A stopwatch or timer is something that takes almost a lifetime on native smartphones, without the need to download external applications. Or the standard way to use it today asked Siri or to any other direct assistant.
However, you rarely stop to think how well your device's stopwatch works well. Surprisingly, it's not just an app that lets time pass and tell you, to avoid mistakes in measuring your iPhone, iPad, and possibly any other app, use another program.
The key is in an hour
Of course, as happened to me until I found out, imagine that a stopwatch is like a simple machine that estimates how much time has passed, that is, a request to say basically "counting seconds". However, this has its own distinctive features.
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Instead of counting seconds passed after tapping the start button, The Stopwatch app actually records the exact time and date that the button is pressed and stores it in the device memory. When you stop the stopwatch simply it will count the time passed from there, in other words, it will take off during the current and saved time.
This way the stopwatch can tell a long time ago even if you shut down the app, you can turn off the iPhone and unlock it again and the stopwatch will continue Since time is running out of time, just save the start time in memory and remove it at that time to show the account.
This brought us to an example, the absurd records, Joshua Mallik, of Kuwait, apparently recorded on the chronometer of your iPhone for approximately 78,888 hours and 32 seconds, about 9 years active.
We don't know that the timer of all smartphones works exactly the same, that of iPhone and iPad is definitely yes but for example Apple Watch does not use this program explicitly. According to Apple itself, your watch may run for up to 11 hours and 55 minutes for some reason.