Have you tried turning it off and on again?
u callin me a two timer?
I didn’t. But if if the shoe fits who am I? to object to your opinion.
This is also helpful for those battery powered devices that you don’t want powered all the time, as it degrades the battery.
Like, say, an old android phone spun up on your network as a Pi-Hole for ad-blocking.
Just have the power cycle slightly shorter than it usually takes to run out of battery power, and power it up for enough time to charge it.
Also, routers usually have an option to auto-reboot at specified intervals.
Finally, for Windows PCs, you can set up an automated reboot cycle with Task Scheduler.
For Linux PCs, you can set an automated reboot cycle by editing your Crontab.
For macOS, you can use pmset.
You guys still using Cron?
I love cron, if those stupid smart devices had a cron I would not have to resort to hardware hacks.
Also, routers usually have an option to auto-reboot at specified intervals.
Tldr, apply physical timer instead. It saves me time.
Note that limiting the maximum battery charge to something like 70 % would be more effective in those cases, completely avoiding the high voltages of a full charge.
However, even that seems absurd in such a use case. Does it matter if the old battery in an old phone gets worse? Especially when only used stationary anyway? Especially when the difference is sometime tiny like 5 % vs. 8 % (=3 % saved) capacity loss per year?