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Feb 06, 2024

It’s summer! Protect your tech from the heat

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Tech is expensive, and there are endless ways to ruin yours.

While we’re talking money, I put together a list of tech freebies you can grab right now.

Now, some bad news: Your smartphone hates the heat.

Smartphones work best between 35 and 95 degrees.

Colder or hotter, you risk hardware damage and shorter battery life.

So, what can you do when there’s record-breaking heat?

Steps to protect your phone

You can keep your phone happy, no matter the weather, with a few simple steps.

Stick to the shade.

Be careful not to set your phone in the sun.

Aim for the shade if you’re outside — or even in the car.

Sound like a tech pro, even if you’re not! Award-winning popular host Kim Komando is your secret weapon. Listen on 425+ radio stations or get the podcast. And join over 400,000 people who get her free 5-minute daily email newsletter.

Don’t set it on the sunny passenger’s seat.

That’s a one-way drive to overheating.

They trap heat, which can be more or less problematic depending on the material it’s made from.

Just be extra careful not to drop it and crack your screen.

I keep one of these screen protectors on for this very reason.

You want to make your phone as lightweight as you can, process-wise.

Turn off Wi-Fi, Bluetooth and demanding apps.

Games with lots of graphics, video streaming and other resource-intensive tasks can strain your phone’s hardware and cause it to overheat.

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This can happen any time of year, but the hotter it is, the more likely your laptop or even desktop can overheat.

And like your phone, too-hot temperatures can do some real damage to the internal components.

Try these steps.

Bust the dust: You’ll need a small screwdriver set, a can of compressed air (or an electric duster that never runs out) and some cotton swabs.

Your computer can overheat if it can’t circulate enough air to stay cool.

Make sure it’s sitting on a hard surface like a desk.

If you lay your laptop on a bed or blanket, the uneven surface blocks the vents and can cause overheating.

Put it on a book, a tray or a cooling pad to keep air flowing.

Close everything you can. Yep, too many processes can create too much heat in your PC or laptop, too.

Dozens of tabs could be heating things up more than you think.

Restart your computer while you’re at it to close down processes running in the background.

Real talk: A power outage during a heatwave could be deadly.

I wrote about the steps to take now to keep yourself safe.

Steps to protect your phoneStick to the shade. Sound like a tech pro, even if you’re not! Award-winning popular host Kim Komando is your secret weapon. Listen on 425+ radio stations or get the podcast. And join over 400,000 people who get her free 5-minute daily email newsletter.Take off your phone case. Stuck outside or in a warm room? Your computer is at risk, tooThanks for signing up!Bust the dust: Improve your laptop’s airflow. Close everything you can. Get seats. Earn rewards. Experience it live.
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