Technology Review - Published By MIT
Advertisement

Doubling Laptop Battery Life

Intel's new integrated power management could dramatically reduce power consumption in your laptop by shutting down operations not being used.

By Kate Greene

Friday, June 13, 2008

smaller text tool iconmedium text tool iconlarger text tool icon

Anyone who uses a laptop on an airplane would love a single battery to last through a trans-American flight. Now researchers at Intel believe that they can double a laptop's battery life without changing the battery itself. Instead, they would optimize power management--system wide--of the operating system, screen, mouse, chips inside the motherboard, and devices attached to USB ports.

Power bars: Intel Research engineers yesterday showed off prototype methods for system-wide laptop power savings. Using the current implementation, average power consumption of a laptop can be reduced from 6.23 to 4.02 watts. The researchers believe that the approach has the capacity to slash up to 50 percent of laptop power consumption.
Credit: Kate Greene

To be sure, manufacturers and researchers have been exploring piecemeal ways to make portable computers more energy efficient. Operating systems are designed to deploy power-saving screen savers and put an entire system to sleep if its owner hasn't used it after a while. And Intel's forthcoming Atom, a microprocessor for mobile Internet devices, can be put to sleep at up to six different levels, depending on the types of tasks that it needs to do.

But the problem with these approaches is that they're not coordinated across the entire device. Intel's prototype power-management system is aware of the power that's used by all parts of a laptop, as well as the power requirements of a person's activity, and it shuts down operations accordingly, says Greg Allison, business development manager. The project, called advanced platform power management, was demonstrated on Wednesday at an Intel event in Mountain View, CA.

Story continues below

Allison gives this example: today, when a person reads a static e-mail, the screen still refreshes 60 times a second, and peripherals such as the keyboard, mouse, and USB devices drain battery power while awaiting instructions. "We're burning energy even when we don't need to," Allison says. In this situation, Intel's system would save power by essentially taking a snapshot of the screen that a person is reading and saving it to a buffer memory. So instead of refreshing, the screen would maintain an image until a person tapped a button on the keyboard or moved the mouse (the keyboard and mouse would also stay asleep until activated).

All the while, the operating system will be monitoring use of other applications, restricting operations to those that aren't being actively used. And if there are any devices plugged into a USB port, such as a flash-memory stick, the system would put them to sleep. At the same time, explains Allison, energy-monitoring circuits on Intel chips will put unnecessary parts of the microprocessor to sleep. It takes 50 milliseconds for the entire system to spring to life, he says, a length of time imperceptible to the user.

Comments

  • What took so long?
    What I find incredible is how long it's taken them to get on this track. They've had processor throttling, screen savers and HDD shutdown for years, but little else. Seems like an obvious move that should have been implemented 5 years ago.

    I'm also waiting for a hybrid storage laptop. Seems like it's still either an HDD or a wickedly expensive yet still too small flash drive. Mainstream Laptops ought to all have at least 4GB of flash drive for the OS and oft-used data, plus a large HDD for everything else.
    Rate this comment: 12345

    ArtInvent
    06/13/2008
    Posts:28
    Avg Rating:
    4/5
    • Re: What took so long?
      ArtInvent your on the right track there should be hybrids but it would need to have more then 4GB SSD, it should have 10GB or even 15GB so the largest OS will it on the SSD no problem.
      Rate this comment: 12345

      hellofu
      06/13/2008
      Posts:6
      Avg Rating:
      2/5

Log In

Forgot your password?     Register »
Advertisement

Videos

Making 3D Maps on the Move
Technology Review November/December 2009

Current Issue

Natural Gas Changes the Energy Map
The United States has vast supplies of this cleaner fossil fuel. But how should we use it?
Featured Content
Sponsored by:
White Papers

Twelve ways to reduce costs with SQL Server 2008
Find out how to reduce costs and get more efficient

Download

Total Economic Impact of SQL Server 2008 Upgrade
Forrester reports on increasing productivity and management capabilities

Download 

Achieving Cost and Resource Savings with UC
How Office Communications Server R2 and Exchange Server can make your business smarter and more efficient

Download 

The Compelling Case for Conferencing
Read how you can improve workload support and find IT efficiencies

Download

How Windows Server 2008 R2 Helps Optimize IT and Save you Money
Read how you can improve workload support and find IT efficiencies

Download

Windows Server 2008 R2 Hyper-V Live Migration
See how Windows Server 2008 R2 and Hyper-V enable virtualization and Live Migration

Download
Advertisement
Subscribe to Technology Review's daily e-mail update. Enter your e-mail address

TECHNOLOGY RESOURCES
Advertisement
MIT Massachusetts Institute of Technology © 2009 Technology Review. All Rights Reserved.