Let's be Watch The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift Onlinereal. You're going to take your phone to the beach. How could you not? So let's make sure it doesn't meet its untimely end there.
There are three main issues to consider when beach-proofing your device: sun, sand, and moisture. You don't want your phone to overheat, you don't want it to get sand in its ports and crevices, and you definitelydon't want it to get wet.
Take these precautions and you'll be able to enjoy your beach day in peace. Unless you get sand under your swimsuit, in which case ... may god be with you.
Your phone runs the risk of overheating on a hot day, especially if it's sitting out in direct sunlight. To keep it safe, store it under a bit of shade -- your beach umbrella, perhaps. Popular Sciencesuggests keeping it under a t-shirt or a corner of your beach towel (but not in the sand!). Whatever you do, don't leave it in your car or in an enclosed, compact space like your pocket. Too hot!
If your phone doesstart to overheat, turn it off immediately. It's probably best to wait until you're in a cooler place before you turn it back on. If you have one handy, hold it in front of a gentle fan or a hairdryer on the "cool" setting.
Yes, we all know the (dubious) rice trick, but the better option is to not let your phone get wet in the first place.
Sure, there are "waterproof" phone cases and beach pouches out there, but the easiest preventative measure is to keep your phone in a sealed plastic sandwich bag when you're not using it. Speaking of, you should be using it as little as possible -- for one thing, you'll probably have a hard time seeing the screen in the sunlight, and besides, you're at the beach anyway. There's other stuff to look at.
Please don't bring your phone with you into the ocean and try to hoist it above the water.
SEE ALSO: If you want to stay cool this summer, don't be afraid to look cornyAs the flawless character Anakin Skywalker once said, "I hate sand. It's coarse and rough and irritating and it gets everywhere." Agreed!
It's particularly important to keep sand away from your phone's ports. If any finds its way into your charging port, your device could lose its ability to charge -- or stop functioning entirely. Sand can also slip into the corners of your case and screen protector, which can be a real nightmare to remove. If it really gets in there, it could even scratch your screen.
Luckily, you should be in the clear if you're already keeping your phone in a sandwich bag. (For extra preparedness, try a dust plug.) If you're the designated DJ for the day (congratulations), consider making a Spotify playlist ahead of time, pressing play when you arrive, then stowing your phone away immediately. You can rest easy knowing you won't accidentally drop your phone in the sand. Plus, no one will be able to request songs or hijack the queue if your phone is inaccessible. This means that a) Their sunscreen-y hands will remain off your screen, and b) your flawless musical curation will play as you intended.
You could also opt to operate your phone using only voice commands. Will you look weird saying "Hey Siri" every three seconds? Yes. But your phone's already in a plastic bag, so you look weird anyway.
It's a classic beach question: How do you keep your stuff from getting stolen while you're in the water? If you're in a large group, you couldtake shifts staying behind with everyone's phones and wallets, but that kind of sucks. So what do you do?
The easiest preventative measure is to keep your phone in a sealed plastic bag.
The definitive resource on the subject seems to be a New York Timesstory from 2016, for which friends of the author submitted their go-to methods for hiding their valuables. There are a lot of genuinely great suggestions and a few deeply weird ones. Some are even both: stowing your cash in an empty sunscreen bottle, for instance, or hiding your phone in a dirty-looking diaper.
When you return from your beautiful beach journey, give your phone a quick cleaning. Employing a small can of compressed air is a popular choice, but Apple actually cautions against this approach, suggesting a "soft, slightly damp, light-free cloth" like a lens cloth instead. If you want to sanitize your phone, this BuzzFeed guide suggests making a solution of half distilled water and half 70 percent isopropyl alcohol, then gently wiping everything down.
And be sure to turn off your phone before you begin the cleaning process. You don't want it to short circuit. Imagine if those six hours it spent in a Ziploc were for nothing!
“Infinite Mischief”: Elizabeth Bishop’s Rebuke to Robert LowellTwitter verification: Would you pay $20 a month to be verified? Users weigh in.15 memes for when you're feeling sad as hellRevisited: Alexander Is Lowered into the SeaThe Making of a Comics Biography, Part 2Priceline hotel deals, flight deals: Shop the Black Friday saleWatching Federer and Nadal Face Off at the Australian OpenThomas Lux, 1946–2017The Puppets Are Doing Just Fine, Thanks for AskingStephen King trolls Elon Musk over his new AI chatbotThe Fletcher from 'A.N.T. Farm' meme, explainedRevisited: Alexander Is Lowered into the SeaThe Fletcher from 'A.N.T. Farm' meme, explainedThe Lenovo Yoga 7i is on sale for just $549.99 at Best Buy.This Guy Really, Really, Really Loved Books—Maybe Too MuchSending Springer Home: What It Took to Save an Orphaned OrcaWordle today: The answer and hints for November 6Why do we follow influencers on Instagram?Asus ROG Ally deal: Save $80 at Best BuyDo we really need at Shonda Rhimes was Beyoncé for Halloween and, naturally, slayed Please enjoy this Vine of Ricky Gervais dressed as a pumpkin Amazon's biggest rival just recruited Kobe Bryant to help get your holiday shopping Australia's coming for the Eurovision crown again, geography be damned Ken Bone as Obi 'The Flash' movie loses its second director due to 'creative differences' How to be a legit NASA astronaut this Halloween Nobody should buy the new 13 Vine founders' new app is the perfect place to memorialize your favorite Vines Maisie Williams and Sophie Turner obviously did Halloween together Apple gives the world what it needs, a facepalm emoji Paul Pierce dressed up as Rick James for Halloween during an actual game Someone drove through this sign so people dressed it up for Halloween Instagram wants you to shop in its app Beyoncé and Blue Ivy slay as Salt Postmates gets a whopping $140 million in new funding Netflix targets ad block users with intentionally creepy 'Black Mirror' promos Taylor Swift wore Ryan Reynolds' actual 'Deadpool' costume on Halloween Fisker is back and ready to take on Tesla with a new self This startup wants to deliver affordable contact lenses straight to your door
1.6s , 10133.71875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Watch The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift Online】,Miracle Information Network