2010年12月14日星期二

Battery-saving tips for laptops and netbooks

Laptop batteries are a cruel instrument to put their faith in are heavy, expensive and, by nature, run away and become less effective over time. On the other hand, is how to get work done outside the outlet, and you can do, if not perfect, at least better performance.

If not already done so, get to know Windows and Mac OS X built-in power management services that are easy to locate for writing "Power" in the Start menu or the Spotlight search box, respectively. In both systems, you can customize the power schemes for best performance (starting Photoshop), (internet browsing for a while) balanced, or the best hp 12-cell ks526aa life (20 percent of the battery and you have to grab email from your boss). You must also configure your own personalized eating plan with your favorite screen brightness, screen and hard disk timeouts, and other criteria - it could be more frugal than you know.

Once you have configured systems, you'll want to be accessible, rather than having to right click on the Power icon in the taskbar and head back on your energy management plan. Create a shortcut on the Windows desktop, and its properties, direct access to powercfg / setactive "Name of your energy plan, which replaces appointed his energy plan in quotes. With that shortcut created, you can keep on your desktop, the pin that to your Start menu, or assign a keyboard shortcut to turn it on - maybe Ctrl + Alt + B for the "battery saver"?

In Windows 7, you can get a more detailed report on what I could do better to save energy. Click the Start menu, type cmd, and click the Command Prompt option that appears. Select "Run as Administrator" and in the prompt that appears, type powercfg-energy. Windows will search your computer running for about 60 seconds, then generate a report on what is using power and how. Power Type-report. html, and Internet Explorer will open with a full report, detailing how their scales processor (or not), such as your hard drive and the fans, and all the way up when USB devices are suspended.