங்கள் ஊர் கடைகளிலேயெ கிடைக்கும். ஆனால் விலை சற்று அதிகம் ஆகலாம்.

http://www.gevey.com/


Unlock செய்வது எப்படி?

Insert Gevey Ultra S and Sim Cardஉங்கள் Geevy Sim எடுத்து நீங்கள் பாவிக்க போகும்  Sim Card மேல் சரியாக பொருந்தும்படி வைக்கவும்.இப்பொது இவை இரண்டையும் உங்கள் Sim Tray மேல் வைத்து உள்ளே செலுத்தவும். இப்பொது உங்கள்  திரையில் உங்கள் நாடு மற்றும் நீங்கள் பாவிக்கும் i Phone மாடல் என்பவற்றை கேட்கும். இதோ உங்கள்  Iphone Unlockஆகி விட்டது.

gevey sim instructions


Wi Fi Direct..

wifi-direct-file-transfer

பெரும்பாலும் கையடக்க தொலைபேசி பாவணையாளர்களுக்கு இன்னொரு கையடக்க தொலைபேசியில் இருந்து கோப்புகளை பகிர்ந்து கொள்ள அதிகம் பயன்படும் ஒரு வழி Bluetooth ஆகும். இதன் தரவு பரிமாற்ற வேகம் 24Mbps ஆகும். ஆனால் மிகவும் பெரிய அளவு கோப்புகளை பகிர்ந்து கொள்ள சற்று தாமதமாகலாம். ஆனால்  சாம்சங் நிறுவனமானது தனது ஸ்மார்ட் போன்களில் Wi-Fi மூலம் கோப்புகளை பகிர்ந்து கொள்ள வழி அமைத்து தருகிறது.
WiFi Direct

இதன் சாதரண தரவு பரிமாற்ற வேகம் 100 Mbps  ஆகும். இதில் உள்ள நன்மை என்னவென்றால் ஒரே நேரத்தில் ஒன்றிற்கு மேற்பட்ட கையடக்க தொலைபேசிகளிற்கு கோப்புகளை இலகுவாகவும் வேகமாகவும் பரிமாறி கொள்ள முடியும்

இதனை செயற்படுத்த பின்வரும் படிமுறைகளை பின்பற்றவும்

  1. From the Home screen, press Menu Menu key > Settings Settings Shortcut >  Wi-Fi.
  2. Touch Wi-Fi Direct at the bottom of the screen
  3. இப்போது உன்கள் மொபைல் போன் ஆனது உங்கள் Wi-Fi எல்லைக்குட்பட்ட Wi-fi Direct on செய்யப்பட்ட தொலபேசிகளின் பட்டியலை காட்டும்
  4. நீங்கள் தொடர விரும்பும் தொலைபேசி மாடலை தெரிவு செய்யவும். ஒன்றிற்கு மேற்பட்ட தொலைபேசிகளை இணைக்க Multy Connect என்பதை தெரிவு செய்யவும்
  5. The other device will receive an Invitation to connect, and you will have 30 seconds to touch Accept for the connection to be made.
  6. Once connected, the other device will be listed under Connected devices, and the WiFi Direct icon will display at the top of your screen.
  7. இப்போது நீங்கள் Wi-Fi மூலம் தகவல்களை பரிமாறிக்கொள்ள முடியும்
  8. Exchange Files Using WiFi Direct

அனைத்து வகையான தொலைபேசி மாடல்களுக்கான PC SUITE மென்பொருட்கள் | PC SUITE APPLICATIONS FOR ALL MOBILE MODELS

இன்றைய காலத்தில் இன்றியமையாத ஒரு பாவணைப் பொருள் ஆகி விட்ட கையடக்க தொலைபேசிகள் பல்வேறுபட்ட வசதிகளுடன் வெளி வருகிறது. உங்கள் கையடக்க தொலைபேசி மற்றும் கணணி என்பவற்றிற்கு இடையிலான தரவு மற்றும் தகவல் பரிமாற்றம் செய்வதற்கு PC Suite எனப்படும் அடிப்படை மென்பொருட்கள் அவசியம். இது ஒவ்வொரு தொலைபேசி மாடல்களுக்கும் வித்தியாசப்படும். உங்கள் தொலைபேசிகளுக்கான PC Suite மென்பொருட்களை தரவிறக்க கீழே தொடருங்கள்.

Nokia PC Suite 7.1
                   Download Here !



Samsung PC Studio (kies)
 Download Here !

Sony Ericson PC Suite 6.0
  Download Here !


LG PC Application
Download LG PC Suite Download Here !

Micromax 1.05 PC Suite
 Download Here !

Huawei PC Software
Huawei Download Here !

Blackberry Desktop App
BlackBerry-Logo-Mobile-2012 Download Here !

China Mobile PC Suite
அனைத்து வகையான China  மொபைல் போன்களுக்குமான PC Suite மென்பொருள்.
Download Here !

அனைத்து விதமான தொலைபேசிகளையும் தொலைந்தால் கண்டு பிடிப்பது எப்படி | HOW TO FIND YOUR LOSTED MOBILES

அனைத்து விதமான ஆன்ட்ராய்ட் தொலைபேசிகளையும் கண்டு பிடிப்பதற்கான ஒரு வழி.  இதற்கு நீங்கள் பின்வரும் வழிகளை பின்பற்றினால் போதுமானது.

Google-toys-around-with-the-Android-Market,-changes-name-to-Google-Play           அனைவரும் ஆன்ட்ராய்ட் மொபைல் ஒன்று வாங்கியவுடன் செய்யும் உடனடி வேலை Google Play Store பயனர் கணக்கு ஒன்று ஆரம்பிப்பது ஆகும் ஏனெனில் அதன் ஊடாக தான் பில்லியன் கணக்கான இலவச மொபைல் ஆப்ளிக்கேஷன்களை தரவிறக்கி கொள்ள முடியும். ஆனால் இந்த  பிளே ஸ்டோர் கணக்கு Google மற்றும் உதவி கொண்டு தொலைந்து போன உங்கள் கையடக்க தொலைபேசியை கண்டு பிடிக்க முடியும் என்று உங்களுக்கு தெரியுமா?

பின்வரும் படிமுறைகளை உங்கள் தொலைபேசியில் செய்யவும்
1.உங்கள் மெனுவில் Google Settings Application ற்கு செல்லவும்

2.அதில் Android Device Manager என்பதில் Tab செய்யவும்.

3.அடுத்து வரும் பக்கத்தில் கீழே காட்டப்பட்டு உள்ளது போல இரண்டு ஆப்ஷன்களையும் Tick செய்யவும்
Find your lost Android device with Android Device Manager

4.அடுத்து Activate என்பதை கிளிக் செய்து வெளியேறவும்

5.அடுத்து உங்கள் கணணியில் பின்வருமாறு செய்யவும்

நீங்கள் உங்கள் Play store கணக்கை ஆரம்பிக்கும் போது கொடுத்த Gmail முகவரி மற்றும் Password ஞாபகம் இருக்கிறது தானே? இல்லை என்றால் ஞாபக படுத்திக் கொள்ளுங்கள். உங்கள் Google கணக்கை Login  செய்து கொள்ளுங்கள். அதன் பின் கீழே தரப்பட்டுள்ள லின்க் கிளிக் செய்து அந்த பக்கத்திற்கு செல்லவும்.
Click Here To Go Device Manage SIte

Find your lost Android device with Android Device Manager
நீங்கள் இப்போது இருப்பது Google Android Device Manager எனும் பக்கத்தில் ஆகும் அங்கே உங்கள் தொலைபேசி மாடல் காண்பிக்கப்படும். இந்த விசேட தளத்தில் உங்கள் தொலைபேசியின் தற்போதைய இருப்பிடம்,அதனை Ring செய்ய வைப்பது மட்டுமன்று அதனை Lock செய்யவும் முடியும்.
நீங்கள் இந்த பக்கத்தில் உன்கள் ஒன்றுக்கு மேற்பட்ட தொலைபேசிகளை பிந்தொடர முடியும்.இந்த சேவையை உங்கள் இன்னொரு தொலைபேசியின் ஊடாக  செய்ய முடியும். இதற்கு உங்கள் இன்னொரு மொபைலில் Play Store சென்று எனும்  Android Device Manager மென்பொருளை தரவிறக்கி கொள்ளவும்.

Download Android Device Manage

Android 5.0 Lollipop Features..

Android 5.0 Lollipop Features

Google's Android 5.0 release is more than just a pretty makeover. Here are 10 fun features you'll definitely want to explore once you have Lollipop in front of you.

There's plenty of new stuff to see, of course -- but once you've finished exploring all the fresh and fancy visuals, here are 10 cool things to try with Lollipop on your Android phone or tablet:

1. Set up a trusted Bluetooth device.

If you have a Moto phone, you may have done this before -- but for the rest of the world, it's uncharted terrain: the ability to have your Android device stay unlocked anytime a specific Bluetooth device is present and paired. 
To set it up, head into your phone or tablet's system settings and tap "Security." Make sure you have "Screen lock" set to something other than "Swipe"; you'll need to have a pattern, password, or PIN established so your phone can automatically secure itself whenever your trusted Bluetooth device isn't around.
Once you've done that, tap "Smart Lock" on that same menu and then tap "Trusted devices." Tap the red plus sign and follow the prompts to pair your smartwatch, car stereo, portable speaker, or practically anything else -- then sit back and enjoy having easy access to your Android gadget whenever the Bluetooth device is nearby.
(You probably don't have access to it yet, by the way, but you'll soon be able to set a trusted place as well. An incoming update to Google Play Services should add that option to all Lollipop devices within the coming days.)

2. Check out the revamped Face Lock feature.

While you're in that same "Security" menu, go back into "Smart Lock" and tap "Trusted face." Follow the prompts to train the system to recognize your face, then press the power button and give it a whirl. 
Android 5.0 Lollipop Face Unlock
As you'll see, Face Lock works far faster and more reliably than it did in the past, when it was novel but just too darn finicky and slow to be practical. With Lollipop, the system starts working to identify your face the second the screen is activated. More often than not, by the time you swipe away the clock, it'll already have you recognized and ready to get through without the need for further security.

3. Take Lollipop's always-listening voice command system out for a spin.

Provided your phone or tablet supports it, you can now give voice commands anytime -- even when your device's display is off. 
The option to activate the feature is a bit buried: Head into your system settings, tap "Language & input" and then "Voice input," then tap the gear icon next to "Enhanced Google services" and look for a line labeled "'Ok Google' Detection."
Tap it, then tap the line labeled "Always on" and follow the prompts to train the system to recognize your voice. While you're in that menu, think about whether you want voice commands to work even when your phone is locked with a pattern, PIN, or password; if you do, tap the line labeled "When locked" before you exit out.
Once you're all done, just say "Okay, Google" and your phone will start listening. You can then ask it a question or give it all sorts of commands and have it work for you whether it's in your hands or not.

4. Interact with a notification on the lock screen.

Lollipop brings a whole new look to the Android lock screen, and your personal notifications are the main attraction. Next time you press your device's power button and see a notification waiting, try swiping it horizontally in either direction to dismiss it. You can also tap on it twice to open it or swipe downwards on it to expand it and gain access to any quick commands available (like archiving or replying to an email).

5. Set up and try priority notification mode.

One of Lollipop's more complex but also potentially useful features is the system's new priority notification mode -- essentially a customizable "do not disturb"-style setting for your tablet or phone. Whenever the priority mode is active, only notifications that are considered "high priority" will make a sound and alert you; any other notifications will show up but remain silent. 
To get started, press your device's volume up or volume down key while the display is on and then tap "Priority" in the panel that appears at the top of the screen. Select either to leave that mode on indefinitely (the default) or to specify a finite amount of time -- an hour, two hours, whatever -- for which it'll remain active.
Android 5.0 Lollipop Priority Notifications
While you have that panel open, take a minute to visit the priority notification settings to make sure it's set up the way you want: After pressing a volume key and tapping "Priority," tap the gear icon next to the words "Priority interruptions only." Now think about what types of notifications you want to alert you when you have the priority mode active. You can opt to allow any combination of events and reminders, calls, and messages -- and with the latter two, you can either allow any calls and messages to come through or allow only calls and messages from approved contacts.

6. Schedule a recurring priority notification mode.

Lollipop's priority notification mode can automatically activate itself at certain recurring times -- if, say, you want your phone to remain silent except for emergency calls and messages during the night. 
Go back into that same menu we were just in (you can also get to it by going into the main system settings and tapping "Sound & notification," then "Interruptions"). Scroll down to the bottom of the screen and select what days and times you want the priority mode to activate.
Once you've done that, your device will automatically go into priority notification mode during those windows -- and you'll be bothered only by the notifications you absolutely need.

7. Customize how app notifications behave.

Want to take things a step further? Lollipop lets you customize notifications on an app-by-app basis so that any app's alerts can be considered "high priority" all the time. 
If you set an app to be high priority, you're effectively whitelisting it: Any notifications generated by that app will always alert you, even if your device is in priority-only mode. The app's notifications will also always appear at the top of your notification panel, above any others.
Android 5,0 Lollipop App Notifications
All you have to do is head into your system settings, select "Sound & notifications" and then select "App notifications." Tap any app you want to customize, then toggle the switch for "Priority" to whitelist it.

8. Prepare your phone for guest access.

If you ever pass your phone or tablet off to a friend, Lollipop's new guest mode is well worth exploring. 
To see how it works, open up your device's Quick Settings panel by swiping down from the top of the screen and then swiping down a second time. Tap the circular avatar at the far right corner, then tap "Guest."
When you're ready to switch back to your own account, do that same thing but tap your name instead of "Guest." If you have a security pattern, PIN, or password set, you'll be prompted to enter it before proceeding.

9. Pin something to your device's screen.

We've all been there: Someone you know needs to borrow your phone "for a quick sec" to make a call or look something up online. Or maybe you want to hand your device over to the little one so she can play a game while the grown-ups talk. A new Lollipop feature called Screen Pinning is designed to let you do those types of things without any hassle -- and without having to worry about the person getting into something they shouldn't. 
Take a moment now to enable it: Go into the main system settings, select "Security," scroll down to "Screen Pinning," and set it to "On."
Then take it for a test run: Tap the Recent Apps key (the square to the right of the Home key) and scroll upward. You'll see a pushpin icon on the most recent app or process you've had open. Tap it and then confirm that you want to pin that process.
Android 5,0 Lollipop Pinning
Your device is now locked to that one process -- so if you hand it off to anyone, it's the only thing they'll be able to use. No returning to the home screen, no seeing notifications, no opening up anything else on the device.
To exit the pinned mode, press the Back and Recent Apps (apparently also now known as "Overview") buttons at the same time. If you have a PIN, pattern, or password set -- which you should if you want this feature to have much meaning -- you'll need to enter it in order to return the device to its normal state.

10. Beam something to another device.

Android Beam has been around for a while, but it's always been hard to know exactly when and how it can work. With Lollipop, Beam is integrated into the system sharing function and is consequently easier to use and more versatile than ever. 
See for yourself: Open up the Photos app on your device and tap any image you like. Then tap the share icon at the bottom of the screen and select "Android Beam" from the list of choices that appears.
Your phone or tablet will instruct you to bring another Android device against its back. Just make sure the other device is unlocked, then bring them back to back -- and shazam: The photo you selected will transfer wirelessly from one device to the other, even if the other device isn't on Lollipop. No wires, no special apps, no third-party services required.
(Both devices will need to support NFC in order for this to work, but pretty much every reasonable Android device released in the past few years does.)
You can do the same thing anywhere the share command is available -- a social media app, a file manager, you name it. Images, links, contacts, and any other type of shareable content should work.

TOP 10 TIPS TO IMPROVE ANDROID BATTERY LIFE..

Android battery

This is a common lament among smartphone users, of course.  It’s apparent that as the power and capability behind our devices has increased this has also placed added strain on the batteries involved.  I remember an old Blackberry 8703e I once owned which could go 2-3 days on a full charge, but keep in mind I really just used it for email only, rather than the multitasking shuffle of web, social media, calendaring, synced documents and driving directions which we all engage in.
It’s a fact that many Android phones have an advantage over the iPhone: the battery is user-replaceable, meaning you can carry a spare with you.  However, even this won’t do you much good if you’re hiking in the north country away from electricity - although there are solar and battery-powered chargers available for when you’re off the grid.
1. Make it less chatty
Your Android has a lot of communicative functions which should be turned off when not in use.  These include WiFi, Bluetooth, NFC and - the major culprit - GPS.
You can turn these off/on by swiping down from the top of your main screen and then tapping the upper right icon, which resembles a window pane:

scott fig a.png
This brings up a list of services you can toggle:
scott fig b.png

In the example above I’ve turned off Wi-Fi, GPS, Bluetooth, NFC and S Beam, since I don’t need these routinely.  Wi-Fi only comes in handy when I’m home or at a location I know has decent hassle-free Wi-Fi (although it can also be used for Location Services when you’re out and about).
We all know how to use airplane mode to save battery life, but it’s also worth considering whether you should set this if you know you won’t need your smartphone for at least an hour – say, a company meeting or a session at the gym.

2. Turn on power saving mode

Power saving mode is a Samsung feature which controls CPU and screen power as well as “haptic feedback” which uses vibrations to signal that a specific function has been utilized.  You can turn it on and configure it by swiping down from your home screen and then choosing the “Settings” icon (which resembles a gear):

scott fib c.png
You will see the list of your available settings:
scott fig d.png
Scroll down the list until you see “Power saving mode” and set it to “On”:
  
scott fig dd.png
Tap “Power saving mode” to review and configure the options:

scott fig e.png
I recommend checking all three options to get the most out of power saving mode but you can pick and choose according to your preferences.

3. Tune your display

You can adjust your display even further to preserve your battery.  The brightness can be lowered if you turn off the “Automatic brightness” option, which I did because I found it worked inconsistently.
Access “Settings” then scroll down to select “Display”:

scott fig f.png

Tap “Brightness.”

scott fig g.png

Uncheck “Automatic brightness,” then manually adjust the brightness level to a comfortable level, then tap “OK.”
You should also set the screen timeout (when the screen will dim after inactivity) for the level that works best for you.  Under “Settings” go to “Accessibility”:

scott fig h.png

If you access “Screen timeout” you can choose between 15 seconds, 30 seconds, 1 minute, 2 minutes, 5 minutes or 10 minutes.  You don’t want the screen to dim when you still need it since that will just cause aggravation, but perhaps you can experiment to find a good balance here.  Note the “Smart Stay” function (see the screenshot in #1) can help prevent unwanted screen timeouts since it detects when you’re using the phone.

4. Tweak your apps

Many applications are demanding resource hogs so you should always be aware of which ones are running and decide whether they really need to be doing so.  This is nothing new, of course – many Windows programs I’ve come across insist on starting up with your computer when they really don’t need to do so (Adobe is famous for this).
You can review which apps are running by accessing “Settings” then “Battery”:

scott fig I.png

You can tap each app or service to get more information.  In my case, the Android OS and Google Play are both taking up a sizeable percentage of my battery.  However, I can’t do much about that since they’re both integral to my device; there isn’t an option to disable these.  If I tap “Google Play Services” I see the following screen:

scott fig j.png

Note the fact “Force stop” is greyed out – some apps can be stopped here (I’ll show you an example next) but not this one.  I can, however, adjust my Location services:
scott fig k.png

In my case GPS was already off, but I can disable “Google Wi-Fi & mobile network location.”
If there are apps you don’t want running and you can “Force stop” them, you’ll see the option enabled as shown below:

scott fig l.png

In this example this service is connecting my smartphone to my corporate email server so I don’t want to use the “Force Stop” option, but if it were a game or other program taking up too much battery life I might choose that option.
It’s not enough just to stop apps – you also need to go through your “Application Manager” (you know the drill; this is located under “Settings”) and remove any apps you don’t need.

scott fig m.png

Yes, I have a few games installed.  Um, that was my son, not me.  To remove any app just tap it and then choose “Uninstall” (note you can also “Force stop” here):

scott fig n.png

Here’s another cool function: at the main Application Manager screen you can swipe to the right to display Running Apps:

scott fig o.png

You can use this information to decide, in the words of Kenny Rogers, what to throw away or what to keep.

5. Adjust your device functions

My Samsung Galaxy comes with some interesting options, but I don’t use all of them.  Let’s review that list of available services I showed you back in #1:

scott fig p.png

I turned off “Screen Mirroring” and “Multi window” since I don’t use those.  I also have the phone set to “Mute” and toggle that with “Sound” – I don’t use Vibrate since I find that unnecessary.
There are more places you can shut off settings you don’t need.  If you access “Motion” under “Settings” you will see the following list of options:

scott fig q.png

Turn off anything you don’t think you’ll use – in fact, go through all possible settings since you might cut down on resource usage and also find some cool features you might not know about (which may not help you reduce battery life if you turn them on, however!)

6. Check your accounts

You may be able to save battery life by having your email or other accounts poll for new messages/data less frequently.  Each account will appear under the “Accounts” section in “Settings.” “Email” will allow you to access however many email accounts are set up on your device.  You can access that function then choose “Settings” to specify sync frequency intervals.  For instance, if I pull up the “Sync Settings” for my personal email account I will see the following:
scott fig qq.png
If I tap “Sync schedule” then I see this handy screen:
scott fig r.png

You can adjust the sync schedule to every 15 minutes, every 30 minutes, every hour or every 2 hours. You can also adjust your roaming settings or specify a peak schedule to sync email more or less frequently to your device during a specific timeframe (working hours for example).
If you review the options you will see a function listed called “Push,” which appears alongside entries such as “Manual” and every X minutes/hours:

scott fig s.png

“Push” means that new messages will be delivered to your device as they arrive on your mail server.  Changing “Push” to a time-based interval such as “15 minutes” can reduce your battery consumption since the Android will only check for new items after that interval has elapsed.
You may also be able to adjust the sync frequency settings for other accounts (where applicable) – try reviewing them under your “Settings” options and see if this is possible.  For instance, I have the option to set sync intervals for my Evernote account from 15/30/60 minutes or every day.

7. Reduce your dependency on cloud access

Ah, the cloud, the cloud, the cloud.  It handles our backups, it syncs our documents, and it delivers us news, entertainment and information.  It also requires lots of bandwidth and makes our devices go the extra mile when everything we own data-wise resides in the cloud.
I love my Dropbox account, but it can chew up battery life on my Droid since it has to download stuff I access.  You can set it to sync only while your Android is using Wi-Fi (Dropbox, “Settings,” “How to Upload”) but another good option is to store all files locally if you can so you can reduce the amount of back-and-forth needed by pulling data down from the cloud.
I have a lot of PDF files I read on my devices, so if I set them as a “Favorite” in Dropbox they will be downloaded to my device where I can open them directly:
scott fig t.png

In the example above, tapping the down arrow shows the menu of options which includes “Favorite.”
Of course, you can just copy the files to your Android manually if you prefer, such as by dragging and dropping them onto your device when hooked to your computer via a USB cable, or accessing the micro-SD card.
There are other examples of objects you could store locally such as MP3 and video files, of course.  However, this brings me to my next point…

8. Watch your multimedia use

Music and videos are the best ways I know to drain a battery.  It’s cool that smartphones can do this stuff but I find myself very conservative with my multimedia use.  I use a Blackberry as an MP3 player when I go to the gym, for instance, since it works fine for my purposes and I don’t have to run down the battery on my Android.  Consider a cheap music player to carry on the side if you just need something to listen to.
If you’re on a coast-to-coast flight and don’t care whether you run your battery down watching a movie on your device, far be it from me to stop you, but if you need your device to communicate with the outside world (such as on a camping trip) I’d skip the entertainment.

9. Get a maid

There are apps available to help you manage resources and battery life on your Android.  I’ll admit I was skeptical about this at first since I recall similar programs in the past which ran on Windows and claimed to optimize your RAM or your registry (but I never observed any noticeable benefit).  However, the ones I’ve tried have some bona fide merit.
Cleanmaster helps you keep track of what’s running on your device and can kill off processes taking too many resources.
scott fig u.png
This allows you to end programs directly.  You can also
The program allows you to perform several functions; if you select “Junk Files” you will see the following:
scott fig v.png
 Selecting “Clean Junk” can restore some of your memory, making your Android have to work less.
The “memory boost” function is somewhat similar; it can kill open apps you don’t need:
scott fig w.png
 There is an App Manager which works in a similar fashion to the native manager on the Android, but you can backup apps first which can be handy:
scott fig x.png
JuiceDefender manages your device using options to disable your connectivity at certain times (or in certain conditions such as when there are no networks available), turn off functions that aren’t being used, prioritize apps over connections (for instance turn off Wi-Fi/mobile data if you’re reading on the device) and so forth.  It relies on profiles to configure these details:

scott fig y.png
This screenshot shows the available settings for the free versus the paid versions:
scott fig z.png

By the way, steer clear of bogus apps that claim to be able to charge your phone using solar energy; here’s a good write-up on one example.

10. Get an extended battery

These nine tips worked reasonably well (I always made it to bedtime at which point I plug in all my devices) but I still had to make sure I charged my Android daily.  Finally I decided to upgrade my battery to a more powerful version: the mighty Zero Lemon 7000 mAh battery, for which I paid $40 (remember, the battery that came with my Android is 2100 mAh meaning the extended battery is over three times as powerful.)