Solving the myth of laptop battery life
Technology lovers everywhere require our collective effort to solve an industry-wide problem. We have been called to task. It is time to take a stand against inaccurate laptop battery life claims.
How many times have you been plugging away at something on your laptop only to be interrupted with a sudden need to plug in? It happens all too often and usually way before the advertised time.
Why is this happening? The truth will baffle you: OEMs test laptop battery life with critical components shut down. That means no WiFi and no advanced graphics. To put it simply, today’s battery life claims are based on a bogus low power user profile. How do we allow this to go unchecked?
Consumer apathy is a disease. We often accept mediocrity from corporations, perhaps because the issues seem relatively insignificant, or perhaps because we have accepted that our input is often of little value to the people in charge.
No more!
The enthusiast field is buzzing with extremely intelligent and creative people. It buzzes with people that have the power to solve problems on a much larger scale than we might normally consider.
As a baseline for the discussion on battery life, let’s lay the groundwork for the questions that need answering:
- What is a realistic user profile?
- Do you average multiple user profiles for a realistic sampling?
- How do you reliably reproduce these profile measurements?
- Who do we entrust with the measuring process?
- How should the statistics be reported?
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