A quality internet connection is enjoyable, but frustrating when it’s slow. And this affects productivity, especially for people whose commercial activities depend on it.
But beyond your personal experience, have you ever thought of how bad this can affect your device (mobile phone or PC)?
Imagine you have to get 200 cars through a crowded traffic jam, and can’t do anything until they’re all through. You get frustrated because you’re stuck and there’s nothing you can do other than wait. This is what your device experiences when using a slow internet connection to load a website or application page.
When your device is experiencing slow internet, it’s in a state where the connection is weak but not completely disconnected. The device is in a sort of confusing state, like plugging and unplugging a device very rapidly.
Having to manage a lot of configurations and signal transfer makes your device struggle. This, in turn, can slow down other programs, even ones that don’t use the internet: reasons why your device might hang when it’s working with a bad internet connection.
When your device is struggling to load a page, it’s undergoing a real battle, even more than a boxer in a ring.
A weak or unstable signal drains your device battery primarily because the device’s radio components must work harder and operate at higher power levels to maintain a connection.
And by working harder, it generates more heat.
It means that when your phone increases the power of its radio antenna to try to connect to a distant or congested cell tower, it increases the power usage and generates significant heat.
Let’s use the noise explanation.
Imagine you’re trying to have a conversation with someone in a noisy room. To hear the person clearly, you have to lean in closer and speak louder. That’s basically what’s happening with your device when the signal is weak. Your device’s “voice” (the radio part) has to shout louder to connect to the network, which uses more energy, draining your battery faster.
This means that a weak signal forces the phone to continuously search for a better connection, “yell” louder and work harder to reach distant towers, and retransmit data packets that were lost during the slow transfer.
In this situation, your phone works 10x harder than in a normal case. And this harms your device’s health.
Also Read: What do your phone signal bars mean? A simple explanation.
When your device is at high thermal status (overheating), its performance drops significantly; a self-adjusting status of a device’s system.
In order to lower the high temperature, the system forces processors to run at lower speeds to cool the system. There are cases where a device’s operating system (OS) may automatically reduce screen brightness, slow down charging, or, in extreme cases, trigger unexpected shutdowns to manage the heat.
However, there is a productivity impact: when a device has thermal issues due to a poor internet connection, performance drops.
According to NCC’s Q4 ’25 Quality of Experience report, download speed drops by 23%, while upload speed is 26% lower. Also, it takes 6 more minutes for the network to respond to requests.
In simple terms, if a device used to take 10 seconds to load a page, it’s now taking around 12.3 seconds in overheating cases. And if uploading a file used to take 10 seconds, it’s now around 12.6 seconds.
Poor network connection is more than just slowing your network; it affects your daily life performance and as well reduces the lifespan of your device battery.
The post Explainer: How slow internet is killing your phones and laptops first appeared on Technext.

