VISTA.BLORGE Vista news
TECH.BLORGE.com
MAC.BLORGE.com
GAMER.BLORGE.com

May 4, 2007 |

Vista drains notebook batteries, manufacturers revolt

By Jonathan Schlaffer





Vista drains notebook batteries, manufacturers revolt Microsoft attempted to improve power management for laptops in Vista but they didn’t exactly succeed. Battery life on laptops from most standpoints is much worse on Vista than it would be using XP. One feature of Vista is responsible for this all by itself.

The new user interface called Aero Glass with its transparency effects, fade effects and minimize/maximize effects takes a toll on battery life. Not only does it require slightly more memory but requires use of the video card to render correctly. The acceleration features of the video card are being used more and therefore battery life is decreased.

There are several ways to combat this if you installed Vista on your laptop. Set the power settings to “Power Saver” or disable Aero Glass completely. According to Cnet most manufacturers of laptops are disenchanted with the power settings present in Vista just because it seems to drain the battery no matter what users do to it. Everyone from Acer to Toshiba is implementing their own custom power options based on the laptop Vista is installed on.

With Aero Glass turned off battery life improves markedly either equaling or surpassing the battery life on Vista. Vista has some new power saving modes too such as “Sleep” but these pose a problem for me, after resuming, CPU usage stays at 50% on my Core Duo processor and I don’t know why. That in and of itself kills battery life, restarting reduces the battery life even more to eliminate the problem and I’m right back where I started with less battery life.

It’s possible for me to get about 2 hours out of my Aspire 5670 laptop with Vista while running Aero Glass on it. I have not tried disabling it to see what would happen because Aero Glass is just enchanting. I’ve never really needed more than 2 hours anyway, either that or I’ve just gotten used to living with battery life limitations.


Related:

  • Free Vista Sunday, save laptop batteries with Vista Battery Saver
  • Vista doesn’t allow cloning, an activation horror story
  • AMD unveils new M690 mobile platform with enhanced Vista support
  • Microsoft offers XP downgrade option for Vista users
  • Vista vanquished by XP in performance tests




  • 3 Responses to “Vista drains notebook batteries, manufacturers revolt”

    1. Vista Drains Batteries, Manufacturers Revolt | Mick’s World:

      […] VISTA.BLORGE.com » Blog Archive » Vista drains notebook batteries, manufacturers revolt Microsoft attempted to improve power management for laptops in Vista but they didn’t exactly succeed. Battery life on laptops from most standpoints is much worse on Vista than it would be using XP. One feature of Vista is responsible for this all by itself. The new user interface called Aero Glass with its transparency effects, fade effects and minimize/maximize effects takes a toll on battery life. Not only does it require slightly more memory but requires use of the video card to render correctly. The acceleration features of the video card are being used more and therefore battery life is decreased. […]

    2. ASIF:

      this vista is a piece of graphic opertaing software which drains our computers like everything so please ban this product and sue the microsoft

    3. kr0n:

      @asif - wtf?

      “this vista is a piece of graphic opertaing software” - yes, well done. it is an operating system with a graphical user interface.

      “which drains our computers like everything” - erm… if you mean that Vista generally runs more slowly than XP or other previous versions, you would be correct. A lot of this is down to the new features such as Indexing and UAC (this helps to prevent n00bs like yourself breaking your Vista installation within a week). It really boils down to this - are you happy to continue with XP or do you want the new eye candy and features? I run XP on both my development machines and Vista on my Laptop and home machines, and I know which I prefer Vista any day of the week.

      “so please ban this product and sue the microsoft” - do you actually have a clue what you’re saying or have you just strung a few sentences together in a language that you really have no grasp of? Why on earth should Vista be banned? It’s a big leap forward from XP and Server 2003 in terms of both the GUI and the underlying technology. As a programmer, there a lot of features which make it easier for me to do more with my applications with less code.

      I suggest you do some research before making such childish remarks in the future.

    Leave a Reply:

    Copyright © 2007 Engaging and compelling blogs that entertain and inform