Posts tagged: dell latitude d630 battery

Jul 13 2010

Laptop about all-day battery life

It’s the holy grail of any laptop user who spends most of the day out of the office.

Yes, thinner and lighter laptops are a blessing. But how about a notebook that will run all day without recharging? When will we be able to hit the road but leave the AC adaptor at home?

The answer to that question is “today”, depending on the price you’re prepared to pay and the compromises you’re willing to make (see sub-section below).

Within the next few years it won’t be an issue. The march of technology in computer chips and other components will make all-day computing a trait of almost every laptop.

“The challenge for us is to bring all-day  dell xps m1330 battery  life to the mainstream so that you take the laptop to work and leave the power supply at home,” says Mooly Eden, the general manager of Intel’s Mobile Platforms Group.

“But all day means different things to different people. For me it might be eight hours, for you it might be 10 hours. And we need to do even more than that, because as the laptop gets older, the battery life will slowly get lower. We need to deliver 10 to 12 hours without the charger. And we will be able to do that, because all-day battery life is not just possible, it is inevitable.”

Making notebooks better is what Eden does. Through his revolutionary work creating Intel’s Centrino laptop technology, the foundation of the Core line of processors, sony vaio vgn-fz430e battery  Eden is considered the father of modern mobile computing.

The Core i3, Core i5 and Core i7 chips run faster than any previous generation of Intel silicon, while drawing less power. And even that extra speed is being channelled into eking out extra battery life.

If you divide the laptop’s typical working day into tiny slices of time, most of them are spent being idle. More processing muscle means the notebook can do the heavy-lifting faster, allowing it to return to the low-power idle state more quickly. The more time it spends there,  hp elitebook 2530p battery the longer the battery lasts.

Eden calls this feature “hurry up and get idle” and it’s enhanced by turbo boost modes that further accelerate the processor for short but intense bursts – opening an email attachment or displaying a PowerPoint deck as thumbnails.

“The idea is wake the notebook up, do the job and then go to sleep again,” Eden explains. “If the chip does the job faster, it can go back to sleep sooner ibm thinkpad x60 battery , so you get better performance and you also get extended battery life. This is the real secret of energy efficiency.”

Yet the processor is just one part of the notebook. The screen is responsible for the largest portion of a laptop’s power drain, followed by the hard drive. Efficiencies in these are slower to come, with fewer breakthroughs and smaller leaps.

That said, notebook screens with LED backlighting draw less juice than the non-backlit models, while also providing a brighter picture.

And while solid state drives draw almost no power compared with the conventional platters of a hard disk, their high price and relatively low capacity makes them impractical for many notebook users. Seagate is leading the way to a new wave of hybrid hard drives that partner a high-capacity hard disk with solid state memory that automatically stores the most commonly used files and data asus eee pc 1000he battery.

There’s also a growing trend towards lightweight operating systems that allow email, music or movies and web-browsing without loading Microsoft Windows.

Typically based on Linux and embedded in a flash memory chip inside the laptop, they spring to life within seconds instead of the hard-disk hammering (and power-sucking) minute Windows often demands – which makes them a boon for shorter work sessions on the go  vgp-bpl8  battery .

Asus, Dell and HP all offer some form of “instant on” mode. Dell’s impressive Latitude ON implementation is bolstered by a tiny secondary processor and has inbuilt Citrix VPN support, making it possible to sidestep Windows for much of the day and let the notebook stride into Day 2 without an AC outlet in sight.

Once we hit true all-day computing for all laptops, this will be the target: a notebook that rocks around the clock, and then some.

How to join the all-day computing revolution

If you want all-day computing, here are some shopping hints.

Acer’s TimelineX family uses Intel’s ultra-low voltage Core i3, Core i5 and Core i7 powerplants to deliver upwards of eight hours in a slim and stylish chassis. The mid-range model with a generous 40-centimetre screen sells for $1600 but you can also get models in a near-netbook 30-centimetre screen size dell latitude d630 battery .

Option up your new laptop. In most business notebooks the standard battery can be replaced by a higher-capacity pack. Dell, HP and Lenovo also offer secondary batteries that replace the CD/DVD drive or attach to the notebook’s underside (sometimes called a “travel slice”) so you can hit the road with two full tanks of juice.

Look for laptops with fast-charge technology so you can top up the dell vostro 1310 battery  quickly by plugging into a power point for just half an hour. Also, place a premium on power-management software that can disable hardware such as the USB and network ports, fingerprint reader and even

CD/DVD drive, if they’re not being used. All those tiny voltage savings add up.

Squeeze the most out of your existing notebook by turning down the screen brightness and turning off 3G, Bluetooth and

Wi-Fi unless you need them. After a few years your laptop battery will be wearing down and running at much less than its original capacity. You can buy a new xps m1210 battery  but you’d be much better off to buy a whole new notebook.

May 05 2010

12 hour battery life in a high-end laptop

An ASUS laptop quietly on display at CES packed two GPUs, a high-end NVIDIA GeForce 310, and a humble Intel GMA… and intelligently switched, second-by-second, between them. The UL80JT can also re-clock its Intel Core i7 CPU on a second-by-second basis. The result of all this micromanagement: miraculous 12-hour battery life in a high-end laptop, available later this year for just over $1,000.

Laptop design is at least partially a tradeoff between components and VGP-BPS8 SONY VGN-FZ battery life; laptops jammed with high-end components last an hour or two, while power-sipping netbooks can last all day. ASUS is trying to close the gap by allowing its laptops to decide how much power is needed and spend their power budgets more intelligently.

Apple’s solution for dual GPUs on the Macbook Pro requires the user to change settings under “Energy Saver,” which is counterintuitive and makes you log out in order to switch. It wouldn’t surprise us if owners never use this feature, Pavilion TX1000 battery.

ASUS’s solution is different because it’s user-transparent; even a novice user will get the fullest possible benefit because the laptop itself is deciding when to switch.

The same principle applies to the dynamic CPU clocking. ASUS includes a desktop widget to track CPU clock speed. While using the UL80JT, I could see it moving up and down with what I did—up with program openings and CPU-intensive processes, and way down at idle. Between the GPU switching, dynamic clocking, and ASUS’s other power management features, the UL80JT manages to consume less than half as much power as the unibody Macbook while browsing.

When it needs to, though, the UL80JT can call on all the resources of a dual-core i7 and NVIDIA’s latest GPU, holding its own with similarly-specced laptops achieving a fraction of its battery life in casual use. For ASUS, the optimizations involved in battery life planning have really paid off, liberating the user from the choice between performance and battery life in the laptop purchasing decision. Inspiron 6400 battery  dell latitude d630 battery

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